Martin Rosenstiel

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Martin Rosenstiel , occasionally also known as Martin Rosenstiehl , (born December 11, 1923 in Eschwege ; † unknown) was a German cabaret artist and actor on the stage and film.

Live and act

Rosenstiel studied philosophy and trained as an actor. He began his theater work in the 1948/49 season under Ernst Karchow at the Bremer Kammerspiele. After that, he no longer tied himself to a stage, but appeared as a copywriter, chansonnier and cabaret artist (one-man events with programs such as The Honorable Pear ). As early as the winter of 1956/57, the artist appeared in front of the camera for the first time with a small role in the Thomas Mann theatrical adaptation Confessions of the impostor Felix Krull , after which the bald rose stalk was mainly seen in television productions. At the summer party of Federal Chancellor Helmut Schmidt in Bonn in 1978, he leafed through the program “Festival of pure unreason”, according to Carl-Christian Kaiser in the time , “the German soul freshly on the table”.

Filmography

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. The Night on Chancellor's Pasture , in: Die Zeit 37/1978 ( online archive ), accessed on January 6, 2018.