Hans Irle

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Hans Irle's grave

Hans Karl Ludwig Irle (born November 22, 1925 in Hamburg , † February 19, 1998 in Hamburg) was a German actor .

Life

Irle attended the acting school of Helmuth Gmelin in Hamburg. There he made his debut in 1948 as Truffaldino in Carlo Goldoni's servant of two gentlemen in the Theater im Zimmer , where he also received his first stage engagement (1948–1950). Other theater stations were the Niedersachsenbühne Goslar and the Hamburger Kammerspiele . In 1953 Albert Lippert brought him to the Deutsche Schauspielhaus Hamburg , where Irle was part of the ensemble for over 25 years. He also played on the Low German stage of the Ohnsorg Theater .

In 1956 he made his feature film debut in a small role in Helmut Käutner's adaptation Der Hauptmann von Köpenick (with Heinz Rühmann in the title role). Numerous roles in film and television productions followed, including a. a film version of Faust starring Will Quadflieg and Gustaf Gründgens , the Edgar Wallace crime thriller Die toten Augen von London , Jürgen Roland's thriller Polizeirevier Davidswache , Wolfgang Petersen's drama Die Konsequenz (with Jürgen Prochnow ) as well as appearances in numerous television series such as Tatort , Ein Case for TKKG , the men from K3 , Cliff Dexter and Adelheid and their murderers .

In addition, Hans Irle worked extensively as a spokesman for radio and dubbing (including for Alan Hale junior in Krieg nach Noten and Melvyn Hayes in The Man Who Loved Redheads ). He also took part in numerous radio plays for the Europa label , including a. The three question marks and the dangerous inheritance , the island of adventure (after Enid Blyton ) and a case for TKKG: victims fly first class .

Hans Irle died at the age of 72 in his hometown and was buried in the Ohlsdorf cemetery there (grave location Y 30/260).

Filmography

Web links