Nicole Risse-Kaufmann

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Nicole Risse-Kaufmann (born Kaufmann * 1973 in Speyer ) is a German actress , singer and cabaret artist . She often appears with her husband, the singer, songwriter , musician and actor Martin Risse (* 1968 in Dortmund ), artist name Mate Irrniss . Together they have written several children's plays such as Muck's Mäuschen Still . The artist couple has two children.

Nicole Kaufmann

Nicole Kaufmann attended the Mannheim drama school , which she successfully completed. It was there that she met her husband Martin Risse. From 1996 she appeared in numerous independent productions and theaters as an actress and singer, e. B. at the court theater Tromm under Jürgen Flügge . As a member of the cabaret trio Die Allergiker , she won the Baden-Württemberg Cabaret Prize in 1999 in the category of best young cabaret . She went on tour with her chanson program Very Close .

Martin Risse - Mate Irrniss

Martin Risse initially trained as a nurse, but then decided to turn his love for music and theater into a profession and attended the Mannheim drama school , where he also met his future wife Nicole Kaufmann. After completing this, he worked for various independent productions. Martin Risse also teaches stage presentation as a lecturer at the Mannheim Drama School.

Musical creation

The pianist Franz Geenen set Martin Risse's song series, Versoffene Lieder zu vorgerückter hour . and both then performed "a kind of blues for a piano and two smoky male voices" to the audience.

Common appearance and work

Kaufmann and Irrniss belonged together several times to ensembles of theaters. B. the children's and youth theater Speyer and the theater MicroMacro in the Odenwald .

In September 2001 they founded the small Traumland theater at Steinhausen Castle in Bommern , where they put on plays and gave recitals with partners and guests.

Zimmer Theater Speyer

On November 16, 2006, Nicole Kaufmann and Martin Risse founded the ZimmerTheater Speyer together with Florian Kaiser in Speyer, a small theater for 50 people, to which the city of Speyer made the space in the right wing of its town hall, Maximilianstrasse 24, available as a venue. Originally, the cellar of the Kulturhof Flachsgasse was planned, but it turned out to be structurally inadequate and damp with mold. After extensive renovation work, the move from the town hall to the Kulturhof complex behind it is planned for 2009.

The program consists of recitals, cabaret recitals, such as the Singing for Cash program with songs by Johnny Cash , cabaret and plays.

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