Ilse Lotz-Dupont

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Ilse Lotz-Dupont (born October 3, 1898 in Berlin , † July 1, 1968 in Munich ; born Ilse Dupont ) was a German actress and screenwriter .

Life

Ilse Lotz-Dupont was the daughter of a journalist and sister of the director Ewald André Dupont . Dupont made her stage debut in 1916 at the Meiningen Court Theater . In 1917/18 she played at the Rheinisch-Westfälische Verbandsbühne in Düsseldorf , and in 1919 at the Leipziger Volksbühne.

In 1921 she performed in St. Gallen and in 1923 at the Schauspielhaus Zurich . In 1924 she was on stage in Potsdam at the theater there and in 1925 in Mönchengladbach . In 1926 she acted for the first time in Berlin, from September 1927 to July 1929 she was engaged at the Stadttheater Saarbrücken . From 1929 to 1933 she worked again in Berlin, her last season she played in 1932/33 at the Theater am Schiffbauerdamm . In the short feature film Mister Herkules , the actress of Jewish origin made her only feature film appearance in 1933, before she was banned from appearing by the National Socialists.

Only in the 1950s did Ilse Lotz-Dupont reappear, now as a screenwriter. Her works on the subjects of love and suffering, misunderstanding and jealousy, travel and comedy are usually kept in the typical restrained style of the German film of the time. The relatively frivolous erotic comedy The black-white-red four-poster bed caused a sensation in 1962.

Filmography

literature

  • Kay Less : Between the stage and the barracks. Lexicon of persecuted theater, film and music artists from 1933 to 1945 . With a foreword by Paul Spiegel . Metropol, Berlin 2008, ISBN 978-3-938690-10-9 , p. 229.

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