Franz Hartwig

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Franz Hartwig (* 1986 in Dresden ) is a German actor .

Life

Franz Hartwig made his first stage experiences in the youth acting group of the Young Generation Theater in Dresden. After graduating from high school, he initially wanted to become a stage master and, after an internship initially planned for only three months, worked in this role for a total of about a year at a small private theater in Berlin. He completed his acting training in 2006 at the Ernst Busch Academy of Dramatic Arts in Berlin . In 2010 he completed his studies there with an acting diploma. Hartwig also received training in pantomime and opera singing ( tenor ).

During his training he already played a number of major theater roles. In 2008 he appeared at the bat studio theater in Berlin as Franz Biberkopf in a stage version from Berlin Alexanderplatz . In 2008 he also appeared at the Maxim Gorki Theater as Laertes in Hamlet in a production by Tilmann Köhler . He also appeared in the roles of Laertes / Rosenkranz in Hamlet at the Schaubühne Berlin in 2008 (director: Thomas Ostermeier ; cast and took on roles).

From 2009 to 2014 Hartwig was then a permanent member of the ensemble at the Schaubühne Berlin . He played there a. Giselher in Die Nibelungen (2009; directed by Marius von Mayenburg ), Colin in Saved by Edward Bond (2010; directed by Benedict Andrews), Acaste in Der Menschenfeind (2010; directed by Ivo van Hove ), the roles of a guardian / brother Thomas in Maß für Maß (2011; directed by Thomas Ostermeier), Tybalt in Romeo und Julia (2013; directed by Lars Eidinger ) and Damis in Tartuffe (2013; directed by Michael Thalheimer )

He also worked at the Schaubühne with the directors Patrick Wengenroth , David Marton , Friedrike Heller , Falk Richter and Àlex Rigola . In 2011 he played at the Schaubühne in the world premiere of the play Regen in Neukölln by Paul Brodowsky . In 2011 he was awarded the “Best Performance” award at the Kontrapunkt Festival in Poland for his role in The Homecoming of Odysseus (2011; director: David Marton).

In addition to his work as a theater actor, Hartwig also worked in television and film productions. He was in smaller roles a. a. seen in the movies Männerherzen… und die very, very big love (2011; director: Simon Verhoeven ) and A Most Wanted Man (2014; director: Anton Corbijn ). In 2014 he played the French silent film actor Gaston Modot in the short film project Deep Gold by Julian Rosefeldt .

In January 2016 Hartwig was seen in the Saarbrücker Tatort crime thriller Totenstille . He played the uncomfortable former Foreign Legionnaire Marc Reichert who hates his deaf sister. His role was laid out as a "bad guy" with family trauma; Hartwig played the role with occasional echoes of Klaus Kinski . In February 2016, Hartwig was seen in a leading role in the ZDF crime series SOKO Stuttgart . He played Martin Koch, the owner of a comic book shop.

In the crime scene: In one fell swoop , the first case of the Dresden investigators Sieland, Gorniak, Mohr and Schnabel , which was first broadcast in March 2016, he played Ole Herzog, the friend of Chief Inspector Henni Sieland ( Alwara Höfels ), with whom he was in an On -Off relationship is alive. He played this role until November 2017 in the three following cases involving the Dresden investigative team.

In October 2016, Hartwig was also seen in the ZDF television comedy Two Lost Sheep , alongside Andrea Sawatzki . He played Thaddäus Gerlach, a young Protestant pastor and son of Bishop Gerlach ( Oliver Breite ). In the ZDF television thriller Die Toten vom Bodensee - The Bride (first broadcast: May 2017) he played the newlywed groom Christian Höflinger, whose bride is found slain after the traditional bride kidnapping. In November 2017 Hartwig was seen in an episode role in the ZDF series Notruf Hafenkante ; he played Tobias Blum, the dispatcher for a Hamburg forwarding company , who is locked in a refrigerated container and almost dies of hypothermia . In March 2018 followed an episode role in the ZDF crime series Der Alte ; this time he played Frieder Hausdorf, the co-founder and inventor of a start-up company that went bankrupt .

In the TV docudrama Kaisersturz (2018) he played Kurt Hahn , the advisor and closest confidante of the last Chancellor Max von Baden . In the German-Austrian TV series Der Pass (2019) he played the psychopathic, “crazy” serial killer Gregor Ansbach “with an unbelievable presence as an evil black sun in the center”. In Heinrich Breloer's two-part TV docudrama Brecht (2019), Hartwig played the painter and set designer Caspar Neher at the side of Tom Schilling , Brecht's childhood friend . In the three-part TV series Our wonderful years , which was broadcast on Das Erste in March 2020 , Hartwig embodies the young Benno, who is courting the shy factory owner's daughter Gundel Wolf ( Vanessa Loibl ).

Hartwig also appeared in radio plays for the rbb and Deutschlandradio . He lives in Berlin.

Filmography (selection)

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Franz Hartwig Video / Showreel at Schauspielervideos.de. Retrieved February 28, 2016
  2. a b c d Franz Hartwig Profile at e-TALENTA . Retrieved February 28, 2016
  3. a b c d e f g Franz Hartwig - Vita; Schaubühne Berlin. Retrieved February 28, 2016.
  4. Crime scene “dead silence”: He doesn't hear anything, but has heard everything . Criticism; in: Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung of January 24, 2016. Retrieved on February 28, 2016
  5. ^ "Tatort" from Saarbrücken: Deaf does not mean harmless criticism; in: Tagesspiegel of January 24, 2016. Retrieved on February 28, 2016
  6. The Saarbrücken “crime scene” in the check: No more funny, please: Stellbrink's fifth case is again on the lower level . Criticism; in: FOCUS from January 24, 2016. Retrieved February 28, 2016
  7. Crime scene: dead silence . Criticism at Filmstarts.de. Retrieved February 28, 2016
  8. ZDF-Film: Comedy "Zwei Lost Sheep" is sport for the muscles of the laugh . Television review. In: DerWesten from October 22, 2016. Retrieved October 23, 2016.
  9. The old man, Matula, Tatort, ... crime thriller tips on Friday . In: Abendzeitung from March 30, 2018. Retrieved March 31, 2018.
  10. ↑ Fall of the Kaiser . Official website of the ZDF . Retrieved November 2, 2018.
  11. Why "Der Pass" is the perfect crime series . TV review. In: Süddeutsche Zeitung of January 26, 2019. Retrieved on December 1, 2019.
  12. Franz Hartwig as Caspar Neher (1916-1933) . Retrieved March 24, 2019.
  13. Multi-part series “Our wonderful years” . TV review at tittelbach.tv . Retrieved March 13, 2020
  14. "Our wonderful years": Departure into freedom . GoldeneKamera.de from March 12, 2020. Accessed on March 13, 2020.