Klaus Abramowsky

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Klaus Abramowsky (* 1933 in Osterode, then East Prussia ; † 1998 in Munich ; actually Klaus Abrahamowsky) was a German actor and voice actor .

Life

As a theater actor, Abramowsky found a wide range of activities on German theaters, at DT Göttingen , at the Neue Schaubühne in Munich and at the Städtische Bühnen Essen, where in 1970 he played Beckmann in Wolfgang Borchert's Outside the Door . A recording of this production was shown several times on television.

Abramowsky became known to a wide audience through many film and television productions. He played in various internationally known productions about the time of National Socialism under well-known directors such as Agnieszka Holland ( Bitter Harvest ) and Bernhard Wicki ( The Spider's Web ). In Hitlerjunge Salomon (also directed by Agnieszka Holland) he embodied the father of Sally Perel and in Margarethe von Trottas Rosa Luxemburg the social democratic politician Arthur Stadthagen .

You could see him on television in the film adaptations of Christine Brückner's novels Jauche and Levkojen and Nirgendwo ist Poenichen as well as in several films from the Tatort series. In 1982 he played the leading role in the television play "Aufdermauer", in which, based on the life of Albert Aufdermauer, the story of a prisoner is told who, after decades in prison, uses a 20-day free pass - but tries to volunteer the bureaucracy fails.

In addition, Abramowsky made numerous guest appearances in television series such as Derrick , Der Alte , Ein Fall für Zwei , Der Kommissar , Aufachse , Der Bastian , Büro, Büro , Okay SIR, Butler Parker and Salto Mortale .

Abramowsky also worked as a speaker for radio plays and dubbing and lent his voice to Hector Elizondo (The Women of St. Quentin), James Faulkner (I, Claudius, Kaiser and God) and the Amphitryon in Walt Disney's Hercules .

Abramowsky is buried in the Westfriedhof in Munich .

Filmography

literature

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Klaus Abramowsky in the Internet Movie Database (English)
  2. Erich Scheibmayr : Personalities in Munich cemeteries. 1985-2002.