Josef Stauder

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Josef Stauder (born February 16, 1897 in Radevormwald ; † April 10, 1981 in Berlin ) was a German author, actor, film and theater director and general manager.

Live and act

Stauder, who was of Jewish-Polish origin, worked as a theater director a. a. at the Stadttheater Mainz, where he staged The Night of the Kings by Julius Maria Becker . In the post-war period (after being appointed by Max Burghardt ) initially as a director at the Leipzig Theater of the Junge Welt and later, from 1953, director of the Berlin Theater of Friendship .

Stauder's productions included Dawn over Moscow (1951, based on Arkadi Gaidar ), Tom Sawyer's great adventure (1954, by Hanuš Burger / Stefan Heym ), Snowball (1955, with Ursula Am Ende , Elfriede Florin , Peter Groeger ) and Wie der Stahl was hardened (1955/56, by Miloslav Stehlik , inter alia with Uwe-Jens Pape ), Schwanda, the bagpiper from Strakonitz by Josef Kajetán Tyl (1956), Das Untier von Samarkand by Anna Elisabeth Wiede (1957), Das Blaue Licht (1958 , among others with Hannes W. Braun , Rainer R. Lange , Johanna Clas , Annemarie Hummel ); furthermore angels do not kiss strange masters . His first directorial work for the German television radio was the studio recording of the Theater der Junge Welt with the play Der Weg ins Leben (with Günther Arndt , Ursula Dippold , Ludwig Friedrich ), a Makarenko adaptation based on a script by Miloslav Stehlik.

Stauder left the theater in the 1960s and worked (after two years of assistantship with Konrad Wolf ) from 1958 for the German television radio, directing several television films, mostly comedies such as the Balzac adaptation Der Fächer der Madame de Pompadour (1964, with Paul Lewitt , Walter Lendrich , Helga Raumer ) or the Wedekind adaptation Der Kammersänger (1964), with Rolf Ludwig , Marion van de Kamp and Adolf Peter Hoffmann in the leading roles.

In 1951, the plays he wrote as a 2: 1 for Irmgard and Who Loves His Wife… premiered. For his work as a playwright he used the pseudonym Jakob Jostau .

He was married to actress Ingeborg Naß until his divorce in 1962 .

Filmography

  • 1954: The Way to Life (studio recording)
  • 1955: Who loves his wife ... (template)
  • 1955: Der Teufel vom Mühlenberg (actor)
  • 1955: Ernst Thälmann - leader of his class (actor)
  • 1959: Schneider Wibbel (TV comedy)
  • 1959: Ultimatum (TV play)
  • 1959: The Black Sheep (TV swank)
  • 1960: The Geese von Bützow (TV comedy)
  • 1960: The Crooked Trade (TV comedy)
  • 1961: Weekend in Paradise (TV swank)
  • 1961: Five Days - Five Nights (Actor)
  • 1961: The master boxer (TV swank)
  • 1961: Stopper (TV fluctuation)
  • 1961: The chaste bon vivant (TV swank)
  • 1962: A story from old Berlin
  • 1962: Hulla di Bulla (TV swank)
  • 1963: When you think you have (TV swank)
  • 1963: For rent (TV play)
  • 1964: Der Kammersänger (TV drama)
  • 1965: The Criminal Wedding Night (TV drama)

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Hans Hauska: From Stalin to Hitler: a fate from the times of terror: records, letters and documents . Bostelmann & Siebenhaar, 2003
  2. Gerrit Walther: Julius Maria Becker, 1887-1949: a poet between the world wars . Battert, 1989
  3. Leipziger Blätter, issues 29-31 . EA Seemann, 1996, p. 82
  4. Bertolt Brecht , Werner Hecht (Hrsg.): Works: large commented Berlin and Frankfurt edition , volume 23, Aufbau-Verlag, 2000
  5. Theater der Zeit, Volume 6, Issues 4-21 . Henschel, 1951
  6. Stage sets from 1945–1958. German Academy of the Arts in Berlin. 1959
  7. ^ Scenes from "The Blue Light" by J. Stauder in the Deutsche Fotothek
  8. Gerry Wolff : The rose was red: an actor legend remembers . Dietz, 2006
  9. ^ Heiko R. Blum: Film in the GDR . Carl Hanser, 1977