Kammerspiele Hannover
The Kammerspiele Hannover , sometimes also called Hannoversche Kammerspiele , was a theater in cooperation with a drama school in the city of Hanover in the early post-war period .
history
Guest performance stage
Shortly after the Second World War , the actor and director Jürgen von Alten was able to set up the "guest theater" in 1945 with the approval of the British military government in the city of Hanover, which was almost half destroyed as a result of the air raids on Hanover . The venue for his ensemble was the vestibule of the Hanover town hall .
Kammerspiele Hannover
From 1946 the guest performance stage was continued under the direction of von Alten as the “Kammerspiele Hannover”. The new venue was the intact basement of the former Mellini Theater in today's Kurt-Schumacher-Straße. The Kammerspiele Hannover worked there with the drama school that Hans-Günther von Klöden had initially founded in Linden and then continued at the Edelhof Ricklingen .
Reinhold Rüdiger , who later became actor, dramaturge and director of the Kammerspiele Hannover, was one of those who previously taught at von Klöden's drama school.
From 1947, the later theater and film actor Klaus Kammer received his first artistic training at the Kammerspiele.
In 1949 the theater business was closed, while the drama school was taken over by the Lower Saxony state capital and from 1950 was integrated as a department into the then academy and later the university for music and theater .
Individual evidence
- ↑ a b c d e f Hugo Thielen : Alten, (2) Jürgen Claus Eugen von. In: Dirk Böttcher , Klaus Mlynek, Waldemar R. Röhrbein, Hugo Thielen: Hannoversches Biographisches Lexikon . From the beginning to the present. Schlütersche, Hannover 2002, ISBN 3-87706-706-9 , p. 28; limited preview in Google Book search
- ^ A b Rolf Badenhausen : Chamber, Klaus. In: New German Biography (NDB). Volume 11, Duncker & Humblot, Berlin 1977, ISBN 3-428-00192-3 , p. 83 f. ( Digitized version ).
- ^ Klaus Mlynek : Second World War. In: Klaus Mlynek, Waldemar R. Röhrbein (eds.) U. a .: City Lexicon Hanover . From the beginning to the present. Schlütersche, Hannover 2009, ISBN 978-3-89993-662-9 , pp. 694f.
- ↑ Anna-Dorothee von den Brincken : Fines Terrae. The ends of the earth and the fourth continent on medieval world maps (= Monumenta Germaniae Historica . Schriften. Vol. 36), at the same time habilitation paper 1973 at the University of Cologne, Hanover; Hahnsche Buchhandlung, 1992, ISBN 978-3-7752-5436-6 , p. 315; limited preview in Google Book search
- ^ Hugo Thielen: Klöden, Hans Günter v. In: Hannoversches Biographisches Lexikon , p. 201