Lisa Siebel

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Adele Lisa Siebel (born October 2, 1919 in Recklinghausen ) is a German actress and conférencière .

Life and accomplishments

The daughter of the brewery director Wilhelm Siebel and his wife Adele received their artistic training at the Folkwang School in Essen in the early 1940s . Lisa Siebel then moved to Munich , where she appeared on the stage (State Theater, Kammerspiele) from 1942. Even after the war, she stayed in the Bavarian capital.

Lisa Siebel's film career was short-lived. Between 1942 and 1944 she was seen in five feature film productions. She made her debut under the direction of Hans H. Zerlett in the Hans Moser comedy once the dear Lord . This was followed by Paul May's smuggler drama The uncanny change of Alex Roscher after Curt Corrinth with Rudolf Prack in the title role. Siebel played a bigger role in the love drama Melusine with Olga Chechowa, but the film by the loyal director Hans Steinhoff was banned immediately after its completion in 1944 and was no longer shown. Siebel's participation in Erich Engel's revue film Long Live Love with Johannes Heesters and Lizzi Waldmüller was not mentioned in the opening credits. Her greatest film role should also be her last: In Viktor Tourjansky's crime film Orient-Express she played as “Frau Dr. Geldern ”alongside Siegfried Breuer , Rudolf Prack, Gusti Wolf and Paul Dahlke as the investigative commissioner“ Iwanowitsch ”.

After the Second World War, Lisa Siebel appeared for a while as the conférencière in Rudolf Schündler's cabaret “ Die Schaubude ” and accompanied the late performances there. Lisa Siebel was married to the Munich service provider and private pilot Berndt Jessurun.

Filmography (selection)

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. after Piet Hein Honig, Hanns-Georg Rodek : 100001. The show business encyclopedia of the 20th century. Showbiz-Data-Verlag, Villingen-Schwenningen 1992, ISBN 3-929009-01-5 , p. 870.
  2. ^ Johann Caspar Glenzdorf: Glenzdorfs international film lexicon. Biographical manual for the entire film industry. Volume 3: Peit – Zz. Prominent-Filmverlag, Bad Münder 1961, DNB 451560752 , p. 1606.
  3. Melusine | filmportal.de. In: www.filmportal.de. Retrieved May 3, 2016 .
  4. Gwendolyn von Ambesser : Schaubudenzauber. History and stories of a legendary cabaret , Edition AV, 2006, p. 22.