Maria Krahn

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Maria Krahn (born October 7, 1896 in Cologne , † December 19, 1977 in Gelsenkirchen ; born Maria Katharina Hubertina Krahn ) was a German actress and voice actress .

life and career

Maria Krahn, born in Cologne in 1896, attended Louise Dumont's drama school after finishing school . Director Saladin Schmitt got her first engagement at the Schauspielhaus Bochum .

Then she played in Frankfurt am Main and Hamburg, and finally she appeared at the Reinhardt Theaters in Berlin until 1933 . In 1928 she married the director and artistic director Hans Hinrich (1903–1974). With the dawn of the sound film age, she became a popular supporting actress, who made 53 film roles by 1945.

After the war she turned back to the theater. From 1955 to 1959 she was on the Wuppertal theaters , from 1960 she played at the municipal theaters of Gelsenkirchen and again at the Schauspielhaus Bochum.

Filmography

  • 1931: Schneider Wibbel
  • 1934: Hermione and the seven upright ones
  • 1934: A girl with power of attorney
  • 1934: Oberwachtmeister Schwenke
  • 1934: Pappi
  • 1935: The girl Johanna
  • 1935: Liselotte of the Palatinate
  • 1935: Noise about Weidemann
  • 1935: The courageous seafarer
  • 1935: Sustaining society
  • 1935: The Foolish Virgin
  • 1935: The shipyard for the gray pike
  • 1936: August the Strong
  • 1936: The kidnapping
  • 1936: incognito
  • 1936: a small gold ring
  • 1936: Noise and luck around Künnemann
  • 1936: The merry women
  • 1936: The beauty spot
  • 1936: Stronger than paragraphs
  • 1936: Susanne in the bath
  • 1936: family parade
  • 1936: girl robbery
  • 1937: Different world
  • 1937: Women's love - women's suffering
  • 1937: Togger
  • 1937: The irresistible
  • 1938: Freight from Baltimore
  • 1938: The muzzle
  • 1938: Holm's murderous matter
  • 1938: Napoleon is to blame for everything
  • 1938: Divorce trip

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Biographical data of Maria Krahn in: Between the stage and the barracks: Lexicon of the persecuted theater, film and music artists 1933 to 1945 , by Kay Less , Metropol, 2008, page 169.