Lola Chlud

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Lola Chlud (born July 13, 1905 in Olbersdorf , Austrian Silesia , † February 6, 2000 in Darmstadt , Germany ) was a German actress .

Life

The daughter of the lawyer and notary Johann Radowan Chlud grew up in Benisch , attended the humanistic grammar school in Linz , where she gained her first theater experience. In 1925 she married the journalist Arthur Kornhuber. Chlud's first permanent engagement took her to Teplitz-Schönau in the 1927/28 season . This was followed by engagements at the Deutsches Theater in Prague and at the Praise Theater in Breslau before she first reached Berlin in 1930 . There Lola Chlud was active for a season at the German Art Theater. In 1931 she went to Vienna to work at the local Volkstheater until 1933 . That year Lola Chlud moved to the Neue Schauspielhaus (Königsberg) . The following year she made a guest appearance at the Theater an der Wien . Lola Chlud then appeared for three seasons at the Münchner Kammerspiele under Otto Falckenberg , but interrupted her stage career when she received the Dipl.-Ing. Friedrich August Heumann from Königsberg married.

During her stay in Berlin Lola Chlud made her screen debut (April 1931). In the gangster film Panik in Chicago , set in the USA, she played a dancer who became a murderer. In just five years, Chlud was seen in a number of very different roles: sometimes as mother (in Die Entführung ) or as landlady (in Hans im Glück ), several times as lordly (Empress Maria Theresia in Der Junge Baron Neuhaus , a princess in Die Heilige and her fool and a countess in her last movie, the world war drama Standschütze Bruggler ). The birth of their first son (1937) heralded a career break, a second son followed in 1942.

In later years Lola Chlud found it difficult to continue her artistic work alongside her role as a mother. In February 1938 she made a guest appearance at the Bremer Schauspielhaus. During the Second World War she appeared at the theaters in Metz and Königsberg . After the war she was seen in numerous character roles on the stages of Gera , Dresden , Leipzig , Lübeck and most recently, from 1965 to 1986, at the State Theater in Hanover . At that time, the artist rarely appeared in front of the camera (for cinema or television films).

In 2000 Lola Chlud died very old in Darmstadt.

Filmography

  • 1931: Panic in Chicago
  • 1934: The young Baron Neuhaus
  • 1935: The saint and her fool
  • 1935: Hans in luck
  • 1936: The kidnapping
  • 1936: The three around Christine
  • 1936: Standschütze Bruggler
  • 1952: the fate of women
  • 1965: The Harry Domela Case (TV movie)
  • 1968: The case of Wera Sassulitsch (TV movie)
  • 1969: The Lady from Maxim (TV movie)
  • 1982: Return to Germany (TV film)

literature

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Susanne Deuter: On the death of the actress Lola Chlud. In: The Ostpreußenblatt. March 25, 2000.