Hilde Volk

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Hilde Volk (-Odemar) (actually Hilde Ester; born September 17, 1912 in Vienna ; † May 16, 1995 in Spain ) was an Austrian theater and film actress and radio play speaker .

Life

Volk made her stage debut in 1933 at the Salzburg City Theater ; she stayed there until 1934. From 1933 to 1936 she was engaged at the Raimund Theater in Vienna . Then she went to Berlin, where she then played on various stages, a. a. at the Renaissance Theater Berlin , at the Deutsches Theater (including the 1937/38 season in Much Ado About Nothing ) and at the Berliner Kammerspiele (in 1940 with Albert Matterstock in the comedy Auf Entdeckungsfahrt ).

After the Second World War , she mainly had theater engagements in Hamburg and Berlin . She played u. a. at the Deutsches Schauspielhaus Hamburg (until 1949), at the Komödie Berlin (until 1950), again at the Renaissance Theater Berlin (since the 1947/48 season; in The Song of the Dove by John van Druten ; later in the 1950/51 seasons, among others , 1952/53 and 1953/54), later at the end of the 1950s at the Schillertheater Berlin . In the 1954/55 season she appeared at the Deutsches Theater Göttingen as Antoinette Hechingen in Heinz Hilpert's production of Hofmannsthal's The Difficult . In 1961 she was engaged at the stages of the city of Cologne . She then appeared again at various theaters in Berlin and as a guest actress a. a. at the Kleine Komödie in Munich (1969–1971), in Hamburg (1971/72, including at the Thalia Theater) and in Frankfurt / Main. 1981 she performed at the Renaissance Theater Berlin in the comedy hoax by Curt Goetz .

She made her screen debut in the 1930s in the films The Wrong Fuff and Spook in the Museum . She got her next roles in 1956 as Edith Keppler in Secrets of a Marriage , as a teacher in Stefanie in 1958 , as Hilda Meier in Without a Mother It Does n't Work (1958), What a Woman Dreams in Spring or If My Big Brother Only Knew (1959). She was also in the films The Juvenile Judge , I'm Just a Woman , Undine, and Crumbles Last Chance .

Hilde Volk could be seen in several television series from the 1970s, such as B. several times in Der Kommissar , Derrick or Der Alte in guest roles of individual episodes. She got the lead role of grandma Pleschka in 1988 in the series The Treasure in No Man's Land and that of Emmi Lefevre in the series Oh-Mathilde from 1990.

Hilde Volk could be heard as a speaker in countless radio plays. Her early work includes the female lead in the RIAS production Der kleine Grenzverkehr (director: Barbara Bienert ) by Erich Kästner from 1949, in which Fritz Wagner was her partner. She spoke two small roles in the commercial radio plays Benjamin Blümchen and Bibi Blocksberg .

Hilde Volk was married to the actor Erik Ode from 1942 until his death in 1983 .

Filmography

literature

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Paul S. Ulrich: Biographical directory for theater, dance and music. Volume 2. Berlin-Verlag, Berlin 1997, ISBN 3-87061-673-3 , p. 1955.
  2. ^ Deutsche-digitale-bibliothek.de: Collection Berlin Document Center (BDC): Personal documents of the Reich Chamber of Culture. Retrieved November 24, 2017 .
  3. Dannhoff, Erika . Stage photo. In: The lady . 25/1937. Retrieved May 23, 2017.
  4. Matterstock, Albert . Stage photo. In: BZ of March 5, 1940. Retrieved on May 23, 2017.
  5. The song of the dove . Stage photo. Radio Revue 14/1947. Retrieved May 23, 2017.
  6. The difficult one . In: Hofmannsthal sheets 1–7, p. 33. Hugo von Hofmannsthal-Gesellschaft, 1968 ( limited preview in the Google book search).
  7. Hocus pocus . Occupation. Internet presence of the actor Harald Effenberg. Retrieved May 23, 2017.