Marianne Prenzel

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Marianne Prenzel (born January 31, 1926 in Langenbielau , Silesia , German Empire ) is a German stage, film and television actress as well as a sought-after voice actress .

Live and act

Born in Silesia, she received her acting training in Berlin shortly after the war, where she began her first stage engagement. From 1948 to 1951 Marianne Prenzel worked at the Hebbel Theater and in 1951 moved to the ensemble of the Schiller Theater, directed by Boleslaw Barlogs . On this stage the artist celebrated successes with Inez in Frisch's “ Don Juan ”, Alice in Kaiser's “ Kolportage ”, Hymen in Shakespeare's “ As You Like It ” and Walburga in Hauptmann's “ Die Ratten ”. In 1957 Marianne Prenzel went to the Deutsches Theater Göttingen, which at that time was run by Heinz Hilpert . In the 1960s Penzel appeared again at the Berlin-Hebbel-Theater, in later years she brought Kurt Meisel to the Bavarian State Theater, which he directed.

Her screen debut in 1948 in the Gert Fröbe film hit Berlin Ballade remained largely unnoticed, but the following year Prenzel was offered the leading role in the tendentious DEFA comedy Saure Wochen - frohe Feste . However, this film had no effect on her career, especially since Marianne Prenzel only worked in the West (West Berlin and West German theaters and films). After their appearances had shrunk to batch format in the early 1960s, Prenzel concentrated on participating in television games. In 1972 she finished her work in front of the camera, which was all in all little remarkable, and concentrated on stage work as well as on her second professional mainstay since the 1950s: dubbing. Prenzel lent her German voice to numerous Hollywood stars, including Corinne Calvet , Joanne Dru , Mitzi Gaynor , Debbie Reynolds and Barbara Rush .

Filmography

literature

  • Herbert A. Frenzel , Hans Joachim Moser (ed.): Kürschner's biographical theater manual. Drama, opera, film, radio. Germany, Austria, Switzerland. De Gruyter, Berlin 1956, DNB 010075518 , p. 568.
  • Johann Caspar Glenzdorf: Glenzdorf's international film lexicon. Biographical manual for the entire film industry. Volume 3: Peit – Zz. Prominent-Filmverlag, Bad Münder 1961, DNB 451560752 , p. 1327.

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