Jacqueline Macaulay

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Jacqueline Macaulay (born April 24, 1967 in Doncaster ) is a British actress who works mainly in Germany.

Jacqueline Macaulay (2012)

Life

Jacqueline Macaulay is the daughter of a Scottish officer and a Hungarian mother. She grew up in England (until 1973) and Holland (1973 to 1986). In 1985 she passed the Abitur examination in the Netherlands. She has lived in Germany since 1986. She completed her acting training at the State Drama School in Stuttgart from 1987 to 1990. She then performed theater engagements at the Schauspiel Bonn , the Schauspielhaus Zurich , the Théâtre National du Luxembourg , the German Theater and finally in 1998 at the Berlin Maxim-Gorki-Theater , where she was a permanent member of the ensemble until 2006.

For her portrayal of Luise in Schiller's Kabale und Liebe , directed by András Fricsay , she was voted “Best Young Actress NRW” in 1994. A year later she was voted “Young Actress of the Year” in a Theater heute critics poll for her double role as Carol and Klara in the play Oleanna / Music, staged by Harald Clemen . With Arthur Miller's The Big Bang ( The Great Depresion ), directed by David Mouchtar-Samorai it was in 1996 for the Berlin Theater Meeting invited by the NRW Theater Meeting Ensemble Prize awarded.

The focus of her artistic work is on the theater, since 2010 at the Dresden State Theater and the Ruhr Festival Recklinghausen . In parallel to her stage work, she also played in various film and television productions, such as Die Albertis, Die Cleveren , Der König vom Block and And Tomorrow The Sun Rises .

Jacqueline Macaulay is married to the actor Hans-Werner Meyer .

Awards

  • 1994: Best young actress in North Rhine-Westphalia
  • 1995: Best young actress BRD (Theater Today)

Filmography

theatre

  • 1990: The Robbers (City Theater Lucerne)
  • 1993: The Pelican (Schauspiel Bonn)
  • 1994: Cabal and love (Schauspiel Bonn)
  • 1996: Emilia Galotti (Bonn Theater)
  • 1996: The Big Bang (Schauspiel Bonn)
  • 1997: A dream game (Luxembourg)
  • 1997: Measure for Measure (Deutsches Theater, Berlin)
  • 1998: Fathers and Sons (Maxim Gorki Theater, Berlin)
  • 2002: Romeo and Juliet (Maxim Gorki Theater, Berlin)
  • 2004: Threepenny Opera (Maxim Gorki Theater, Berlin)
  • 2005: The happy journey (Maxim Gorki Theater, Berlin)
  • 2007: Quato Tasso (Theater der Ruhrfestspiele, Recklinghausen)
  • 2009: Danton's death (Hans-Otto-Theater, Potsdam )
  • 2010–2012: Ms. Müller has to go (Staatsschauspiel Dresden)
  • 2011: The uprising (Theater der Ruhrfestspiele, Recklinghausen and Théâtre National du Luxembourg)
  • 2013–2015: Rose Bernd (Theater der Ruhrfestspiele, Recklinghausen, Théâtre National du Luxembourg, Saarländisches Staatstheater, Saarbrücken)
  • 2013–2015: Dali versus Picasso (Théâtre National du Luxembourg / Ruhrfestspiele)
  • 2014–2015: Zorn (Kammerspiele Hamburg)
  • 2015: Rhinos (Ruhrfestspiele Recklinghausen)
  • 2016: life is a dream . - Calderon (Ruhrfestspiele Recklinghausen)
  • 2016–2017: Cabaret (tipi at the Chancellery)
  • 2017: Sayonara Tokyo - Geishas! Tamagotchis! Edelweiss! (Winter Garden Berlin)
  • 2017: Rausch (Ruhrfestspiele Recklinghausen, Deutsches Theater Berlin, Staatstheater Hannover)

Radio plays and features

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Ms. Müller has to go. ( Memento from April 7, 2012 in the Internet Archive ) Staatsschauspiel Dresden . Retrieved August 26, 2017.
  2. Sarah Heppekausen: Uprising (UA) - In the Ruhrfestspiele dreams of the theater Revoluzzen. “Volker, hear the signals!” In: Nachtkritik.de . May 10, 2011. Retrieved August 26, 2017.