Ludwig Blochberger

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Ludwig Blochberger (2014)

Ludwig Blochberger (born December 3, 1982 in East Berlin ) is a German actor .

Life

Ludwig Blochberger was born in East Berlin in 1982 . His father Lutz Blochberger (actor and director) and his mother Gitta Blochberger ( puppeteer ) were studying at the Ernst Busch Academy of Dramatic Arts at that time . In 1984 the family moved to Dresden due to the two parents' theater engagements . In 1990 Ludwig Blochberger attended the Kreuzschule of the Dresden Kreuzchor for a year . In 1992 he moved to Vienna and belonged to the Vienna Boys' Choir until 1995on. With this famous Austrian boys' choir, he got to know the world early on on concert tours (Japan, Australia, USA). In 1995 he made his first appearance at the theater, he was part of the theater production Woyzeck at the Chur Open Air Theater ( Switzerland ) . Then he was able to continue with further appearances at the Vienna Burgtheater , including playing Prince Edward III. in the production of Edward II by Claus Peymann . In 1999 Ludwig Blochberger returned to his native Berlin. In 2000 he played the role of Klaus Heuser in the multi-award-winning three-part TV series Die Manns - A novel of the century , alongside Armin Mueller-Stahl . In the same year he finished his school career and one year later began his acting studies at the "Ernst Busch" Academy of Dramatic Arts in Berlin .

While still a student, he shot for the cinema productions Sommersturm (director: Marco Kreuzpaintner ) and the Oscar-winning film The Lives of Others (director: Florian Henckel von Donnersmarck ). The television film Der Vater meine Sister (Director: Christoph Stark ), a family drama in which Ludwig Blochberger played a leading role together with Katharina Schüttler and Christian Berkel , premiered at the Munich Film Festival and earned it an Undine Award nomination for "Best Young Character Actor" a. In 2005 he completed his acting training and took part in 3 Tatort episodes, including the leading role in the Frankfurt Tatort staged by Niki Stein : Empty . In the movie The Last Train (directed by Joseph Vilsmaier & Dana Vávrová ) he played the unscrupulous SS-Obersturmführer Crewes, who escorted one of the last deportation trains to Auschwitz.

His most important theater works to date include the productions by the director Hans Neuenfels , who brought him to the RuhrTriennale in Bochum in 2005 for his world premiere of Schumann, Schubert and der Schnee , an “Opera for the piano” . In this fictional encounter between the two musical geniuses, Ludwig Blochberger played the role of Franz Schubert (actor) alongside the baritone Olaf Bär . There is a 60-minute film adaptation of this production by the director Enrique Sánchez Lansch . In 2007 Neuenfels finally cast him in the title role of Baal by Bertolt Brecht at the Munich Volkstheater . In the same year Ludwig Blochberger played the leading role for the first time under the direction of his father Lutz Blochberger in the world premiere of the tragic comedy Heil Hitler! , the playwright Rolf Hochhuth .

In 2013 Ludwig Blochberger played the German ex-Chancellor Helmut Schmidt in the docu-drama Helmut Schmidt - Questions of Life (director: Ben von Grafenstein ). This film was broadcast on ARD on December 23, 2013 on the occasion of Helmut Schmidt's 95th birthday. In the same year he took on the continuous role of Inspector Riwal in the new ARD series Kommissar Dupin , which is based on the best-selling novels by the author Jean-Luc Bannalec and is set in Brittany (France). Since autumn 2015, Ludwig Blochberger and Stephanie Stumph have been playing detective Tom Kupfer and Annabell Lorenz at the side of Jan-Gregor Kremp in the ZDF crime series Der Alte .

Ludwig Blochberger is the singer and guitarist of the band GENIEßEN & LEIDEN, which he founded together with the actors Roman Roth and Thimo Meitner in autumn 2017.

Filmography

movie theater

watch TV

theatre

Audio book

reading

Web links

Commons : Ludwig Blochberger  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. Klaudia Wick: Well-intentioned lies. In: Berliner Zeitung . March 8, 2006, accessed August 27, 2014 .
  2. Wolf Banitzki: Revolt would be appropriate. In: theaterkritiken.com. Retrieved August 27, 2014 .
  3. Barbara Möller: Crazy about Adolf. In: Hamburger Abendblatt . January 15, 2007, accessed August 27, 2014 .