Marina Wandruszka

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Marina Wandruszka (* 1954 in Vienna ) is an Austrian actress .

Actress Marina Wandruszka

Life

Marina Wandruszka is the daughter of an Italian and an Austrian, the historian Adam Wandruszka , and accordingly grew up bilingually (Italian and German) in Cologne and Venice. During her school days she had already completed dance training in the cathedral city before she began studying acting at the Max Reinhardt Seminar in her native city. She was taught by Susi Nicoletti and Otto Schenk, among others . Wandruszka made her debut at the Bremen Theater in the role of Mizi Schlager in Arthur Schnitzler's play Liebelei, directed by Andrea Breth . After another stint at the Oldenburg State Theater , she came to Hamburg and sang the role of Ida in Johann Strauss ' operetta Die Fledermaus at the State Opera there . Here, Wandruszka was engaged by Jürgen Flimm at the Schauspielhaus Zürich , where she played the title role in Gotthold Ephraim Lessing's comedy Minna von Barnhelm , which she said was her favorite role. In 1985 she followed Flimm to the Hamburg Thalia Theater , of which she has been a member since then.

In addition to acting, Marina Wandruszka also works as a director. She showed her first productions at what was then the second venue of the Thalia Theater, the TiK Theater in the Kunsthalle, which existed from 1972 to 2000. Other directing credits included the Mozart -opera The Marriage of Figaro in Amsterdam and in Innsbruck The Gipsy Princess by Emmerich Kálmán and Giuseppe Verdi's opera La traviata .

Marina Wandruszka has only worked sporadically in front of the camera, as well as for the radio.

Filmography

Radio plays

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Fritz Fellner , Doris A. Corradini (Ed.): Austrian History in the 20th Century. A biographical-bibliographical lexicon (= publications of the Commission for Modern History of Austria. Vol. 99). Böhlau, Vienna et al. 2006, ISBN 3-205-77476-0 , p. 438.
  2. a b c d Paul Barz: Staging monologues of lonely people , Welt am Sonntag from September 9, 2007 , accessed on May 21, 2016
  3. Biography on the Thalia Theater website , accessed on May 21, 2016
  4. Armgard Seegers: "The young colleagues play like the devil" , Hamburger Abendblatt from July 18, 2015 , accessed on May 21, 2016