Klaus Rohrmoser

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Klaus Rohrmoser (born January 4, 1953 in Innsbruck ) is an Austrian director , actor , theater director and author . He completed his studies a. a. at the Lee Strasberg Drama School in New York .

play

Rohrmoser learned a. a. at the Lee Strasberg Drama School in New York . From 1972 to 1997, in addition to directing assignments, he also worked as an actor in the ensemble of the Vienna Volkstheater and as a guest at the Ensembletheater Wien and Tiroler Landestheater , the Volksbühne Berlin, the Landestheater Tübingen, the Schauspielhaus Bochum and the Volkstheater Munich. As a stage actor he played Hamlet in Shakespeare's Hamlet and Richard III. Richard III, in Franz Xaver Kroetz "Not fish, not meat, Hermann, in Trevor Griffith's comedian Mick Connor, in Herbert Achterbusch's Ella, in Georg Büchner's Danton's death the Danton, in Lars Norén Nacht, Mother of the Day, the hotelier Martin, in Alan Ayckbourn's comedy Half Truths the Philip, in Shakespeare's Othello the Iago, the Rappelkopf in Alpenkönig und Misanthrope, the mother in the Weberische by Felix Mitterer and many others.

From 1999 to 2012 Rohrmoser was entrusted with acting direction at the Tiroler Landestheater. He launched the Tyrolean Dramatists Festival in 2002. Various teaching positions at drama schools have been part of his other activities for years.

Since 1993 he has been married to the actress and director Judith Keller , with whom he has two sons.

Film and TV

Rohrmoser played a leading role in a number of movies, including Kaltes Fieber (director: Joseph Rusnak ), Malambo (director: Milan Dor ), Ossegg - or the truth about Hansel and Gretel (director: Thees Klan) and Unter Freunde (director: Lukas Stepanik ). He also worked as a film actor in various television productions from NDR , ORF , ZDF and BR .

Director

Since 1981 Rohrmoser u. a. Staged at the following houses or institutions: Wiener Volkstheater, Theater in der Josefstadt , Wiener Festwochen , Tiroler Landestheater Innsbruck , Tiroler Volksschauspiele Telfs , Münchner Volkstheater , Stadttheater Bruneck , Waldviertler Hoftheater , RAI Radiotelevisione Italiana , Theater Trier , Tyrolean Dramatist Festival .

Literary works

Radio plays

Awards

In 1984 the Milan Dor film Malambo with Rohrmoser in the leading role was awarded the Grand Prize at the Mannheim-Heidelberg Film Festival ; In 1990 Rohrmoser received the Actor Award as the best young actor at the Max Ophüls Prize film festival in Saarbrücken.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Klaus Rohrmoser , on emmywerner.at, accessed on January 15, 2019
  2. Prize winners , on ffmop.de, accessed on January 15, 2019