Hans Ulrich (actor)

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Hans Ulrich Dzialas (born June 30, 1903 in Obernigk , Trebnitz district, Silesia , Germany ; † February 12, 1993 in Lüneburg ) was a German actor .

Life

Ulrich attended a humanistic grammar school and then, in the early 1920s, received his artistic training from the actors Walter Werner and Eduard von Winterstein . Ulrich made his theater debut in 1925 at the Barnowsky Theaters, where he stayed for a season. This was followed by commitments to Stuttgart (Schauspielhaus), Gotha (State Theater), Dresden ( Albert Theater ), Trier (City Theater), Hanau (City Theater), Frankfurt an der Oder (City Theater) as well as to numerous Berlin theaters (State Theater, Jürgen-Fehling- Theater, Theater am Schiffbauerdamm, Comedy, Renaissance Theater, Volksbühne). At an early stage, Hans Ulrich also took part in radio broadcasts in Stuttgart, Frankfurt am Main, Leipzig as well as the Reichsrundfunk Berlin and, after the Second World War, the RIAS and the NWDR.

During the Nazi era, the artist with the thin face appeared sporadically in movies for the first time, but Ulrich only appeared in front of the camera after the war, mainly in television productions. Roles in cinema productions were rather rare. Ulrich embodied the entire range of roles of a classic supporting actor: he played a peasant leader like a general, an examining magistrate like a bank clerk, a teacher like a captain. In 1969 he played a key role in the ambitious documentary game about the short-lived Munich Soviet Republic , Rotmord , by Peter Zadek and Tankred Dorst , together with Reichswehr Minister Gustav Noske . After 1972 Ulrich hardly appeared in front of the camera.

Hans Ulrich also worked as a voice actor.

Filmography (selection)

  • 1934: We park wherever we like
  • 1939: homeland
  • 1941: The gas man
  • 1946: Free Land
  • 1949: The beaver fur
  • 1950: 12:15 a.m., room 9
  • 1954: Carola Lamberti - One from the circus
  • 1957: The Last Night (TV movie)
  • 1959: TV epitaval: The Jakubowski case (TV series)
  • 1960: The Servant of Two Masters (TV movie)
  • 1960: Comedy of Errors (TV movie)
  • 1962: Egmont (TV movie)
  • 1964: The Criminal Court (two-part television film)
  • 1965: The Locked Door (TV movie)
  • 1965: The Robbery of the Sabine Women (TV movie)
  • 1966: Electra must carry mourning (TV film)
  • 1966: The Angelika Case (TV movie)
  • 1966: Black Friday (TV movie)
  • 1967: Thirteen Letters (TV movie)
  • 1967: Egmont (TV movie)
  • 1968: A coffin for Mr. Holloway (TV movie)
  • 1969: Rotmord (TV movie)
  • 1969: Naval Mutiny 1917 (TV movie)
  • 1971: German lesson (TV film)
  • 1971: Doing business with Plückhahn (TV film)
  • 1972: On the trail of the perpetrator (two episodes)
  • 1972: The Illegal (three-part television series)
  • 1972: The Threepenny Opera (TV movie)
  • 1972: We 13 are 17 (an episode of the TV series)
  • 1974: Griseldis (TV movie)
  • 1979: A chapter of its own (an episode of the television multipart)

literature

  • Herbert A. Frenzel , Hans Joachim Moser (ed.): Kürschner's biographical theater manual. Drama, opera, film, radio. Germany, Austria, Switzerland. De Gruyter, Berlin 1956, DNB 010075518 , p. 760.
  • Johann Caspar Glenzdorf: Glenzdorf's international film lexicon. Biographical manual for the entire film industry. Volume 3: Peit – Zz. Prominent-Filmverlag, Bad Münder 1961, DNB 451560752 , p. 1771.

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