Loni Pyrmont

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Loni Pyrmont (born December 31, 1900 in the German Reich , † after 1944) was a German operetta singer and silent film actress with a short career in the early 1920s.

Theater and film

Loni Pyrmont had attended secondary school for girls and received her artistic training at the drama school of the Schauspielhaus Berlin during the First World War . She also took singing lessons on the side. Loni Pyrmont's career began with small roles in operetta productions by Rudolf Nelson , after which she took part in cabaret appearances in the Rhineland and Westphalia. The theater director Martin Zickel became one of her patrons on stage.

Loni Pyrmont made her best-known appearances in comedies, theater plays and operettas such as When one is in love, Das Mädel von Davos, Der Raub der Sabinerinnen, Mein Leopold and Jean Gilbert's Uschi . Loni Pyrmont celebrated another success in 1924 with a performance of the operetta Die Fledermaus . She was a member of the Berlin Rose Theater ensemble as Loni Rose-Pyrmont until the end of her stage career in 1944, and she was also seen at the theater on Kommandantenstrasse.

At the end of the war in 1918, Max Landa discovered Loni Pyrmont for the film. From 1921 to 1924 she worked in mostly less important productions by well-known directors such as Paul Heidemann , EA Dupont , Manfred Noa and Georg Jacoby . Film trips took her to Italy , Switzerland , France and Monaco .

Private

Loni Pyrmont had married his colleague (actor and singer) Alfred Krafft-Lortzing on April 7, 1925 , seven years later the actor Hans Rose from the Rose Theater, to which she had been a soubrette since 1930 , became her second husband. Nothing is currently known about her later life.

Filmography

  • 1918: The Japanese
  • 1921: The pride of the family
  • 1921: Ghosts of the past
  • 1922: The black chess lady
  • 1922: That's how men are
  • 1923: The game of love
  • 1923: Adam and Eve
  • 1924: The beautiful adventure

literature

  • Kurt Mühsam / Egon Jacobsohn: Lexicon of the film . Lichtbildbühne publishing house, Berlin 1926. P. 145 f.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Loni Pyrmont-Rose in luise-berlin.de