Lisa Stammer

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Annaliese "Lisa" Stammer (* 1916 in Düsseldorf as Annaliese Kressel ; † March 1985 in Haar (near Munich) ) was a German dancer , actress and restaurateur .

Life

Stammer began her career as a dancer at the Frankfurt Opera . She finally came to Munich via Duisburg and Düsseldorf, where she was to find her home. In the Bavarian capital, she delighted as a solo dancer in the Theater am Gärtnerplatz .

In 1940 she made her first appearance in a film when she got a role as the Mexican dancer Rosita in the feature film Between Hamburg and Haiti . After further roles as a dancer, such as in Die Reise nach Marrakesch or Die Nacht ohne Sünde , she received several more important roles in the following years, such as in the Austrian film Torreani from 1951 as Isabella at René Deltgen's side and in 1952 in Theo Lingen's and Paul Hörbiger cited comedy You only live once in one of the two leading female roles as Lilian. In that era, on August 15, 1952, it graced the front page of the Austrian magazine Funk und Film .

In later years she and her future partner Guido Eberl - "a former car dealer well known in the city", so Hans Ruland in the jazz newspaper - ran the jazz bar Kleines Rondell in Maxvorstadt at the intersection of Luisenstrasse and Karlstrasse. At a time when curfew at one o'clock was still in force in Munich, the bar , which continued in the style of the 1950s, had one of the few licenses to keep it open longer. This led to the fact that in Munich's then extremely lively jazz scene, numerous artists from performances elsewhere moved into the until then mostly empty little roundabout from around 1:30 a.m. , including Monty Alexander , Joe Newman , Bud Freeman , Barney Kessel , Lennie Felix , Jimmy Woode , Edgar Wilson, Hans van der Sys or Freddie Brocksieper . This often led to jam sessions , to which Eberl gladly contributed with one of the treasures of the Rondell by playing the violin that once belonged to the famous gypsy musician Toki Horváth , but which only had one string. Eberl received the violin for paying Horváth's funeral expenses in 1971.

Lisa Stammer, who last suffered from Parkinson's , died shortly after Guido Eberl in March 1985. She found her final resting place in the Waldfriedhof in Munich .

Filmography

Lexical entry

  • Werner Ebnet: You lived in Munich: Biographies from eight centuries , Buch und Media, Munich, 2016. p. 577.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. In Night Without Sin she formed a “dancing couple” with Werner Stammer. She married the ballet master Werner Stammer (1906–1985) in 1938 in Munich. The couple gave numerous guest appearances. See Tanz-Journal 2006, p. 26. (The German Dance Archive in Cologne administers Werner Stammer's estate.)
  2. Mic Oechsner : Toki Horváth , Jazzgeige.at, August 20, 2017