Willi Kleinoschegg
Wilhelm Kleinoschegg (born December 20, 1885 in Graz , Austria-Hungary , † September 1, 1955 in Dresden ) was a German actor .
Life
Willi Kleinoschegg began his acting training at the Burgtheater in Vienna and later continued it at the Reichersche Drama School in Berlin. He was tutored by Alexander Strakosch and Adolph L'Arronge . He then appeared on various stages in Bielefeld, Jena, Hirschberg and Aachen, where he played heroes and adolescent lovers. In 1913 he moved to Dresden and worked at what was then the Albert Theater under director Maximus Rene. In 1915, discovered by Artistic Director Nikolaus Graf von Seebach , he moved to the Dresden Court Theater . He worked at the Saxon State Theaters in Dresden for almost forty years . For his portrayal of Lenin in Nikolai Pogodin's play The Glockenspiel des Kremlin , he was awarded the GDR National Prize in 1951 .
Kleinoschegg made his film debut in 1918 in a supporting role in Rudi Bach's silent film Poor Little Eva , a film adaptation of Paul Langenscheidt 's novel of the same name on the subject of abortion, which was later censored and shortened. Only at the end of his acting career was Kleinoschegg back on the screen. He played the role of the father of a main character in two literary adaptations produced by DEFA : first in 1951 in Corinna Schmidt (after Theodor Fontane's wife Jenny Treibel ) and in 1954 in Pole Poppenspäler .
Willi Kleinoschegg died in 1955. He found his final resting place at the Weißer Hirsch forest cemetery in Dresden.
Filmography
- 1918: Poor little Eva
- 1951: Corinna Schmidt
- 1954: Pole Poppenspäler
theatre
- 1926: Max Mohr : Platinum mines in Tulpin (Columbus Meier) - Director: Georg Kiesau ( Sächsische Staatstheater Dresden - Schauspielhaus)
- 1929: Gerhard Menzel : Fern-Ost - Director: Josef Gielen (Sächsische Staatstheater Dresden - Schauspielhaus)
- 1932: Johann Wolfgang von Goethe : Götz von Berlichingen - Director: Josef Gielen (Sächsische Staatstheater Dresden - Schauspielhaus)
- 1932: Sigmund Graff / Carl Ernst Hintze : The Endless Road - Director: Georg Kiesau (Sächsische Staatstheater Dresden - Schauspielhaus)
- 1940: Curt Goetz : The Liar and the Nun - Director: Georg Kiesau (Sächsische Staatstheater Dresden - Schauspielhaus)
- 1940: Hanns Gobsch : Maria von Scottland - Director: Karl Hans Böhm (Sächsische Staatstheater Dresden - Schauspielhaus)
- 1942: Johannes von Guenther : Der Kreidekreis - Director: Rudolf Schröder (Saxon State Theater Dresden - Schauspielhaus)
- 1943: Otto Erler : Die Blutsfreunde - Director: Rudolf Schröder (Sächsische Staatstheater Dresden - Schauspielhaus)
- 1943: William Shakespeare : Hamlet (King Claudius) - Director: Georg Kiesau (Sächsische Staatstheater Dresden - Schauspielhaus)
- 1947: Konstantin Simonow : The Russian Question (MacPherson) - Director: Albert Fischel ( Staatstheater Dresden )
- 1949: Vercors : The Silence of the Sea - Director: Otto Dierichs (Staatstheater Dresden)
- 1951: Nikolai Pogodin : The Glockenspiel des Kremlin (Lenin) - Director: Martin Hellberg (Staatstheater Dresden)
- 1952: Nikolai Pogodin: The Man with the Gun (Lenin) - Director: Guido Reif (Staatstheater Dresden)
- 1953: Erwin Strittmatter : Katzgraben (party secretary) - Director: Bertolt Brecht ( Berliner Ensemble )
Awards
- 1951: National Prize of the GDR III. Art and literature class
Web links
- Willi Kleinoschegg in the Internet Movie Database (English)
- Willi Kleinoschegg at filmportal.de
Individual evidence
- ^ Berliner Zeitung of October 18, 1951; P. 3
- ^ Berliner Zeitung of September 6, 1955; P. 4
- ↑ Willi Kleinoschegg In: Our National Prize Winners 1951. Cultural Association for the Democratic Renewal of Germany, Berlin 1952.
personal data | |
---|---|
SURNAME | Kleinoschegg, Willi |
ALTERNATIVE NAMES | Kleinoschegg, Wilhelm |
BRIEF DESCRIPTION | German actor |
DATE OF BIRTH | December 20, 1885 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Graz , Austria-Hungary |
DATE OF DEATH | September 1, 1955 |
Place of death | Dresden |