Maria Häussler

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Maria Häussler , also Maria Häussler (* around 1940), is a German actress .

Life

Maria Häussler is the daughter of the actor couple Richard Häussler and Maria Andergast . In the season 1956/57 she appeared at the Hebbel Theater in Berlin in the comedy Die Abiturientin ( Matura ) by Ladislas Fodor in a production by Erik Ode . In the season 1957/58 she appeared at the Theater am Kurfürstendamm in Die Zeit und die Conways . After the Wall was built in 1961 , Häussler went west.

Her other stage roles included u. a. Princess Sidselill in Schluck und Jau (Städtische Bühnen Frankfurt, director: Herbert Kreppel , premiere: 1962/63 season) and the viola in Was ihr wollt (Städtische Bühnen Lübeck, premiere: season 1963/64, director: Jürgen von Alten ). In the 1964/65 season she played on the stages of the Hanseatic City of Lübeck in the world premiere of the play Where is Jena by Theodor Schübel . Then she was engaged at the Wuppertaler Schauspielhaus .

Häussler made her debut as a film actress at the age of 16 under the direction of Hans Heinrich as a young, pretty shipbuilding student Anne Vollbeck in the DEFA barge comedy Alter Kahn und Junge Liebe (1957) alongside Götz George , who made his first major in this film Played film role. Häussler and George, for whom Maria Häussler was his first "real" girlfriend, fell in love during the shooting; the liaison continued after filming and lasted two years. Occasionally she also worked as a voice actress for DEFA between 1956 and 1958 . In a TV adaptation of the Büchner drama Dantons Tod (first broadcast: March 1963) she played Julie Danton, the wife of the title hero, directed by Fritz Umgelter .

Häussler also worked as a radio play speaker, a . a. at SWR , Süddeutscher Rundfunk , WDR and NDR . She read u. a. Texts by Honoré de Balzac and Bertolt Brecht , participated in radio plays (including Urfaust , visit to the rectory by Ilse Aichinger ) and recorded fairy tale radio plays . In 1974 she took on a role in the radio play production It had to be, Elke, that was unbearable at WDR or Die Änste der Bürger von Renke Korn .

From 1963 Maria Häussler was married to the director, senior stage manager and dramaturge Günter Ballhausen (1929–2015). The marriage, which resulted in two daughters, was later divorced.

Filmography

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. a b THE FILM-GRANDPA'S TELLS . Synchron forum of the German dubbing index. Article from July 2017. Accessed on August 20, 2019. Note: Maria Häussler was 16 years old and two years younger than Götz George when the film Alter Kahn und Junge Liebe was set . So 1940 is probably the year of birth.
  2. a b Jens Rübner: Career start at DEFA . In: The fascination of scenery - 60 years of DEFA . Engelsdorfer Verlag 2011. ISBN 978-3-86703-985-7 .
  3. The high school graduate 'by Ladislas Fodor . Program booklet. Retrieved August 20, 2019.
  4. THE TIME AND THE CONWAYS . Program booklet. Retrieved August 20, 2019.
  5. "Get over" - for a great actor . In: the Friday of June 27, 2016. Retrieved on August 20, 2019.
  6. WHERE IS JENA? . Review of the premiere. In: DIE ZEIT of June 4, 1965. Retrieved on August 20, 2019.
  7. Jens Rübner: Götz George . In: »Snot Noses«. Film children - from days long gone . Engelsdorfer Verlag 2012. ISBN 978-3-86901-181-3 .
  8. LES AMANTS DE VERONA . DEFA Foundation film database. Retrieved August 20, 2019.
  9. LABAKAN . DEFA Foundation film database. Retrieved August 20, 2019.
  10. Danton's death . Production details. Retrieved August 20, 2019.
  11. Maria Häussler (speaker) . audible.de. Retrieved August 20, 2019.
  12. Studio time radio play: Visit to the rectory . Production details. Deutschlandfunk culture . Retrieved August 20, 2019.
  13. Goethe's earlier, fragmentary Faust as a radio play: Der Urfaust . Production details. Deutschlandfunk culture . Retrieved August 20, 2019.
  14. Renke Korn . Radio play productions. Retrieved August 20, 2019.
  15. GÜNTER BALLHAUSEN (1929-2015) . Obituary. Official website of the Landestheater Württemberg-Hohenzollern . Retrieved on August 20, 2010. Note: Ballhausen, born in Essen, was a director at the Frankfurt am Main city theaters, then chief dramaturge and chief stage director of the Hanseatic city of Lübeck. From 1965 to 1975 he was senior director and member of the theater management at the Wuppertal theater. From 1990 to 2000 he was chief dramaturge at the theater of the city of Heilbronn, from 1984 to 1991 senior stage director at the Landestheater Württemberg-Hohenzollern.
  16. ^ Günter Ballhausen . In: Who's Who . Retrieved August 20, 2019.