Margarete Henning-Roth

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Margarete Henning-Roth , also Margarethe Henning-Roth or Margaretha Henning-Roth , (born June 11, 1899 in Munich , † after 1961), was a German actress .

Life

Henning-Roth was born as the daughter of the post office clerk Christian Henning and his wife Maria Dorn under the real name Margareta Berta Henning in Munich. She attended girls' high school. She received her acting and singing training from Ernst von Possart and the concert singer Magda Lenau . She had her first stage engagements at the Theater of Tilsit, at the City Theater Konstanz , at Ulm Theater and the City Theater Kaiserslautern . She then played at various Berlin and Munich theaters ( Münchner Kammerspiele ). Since the 1930s she also worked at the Residenztheater in Munich . After the Second World War , she was recorded there as a permanent member of the ensemble from 1946 to 1951. Henning-Roth was an affiliated member of the Reichstheaterkammer .

Henning-Roth has been active in silent films since 1919 . Between 1936 and 1956 is proven as an actress in the sound film. She played there, with a matronly figure, mostly small and small roles, batches , especially female service staff (such as waitress or cloakroom attendants). The IMDb's first film is the peasant comedy The Laughing Third from 1936, where she is named in the cast list as “Corpulent Lady with Child”. In Willi Forst's film fun play Serenade (1937) she appeared as a waitress. In the film Comedians , which premiered on September 5, 1941 , she embodied the cloakroom attendant at the Neuberin, directed by GW Pabst .

After the Second World War she had supporting roles in homeland films and fairy tale films . In the black and white comedy Die Drei Dorfheiligen (1949) she played Hilgermoserin, the wife of the village mayor Hilgermoser ( Joe Stöckel ). In the fairy tale film Tischlein deck dich (1956) she played the role of the devious landlady at the side of Hans Elwenspoek .

Henning-Roth took on various radio and television roles.

In 1924 she married the administrative officer Anton Roth. In the German Stage Yearbook 1959 she is listed as living in Munich's old town (Munich 2, Neuturmstrasse 10). In 1961, Glenzdorf's International Film Lexicon also used this address; Naring , Post Westerham in the district of Miesbach (with a telephone connection in Feldkirchen ) is given as another place of residence . It can therefore be assumed that Henning-Roth was still alive in 1961.

literature

  • Johann Caspar Glenzdorf: Glenzdorf's international film lexicon. Biographical manual for the entire film industry. Volume 2: Hed – Peis. Prominent-Filmverlag, Bad Münder 1961, DNB 451560744 , p. 645.

Filmography

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Jürgen Schläder / Robert Braunmüller: Tradition with a future: 100 years of the Prinzregententheater in Munich . Ricordi Verlag 1996. p. 370. Excerpts from Google Books .
  2. ^ Alois Johannes Lippl: Two hundred years of residence theater in words and pictures . Festschrift for the opening of the Munich Residenztheater on January 28, 1951. List of actresses in the ensemble. P. 70. Excerpts from Google Books .
  3. ^ Deutsches Bühnen-Jahrbuch: Theatergeschichtliches Jahr- und ...: Volume 55 Entry on Google Books
  4. Serenade . Cast list. Retrieved September 10, 2016.
  5. Filmkunst, issue 18 . Entry on Google Books
  6. Tischlein deck dich ( Memento of the original from March 4, 2016 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. . Content, cast and film program (www.maerchenfilm.de; with photo by Margarete Henning-Roth) @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.maerchenfilm.pytalhost.com
  7. ↑ Set the table . Detailed cast list with photos of the scene. Retrieved September 10, 2016
  8. ^ German stage yearbook . Volume 67, FA Gèunther & Sohn a.-g., 1959. Excerpts from Google Books .
  9. Carnival Detailed cast list. Official website of the Friedrich Wilhelm Murnau Foundation . Retrieved September 10, 2016.