Jürgen Wulf

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Jürgen Wulf (born June 2, 1923 in Hamburg , † after 1987) was a German actor in film and television.

Life

Shortly after the Second World War, Wulf received his artistic training in his hometown from Eduard Marks . During this time he met the directors Helmut Käutner and Wolfgang Liebeneiner , who were on the board of directors, as assistant director of the Hamburger Kammerspiele Ida Ehres . Käutner brought Wulf to film at the end of the 1940s, where he was used both as an actor (Käutner's Der Apfel ist ab ) and as an assistant director (Käutner's Königskinder ). After his last (tiny) film role in the romance Hallo Fräulein! of the former Käutner assistant Rudolf Jugert , Wulf temporarily took leave of acting and took over the petrol station once operated by his father for ten years .

In the 1960s, Wulf can again be identified as an assistant director, but he did not return to the camera until 1969, this time as a television actor. Still residing in Hamburg, Jürgen Wulff was seen mainly with small roles in North German television series such as Captain Harmsen , Hamburg Transit and Kümo Henriette . He played sporadically but also in individual productions. After his participation in the film adaptation of Ralph Giordano's Die Bertinis , Jürgen Wulf, who had also acted as a voice actor, disappeared from the public eye.

Filmography

Web links