Markus glasses (actor)

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Markus Gläser (* 1986 in Wiesbaden ) is a German actor .

Life

Glasses grew up in his hometown Wiesbaden. Even in elementary school he played as one of the dwarfs in the fairy tale play Snow White and the seven dwarfs in the school theater. He attended the Carl von Ossietzky School in Wiesbaden. There he also took part in school theater performances, wrote his own small plays and graduated from high school there in 2006. After graduating from high school, glasses first traveled through South Africa . From 2006–2007 he lived and worked in France , where he helped set up an organization in Marseille to take care of immigrants and refugees in the context of volunteer projects . From 2007 to 2009 he then studied applied political science at the universities of Freiburg im Breisgau and Aix-en-Provence . He completed his studies with a bachelor's intermediate examination.

He then decided on an artistic career and initially worked as an assistant director and stage manager at the Hessian State Theater Wiesbaden in the 2009/10 season . From 2010 to 2014, Gläser completed his acting studies at the University of Music and Performing Arts in Frankfurt am Main . There belonged u. a. Susanne Wolff and Werner Wölbern to his teachers.

During his studies he performed a. a. already at the Schauspiel Frankfurt (season 2012/13; in the roles of Christian and Crusius in Purgatory in Ingolstadt , staging: Constanze Becker ), at the Theater Heidelberg (season 2012/13), at the Staatstheater Darmstadt (2013) and with his own reading and Music project HIPHO Poetry at the Wiesbaden State Theater (season 2012/13).

Glasses has been working as a freelance actor since the 2014/15 season. In the 2014/15 season he took on the role of the "psychopathic and greasy" dealer Ben in the German-language premiere of the one-act play Brilliant Adventures by Alistair McDowall at the Mannheim National Theater . He had further stage engagements at the Rheinisches Landestheater Neuss (2014; as Niki Modersohn in Das Himbeerreich by Andres Veiel ) at the Staatstheater Cottbus (2014/2015; as Jürgen “Brötchen” Brodele in Sonnenallee ).

In 2015 he was a guest at the Brothers Grimm Festival in Hanau . There he appeared as a woodcutter in Hansel and Gretel and as Ferdinand in Kabale und Liebe . Since 2015 he has appeared in the solo piece Der Weg zum Glück by Ingrid Lausund with the Freie Schauspiel Ensemble Frankfurt . In the 2015/16 season he appeared again at the Schauspiel Frankfurt (as Bürger in Dantons Tod , director: Ulrich Rasche ).

In the 2016/17 season, glasses went to war as a guest at the Hessian State Theater Wiesbaden - imagine if he were here by Janne Teller .

Glasses also had television roles. He played the intern Markus in the satirical ZDF sitcom Lerchenberg . In January 2017, he was seen alongside Louis Nitsche in the ZDF series Notruf Hafenkante (director: Oren Schmuckler ) in a leading role as Timo Röder; he played one of two motorcycle enthusiasts who take part in illegal motorcycle races. In February 2017 he was seen in the ZDF series The Public Prosecutor in another episode role; He played the suspect student Sebastian Leonhardt, who let a homosexual young man, who was later found dead, live with him.

Glasses lives in Wiesbaden.

Filmography (selection)

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. a b c Markus glasses ; Profile and vita at Schauspielervideos.de. Retrieved January 20, 2017.
  2. a b c d e f g Wiesbaden actor Markus Gläser plays in the ZDF sitcom "Lerchenberg" ; Portrait. In: Allgemeine Zeitung from September 15, 2015. Retrieved January 20, 2017.
  3. a b c d e f g h i Markus Gläser ( Memento of the original from January 20, 2017 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. . Vita. Official website of the University of Music and Performing Arts . Retrieved January 20, 2017. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.schauspielabsolventen.de
  4. Four times life, at least: "Brilliant Adventures" as a German premiere at the National Theater in Mannheim . Performance review. Retrieved January 20, 2017.