Ilona Wiedem

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Ilona Wiedem (born May 1940) is a German actress .

Life

She completed her training at the Schauspielhaus Frankfurt am Main and was a member of the Frankfurt Opera Ballet . This was followed by a two-year engagement in Heidelberg, where she played, among others, The Queen in Hamlet , Mrs Peachum in the Threepenny Opera , Madame Wupptich in Heinrich IV. Or Titania in a Midsummer Night's Dream . In Krefeld she gave the " public opinion " in Orpheus in the underworld .

In film and television you know Wiedem more through supporting roles, for example in each his own , a woman for certain hours or in 1993 in the television series Friends for Life . In Düsseldorf she belonged to the ensemble of the Kammerspiele, as well as to the comedy, and years earlier also to the voles with Dieter Hallervorden .

Born in Frankfurt, she became known to children primarily through her voice in various radio plays, for example in commercial series such as Benjamin Blümchen or in individual parts such as Alice in Wonderland in the radio play of the same name or as Josefine in Leuchtturm Josefine and Seemaus Josefine .

plant

Radio plays

  • 1968: Michael Brett : The Lancester Case - Director: Günther Sauer ( Detective radio play - SDR )
  • Benjamin Blümchen moves out (40) as Mrs. Meier
  • We children from Bullerbü as a mother
  • Alice in Wonderland (Fontana) as Alice
  • The Borgmännchen: News from the Borgmännchen as Ariettchen
  • Lighthouse Josefine / Seemaus Josefine (Philips) as Josefine
  • Robbi, Tobbi and the Fliewatüüt (3) as Polly, the mouse
  • Sigismund Rüstig (Fontana) as Juno
  • SOS - Danger on Board (Maritime) as Doris
  • Till Eulenspiegel (maritime)
  • Travel around the world in 80 days as Auda, young Indian widow
  • Bad luck with porcelain (WDR radio play, 1982)

Movie and TV

  • 1997: Singles (multi-part)
  • 1993: Friends for Life (TV series)
  • 1991: The most beautiful love story of the century
  • 1985: A woman for certain hours
  • 1980: divorce in French
  • 1977: each his own
  • 1957: For two groschen of tenderness

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Claudia Schülke: Ilona Wiedem: Big cat with a Hebrew lucky charm. In: faz.net. December 23, 2009, accessed on May 18, 2020 : “She will be 70 at the end of May next year, but she knows that you can't tell. [...] inherited it from her father, a Hungarian Jew in the diplomatic service who was killed with her sister in a bomb attack in Berlin. In 1944 the mother moved with her to Frankfurt-Bornheim, in the Saalburgallee. "