Ingrid Zoré

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Ingrid Zoré , born Ingrid Neugebauer (born May 7, 1936 in Berlin ) is a German costume designer .

biography

Ingrid Neugebauer completed an apprenticeship as a tailor and then studied fashion and stage design at the Berlin master school for arts and crafts . In 1960, the Berliner began working as a costume designer, mostly under the name Ingrid Zoré since the mid-1960s.

She worked for both film and television productions, often under renowned directors such as Claus Peter Witt , Volker Schlöndorff , Kurt Hoffmann , Franz Peter Wirth , John Schlesinger , Wolfgang Liebeneiner and Wolfgang Staudte . In addition to historical-literary pieces such as Don Karlos and Wallenstein's Death , Ingrid Zoré designed mainly costumes for television productions with (old) Berlin local color ( Der iron Gustav , Königlich Preußische Seehlassung , Der Bettler vom Ku'damm , Der Trinker, The captain of Koepenick ).

For the cinema, she initially designed mostly the clothes for inconsequential comedies, only rarely were there more challenging tasks such as Die Feuerzangenbowle , Der Fangschuß , “ Grete Minde ” and Schöner Gigolo, poor gigolo - films that require some effort in the production of historical clothes and robes required.

Since the beginning of the 1970s, international directors filming in Germany have also engaged the sought-after and extremely productive costume designer.

Filmography (only theatrical films)

literature

  • Birgid Hanke : “It has to be right”. The costume designer Ingrid Zoré . Edition Linie, Bremen 2016, 70 pages, ISBN 978-3-00-052167-6 .
  • Kay Less : The film's great personal dictionary . The actors, directors, cameramen, producers, composers, screenwriters, film architects, outfitters, costume designers, editors, sound engineers, make-up artists and special effects designers of the 20th century. Volume 8: T - Z. David Tomlinson - Theo Zwierski. Schwarzkopf & Schwarzkopf, Berlin 2001, ISBN 3-89602-340-3 , p. 551.

Web links