Dorothee Parker

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Dorothee Parker , born Dorothea Glöcklen and Dorothee Glöcklen , pseudonym Norma Townes (* 11. March 1938 in Cologne-Riehl as Dorothea Glöklen ) is German actress and businesswoman.

Live and act

Born in Dorothea Glöklen, she began to play under the slightly different name Dorothee Glöcklen Theater and began her first permanent engagements in 1959 at the Westphalian State Theater Castrop-Rauxel and in Recklinghausen ( Ruhr Festival ). In the same year the trash film producer Wolf C. Hartwig discovered the black-haired woman and used her as an attractive eye-catcher in the majority of the films he produced over the next five years.

While Dorothee Glöcklen always played under her own name until 1961 ( The Girl with Narrow Hips ), in the same year Hartwig, who was soon to become her husband, gave her the international sounding pseudonym Dorothee Parker (starting with Hate Without Mercy ). Parker's role type was initially often that of the decorative appendage on the side of the strong hero who was rescued from great danger; But in later years she was allowed to embody the wicked femme fatale or an unscrupulous gangster bride. Since she went under the name of Parker, the actress no longer spoke with her own voice in the German versions of the internationally co-produced Hartwig films, but was dubbed by Rosemarie Fendel .

When she separated from Hartwig, Dorothee Glöcklen suddenly ended her film work and, as Dorothea Parker, set up a model agency (“Parker-Sed Model Agency”) in Hamburg with her business partner Sebastian Sed (namesake of the Sedcard ) from the mid-1960s. After that, their track is lost.

Filmography (complete)

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Kay Less : The film's great personal dictionary . The actors, directors, cameramen, producers, composers, screenwriters, film architects, outfitters, costume designers, editors, sound engineers, make-up artists and special effects designers of the 20th century. Volume 3: F - H. Barry Fitzgerald - Ernst Hofbauer. Schwarzkopf & Schwarzkopf, Berlin 2001, ISBN 3-89602-340-3 , p. 556.
  2. Parker in synchrondatenbank.de