Nina von Porembsky

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Nina von Porembsky (* 1939 in Berlin ; † after 1971) was a German actress in film and television.

Live and act

Little information is known about Nina von Porembsky. As the daughter of Alexa von Porembsky and the actor Andreas Ortner, she easily made the leap into show business, and she starred in her film debut in 1953, the old-fashioned romance When the white lilac is blooming again , alongside two other actor children, Götz George and Romy Schneider . But unlike the two previously mentioned, who were to develop into veritable stars a little later, Nina von Poremsbky could not really assert herself despite a number of follow-up roles.

Until the end of the 1950s, the slim and rather small young woman worked with less conspicuous roles in cinema productions, including The Sandman (1955) and Our Wonderland at Night (1959) at her mother's side. After only three television films in 1966/67, her acting career was already over. Nina von Porembsky is said to have died a little later (in 1971 she still had the leading role in the radio play Can the squeaking of the tram have only been a woman? ).

As early as 1950 she was one of the many little bunnies in the German dubbing of the Disney classic Bambi , in which around 100 Berlin children took part.

Filmography

Radio plays

  • 1957–1964: Thierry : Pension Spreewitz (1958–1959 she spoke the role of “Lucile” in ten episodes.) - Director: Ivo Veit (150 episodes) ( RIAS Berlin)
  • 1972: Wolf Wondratschek : Could the squeaking of the tram have only been a woman? (Main role) - Director: Wolf Wondratschek ( WDR )

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ARD audio game database. ARD, accessed on June 28, 2020 .
  2. Edi walks over corpses! Not a perfect story. Retrieved June 28, 2020 .
  3. Pension Spreewitz - Small stories in big Berlin. Retrieved June 28, 2020 .