Jürgen Hartmann (actor)

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Jürgen August Hartmann (born May 24, 1965 in Stuttgart ) is a German actor .

Life

After graduation Juergen Hartmann graduated 1985-1988 training at the School of Kleintheater Frieder Nögge to clown , Kabarettisten and cuff Player . From 1988 to 1992 he studied at the University of Music and Performing Arts in Hanover . In a competition held by drama schools in Hamburg in 1990, Jürgen Hartmann won a prize for the role of Max in the play Bent - Rosa Winkel by Martin Sherman .

He played his first roles at the Lower Saxony State Theater in Hanover. Further stage stations were the State Theater in Darmstadt , the Theater Basel , the German National Theater in Weimar and the Theater Dortmund . For the title role of Liliom in Molnar's most famous play in a performance at the Darmstadt State Theater, he received an actor of the year nomination in 1996 . From 2009 to 2010 Jürgen Hartmann was engaged at the Essen theater . Since the 2010/2011 season he has been a member of the ensemble of the Schauspielhaus in Bochum .

Jürgen Hartmann continued to work in various film and television productions .

These included the Otto Waalkes films Otto - The New Film and Otto - The Love Film . He was also seen as a performer in television series such as The Elephant - Mord never barred , SOKO Cologne , Wilsberg and Tatort . With the character of the coroner Daniel Vogt in the television series Tatort , he gained notoriety since 2008 in the cases of the Stuttgart investigative duo Lannert and Bootz (played by Richy Müller and Felix Klare ) produced by Südwestrundfunk .

Filmography (selection)

Crime scene episodes from Stuttgart (coroner Daniel Vogt)

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. a b Short biography of Jürgen Hartmann ( memento from December 3, 2013 in the Internet Archive ) on Schauspielhaus Bochum online; Retrieved November 7, 2016
  2. The elephant - murder never expires in Michael Reufsteck , Stefan Niggemeier Das Fernsehlexikon . All over 7000 programs from Ally McBeal to the ZDF hit parade. Goldmann, Munich, 2005, ISBN 978-3-442-30124-9 , p. 327.