Hannelore Lübeck

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On the occasion of the 30th anniversary of The CIVIL warS in January 2014 in the Odeon cinema in Cologne; from left to right: Hannelore Lübeck, Cornel Wachter , Robert Wilson

Hannelore Lübeck (born April 5, 1927 in Wuppertal , † October 25, 2014 in Bayenthal ) was a German actress .

Life

Lübeck completed a singing course to become an opera singer in the years 1947–1950 , which she completed with the stage maturity test. In 1948 she made her stage debut. Between 1948 and 1979 she had theater and opera engagements at the Wuppertal theaters , at the Badisches Staatstheater Karlsruhe and at the Cologne Opera . From 1972 to 1985 she was engaged at the Kölner Schauspielhaus , where she a. a. in Nachtasyl (1981; directed by Jürgen Gosch ), Der Menschenfeind (1983; directed by Jürgen Gosch) and as Spelunken-Jenny / Seeräuber-Jenny in Brecht / Weill's Die Dreigroschenoper (1983) in a production by Jürgen Flimm .

In 1984 she worked at the Schauspiel Köln in Robert Wilson's theater project The CIVIL WarS ; she had the main role and embodied several roles. Her participation in this project is considered to be the artistic high point of her theater career. In 1984 she received the “Actress of the Year 1984” award from Theater heute magazine for her performance . 30 years after the Cologne premiere of Robert Wilson's The CIVIL warS: a tree is best measured when it is down , Hannelore Lübeck attended the reunion celebration initiated by Cornel Wachter in the Cologne Odeon cinema as guest of honor and patron.

Between 1985 and 1993 she had guest engagements at the Freiburg Theater , a. a. as Aunt Paula in Das Feuerwerk (premiere: 1990/91 season), as Mother Goose in the opera The Rake's Progress (premiere: 1991/92 season), as she desires young Karl, the young object of her desire, “with a lustful eye patterning “Brunelda, the mistress of an aging vagabond, in the music theater project America by Pavel Mikulastik (1992/93 season) and as Baal's mother in Brecht's play Baal . In the 1994/95 season she took on the role of wife Luise Maske in the social comedy Der Snob (director: Michael Wallner ) at the Düsseldorfer Schauspielhaus . Between 1996 and 2002 she again had guest engagements at the Cologne Schauspielhaus, including in Liliom (1996; director: Torsten Fischer ) and as Aunt Julchen in Hedda Gabler (1998), in a production by Günter Krämer . In the 1998/99 season she appeared at the Burgtheater in Vienna with the role of Erna in Werner Schwab's play The President . In 2004 she appeared at the Bonn Theater in the Bonner Kammerspiele as Sarah's aunt in the play Ariel by the Irish playwright Marina Carr (director: Klaus Weise ). Lübeck's portrayal tore up "abysses, gently and quietly".

Since 1970 Lübeck has also worked for film and television, a. a. with the directors Volker Schlöndorff and Walter Bockmayer . In the movie Narren (2003), directed by Tom Schreiber , she played Grandma Bützer, his grandmother with dementia and who loved the Cologne Carnival until the end of her life, at the side of Christoph Bach . In 2004 she had a small role as a butcher's wife in the movie ventricular fibrillation .

On television she was often cast in the role of the weird, quirky old man. She played neighbors, landladies, patients, cashiers and other comic batches . Often her appearances were limited to a few short scenes and sentences, but her appearance (small body, flame-red hair) and her distinctive voice made the audience remember her. She had small, memorable roles in two Tatort crime stories, such as Ms. Behrendt, the owner of the “Pension Erika”, in Tatort: ​​Märchenwald (2004) and as a neighbor of Helen Reinders ( Camilla Renschke ) in Tatort: ​​Requiem (2005). She also appeared in several comedy formats (including Alles Atze , Angie ).

In the Eifel crime thriller Der Bulle und das Landei (2010) she played the innkeeper Berta Gunsel. In April 2014 she was seen in the role of Gerti Rössler in the ARD television thriller Der MaMa ; this was her last television role.

Lübeck lived in Cologne's Ehrenstrasse for several decades. She died at the age of 87 in St. Antonius Hospital in Bayenthal.

Filmography (selection)

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. a b c : Wilhelm Kosch (Ed.): Deutsches Theaterlexikon . Supplementary volume, part 3. K – L. Page 400. De Gruyter, Berlin [et al.]. November 2014. ISBN 978-3-11-031137-2 (accessed from De Gruyter Online).
  2. a b c Died at the age of 87. Cologne mourns the loss of actress Hannelore Lübeck . Obituary in: EXPRESS of October 28, 2014. Accessed December 25, 2014.
  3. ^ Hannelore Lübeck . Entry in the film database filmportal.de . Retrieved January 28, 2018.
  4. Note: The place of birth of H. Lübeck is given in several film databases and in Kosch's German Theater Lexicon only with Wuppertal . More detailed information is currently not available.
  5. Marianne Betz: IN THE SEARCH FOR KAFKA'S "AMERICA" . Performance review. In: Orpheus . Issue April 4, 1993. Pages 24/41; to. H. Lübeck on page 41.
  6. a b Dietmar Kanthak: At a quarter to ten the knives speak . Performance review in: Generalanzeiger from February 1, 2004
  7. Feature film of the day. The bull and the country egg ( Memento of the original from December 25, 2014 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. Criticism and photos of scenes (including with Hannelore Lübeck) in Heilbronn's voice on July 14, 2010. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.stimme.de