Heinz Rippert

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Heinz Rippert (born April 6, 1912 in Velbert , German Reich , † August 1989 in Bad Alexandersbad ) was a German actor in the stage, film and television industry and a theater director.

Live and act

Rippert had attended a humanistic grammar school and then studied law at a university. Rippert received artistic training from 1933 at the Max Reinhardt School of the German Theater in Berlin. Almost at the same time he was brought in front of the camera, even before Rippert could make his debut as a committed actor on the theater boards. After his debut at the Potsdamer Stadttheater he could still be seen in the 1930s a. a. at Berlin's Renaissance Theater and at Heinrich Georges Schiller Theater. During the Second World War, Heinz Rippert belonged to the ensemble of the Düsseldorfer Schauspielhaus, his last stage stop before the end of the war was in Hanover in the 1943/44 season. Here he filled in the role compartment of the First Hero.

Heinz Rippert began his post-war career as an actor and director at Mannheim's National Theater, where he stayed until 1951. Then he went to the Städtische Bühnen in Krefeld for many years. Other theater stations in Rippert's artistic vita were Bielefeld, Nuremberg and Hamburg. He also appeared at the Recklinghauser Festival, where he staged “Jedermann” with colleagues Claus Clausen , Tilla Durieux and Hilde Körber in the leading roles. He also worked as a director and artistic director at other venues.

After three decades of abstinence from the camera, Rippert returned in 1969 and appeared in a number of television games in the years to come, without leaving any particularly large marks. The native Westphalian with the distinctive facial features was married to his colleague Heidi Kuhlmann (1910-1993), who was two years older than him , and lived in Kleinwendern / Bad Alexandersbad, where he played a key role in the establishment of a village museum. Rippert has also published a number of writings on the theater, a comedy, several short stories and a chronicle about Bad Alexandersbad.

Filmography

  • 1934: I for you - you for me
  • 1934: Hermione and the seven upright ones
  • 1936: Small but mine (short film)
  • 1936: The new cabin boy (short film)
  • 1936: family parade
  • 1938: Pour le Mérite
  • 1939: Midsummer bonfire
  • 1969: The miracle of Lengede
  • 1969: Troilus and Cressida
  • 1970: Order: Murder
  • 1970: Miss Molly Mill (two episodes)
  • 1971: Read Yesterday (TV series, episode)
  • 1973: The chalk garden
  • 1977: MS Franziska (TV series, one episode)

literature

  • 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. 1408.

Individual evidence

  1. Kleinwendern village museum near Bad Alexandersbad

Web links