Klaus Barner (actor)

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Klaus Barner (* 1933 ) is a German actor and radio play speaker .

Life

Barner played on stages in Trier, Bochum, at the Theater Bonn and at the Ruhr Festival in Recklinghausen.

In 1955 he made his feature film debut under the name Klaus Meyer-Barner in Ulrich Erfurth's drama Mature Youth . In the almost 50 years of his career as a film and television actor, he appeared in over 50 productions. He played under well-known directors such as Tom Toelle ( Ein Sommer - ein Herbst ), Eberhard Itzenplitz ( The Man from Brooklyn ) and Fritz Umgelter ( Caroline ), Wolfgang Menges Grüß Gott, I come from over there , in Die Vorstadtkrokodile, based on Max 's youth book of the same name von der Grün and as Pontius Pilate in the musical arrangement of the Passion story It would be good that a person were killed for the people . Barner is also known to a wide audience for major roles in television multi-part shows as well as his recurring roles in television series. He played the investigative Inspector Hill alongside Hardy Krüger in Street Sweeper The Knife by Francis Durbridge , the father of the title character embodied by Anja Schüte in The Defiant Head after Emmy von Rhoden, the head of the institution in the ARD series Knastmusik , and the math teacher in the family series Out of the Blue Dr. Wiesner and on ZDF - adventure four-parter The black boomerang according to Rüdiger Bahr the biochemist Dr. Peter Lester. In the films of the Sat.1 game show Cluedo based on the board game of the same name , he was seen as Pastor Clemens Grün.

In addition, he frequently took on guest roles in television series and series such as Tatort , Die Schwarzwaldklinik , Das Traumschiff , Ein Fall für Zwei , SOKO 5113 , Die Männer vom K3 , Der Clown , Eurocops , Wolffs Revier and Großstadtrevier .

Barner also worked extensively as a radio play speaker in over 100 productions. He played the main role of Pirx in the WDR production Testflug nach Stanislaw Lem , the main role in Gentle after Fjodor Michailowitsch Dostojewski , the Kronos in the 15-part MDR production Prometheus after Franz Fühmann , was in Norbert Schaeffer's three-part adaptation of Rainald Goetz ' Fortress can be heard as Joseph Goebbels, among others, and has taken on the role of master detective Sherlock Holmes in the SWR production Sherlock Holmes and the Whitechapel Murders alongside Wolfgang Condrus as Dr. Watson.

Barner's daughter is the actress Nora Barner (* 1963).

Filmography (selection)

Radio plays (selection)

  • 1974: test flight; WDR; Director: Manfred Brückner
  • 1980: a director is sacrificed; WDR; Director: Heinz Dieter Köhler
  • 1980: Help comes to me from the mountains; WDR; Director: Oswald Döpke
  • 1980: paper tiger; WDR; Director: Klaus-Dieter Pittrich
  • 1981: No trace of life ...; BR; Director: Heiner Schmidt
  • 1984: exit; SR; Director: Lothar Trautmann
  • 1985: Clara or the three forms of madness; SR; Director: Norbert Schaeffer
  • 1985: murder weapon; SR; Director: Willy H. Thiem
  • 1986: The caretaker; MR; Director: Günther Sauer
  • 1986: Klaus Störtebeker or Only the Liar comes into possession of the truth; NDR; Director: Hans Gerd Krogmann
  • 1986: passionate murder; WDR; Director: Manfred Brückner
  • 1986: Rebecca's child; SR; Director: Arturo Möller
  • 1987: Private detective Albert Samson: A woman is looking for herself; SWF; Director: Hans Gerd Krogmann
  • 1989: Danton's death; SDR; Director: Norbert Schaeffer
  • 1989: The dictates of the transhumans; SDR Heidelberg; Director: Andreas Weber-Schäfer
  • 1989: The dead don't laugh; NDR; Director: Hans Rosenhauer
  • 1990: The Conquistadors; NDR; Director: Hans Rosenhauer
  • 1991: Anna Marx and the caviar; SWF; Director: Ursula Langrock
  • 1991: last love; NDR; Director: Hans Rosenhauer
  • 1992: Sorgler's return; SDR Heidelberg; Director: Andreas Weber-Schäfer
  • 1993: Anna Marx and the State Secretary; SWF; Director: Walter Adler
  • 1993: I found my religion; SWF; Director: Annette Jainski
  • 1993: Spacebound; SDR Heidelberg; Director: Andreas Weber-Schäfer
  • 1993: Squatt / Demolition; SR; Director: Marguerite Gateau
  • 1994: The Nights of St. SWF; Director: Hans Gerd Krogmann
  • 1994: The gentle one; SWF; Director: Corinne Frottier
  • 1994: One last inventory; WDR; Director: Hans Gerd Krogmann
  • 1994: fortress; SWF; Director: Norbert Schaeffer
  • 1994: What time is it, Mr. Borges ?; SWF; Director: Ulrich Lampen
  • 1995: Blankenhorn and the Blue Murderer; NDR; Director: Hans Rosenhauer
  • 1997: Anna Marx and the Berlin Cartel; SWF; Director: Walter Adler
  • 1997: Cthulhu; SDR; Director: Andreas Weber-Schäfer
  • 1997: The visitor from Germany; SR; Director: Annette Jainski
  • 1997: Satie-rikon. You should compose music that you can listen to; SDR; Director: Alexander Schuhmacher
  • 1997: Sherlock Holmes and the Whitechapel Murders; SWR; Directed by Patrick Blank
  • 1998: The man who watched the trains; SWF; Director: Walter Adler
  • 2000: The adventurous Simplicissimus; SWR; Director: Hans Gerd Krogmann
  • 2000: Inspector jury stands in the rain; MDR; Director: Hans Gerd Krogmann
  • 2001: The Miss of Scudéry; SWR; Director: Patrick Blank, Benno Schurr
  • 2002: Babushka; SWR; Direction: Hartmut Kirste , Benno Schurr
  • 2002: The Nippenheims; SWR Tübingen; Director: Günter Maurer
  • 2002: Prometheus; MDR; Director: Hans Gerd Krogmann
  • 2003: last hour; SWR; Director: Anette Berger
  • 2004: The second spot; SWR; Director: Stefan Hilsbecher
  • 2004: Monopoly; SWR; Director: Gerwig Epkes
  • 2004: Where were you when the fire; SWR; Director: Uta-Maria Heim
  • 2006: I was a monkey child; SWR; Director: Oliver Sturm

Radio features / documentation (selection)

  • 2009: Education for a socialist personality - children's homes in the GDR - Author: Thomas Gaevert - SWR2 , 55 min.
  • 2009: Ways to Oz - Author: Thomas Gaevert - SWR2 feature on Sunday, 55 min.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Kurt Dörnemann: Shakespeare-Theater: Bochum 1919-1979 , Laupenmühlen-Druck 1979, p. 98
  2. Theater heute , Volume 20, 1979, p. 56
  3. Fred Eckhard, Matthias Franck: You for us and we for you: 40 years Ruhrfestspiele Recklinghausen , JHW ​​Dietz Nachhaben 1986, p. 218