Paul Burian

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Paul Burian (* 1944 ) is a German actor , radio play speaker and director .

Act

Paul Burian attended an acting school in Vienna. His area of ​​activity as a theater actor was primarily his hometown Berlin . He was a member of the ensemble of the Berlin Schaubühne on Lehniner Platz . In 1981, for example, he was still in the stage Hallesches Ufer , the Woyzeck in drama by Georg Buchner , 1982, he was seen at the Lehniner place in the art of comedy by Eduardo de Filippo and in Shakespeare's Hamlet . In 1985 he took the stage in the Triumph of Love by Pierre Carlet de Marivaux . In February 1987 he embodied the leitmotif messenger in the world premiere of Robert Wilson's Death Destruction & Detroit II . Paul Burian was also often active as a director, for example in the 1995/96 season in The silk shoe by Paul Claudel ( Stadttheater Heilbronn ), in 2010 in Much Ado about Nüscht! based on Shakespeare (Berliner Taschenoper) and in 2016 in Das verlorene Paradies by Tomasz Kajdanski (48h Neukölln). He is known as a film actor through his participation in German and international feature films and television films in the time frame 1970 to 2010. He took on his first radio play speaking roles as early as 1960.

Paul Burian lives mainly in Berlin and temporarily in Vienna.

Filmography (selection)

  • 1971: The Taming of the Shrew (TV movie)
  • 1972: eat, daddy, eat! (TV movie)
  • 1972: Four against the British pound (TV movie)
  • 1973: A Better Man (TV Movie)
  • 1974: supermarket
  • 1974: confrontation
  • 1975: Commissioned by Madame (TV series, 1 episode)
  • 1976: The assistant
  • 1977: The snake egg
  • 1978: Alzire or the new continent
  • 1979: Woyzeck
  • 1979: Winter trip in the Olympic Stadium
  • 1981: The passionate
  • 1982: Mom
  • 1982: Who's crazy there, Doctor?
  • 1986: Triumph of Love (TV movie)
  • 1987: The vast country
  • 1988: The dollar trap
  • 1993: The green Heinrich
  • 2005: Fateless
  • 2007: Lamento
  • 2008: The Wedding Waltz (TV movie)

Radio plays (selection)

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Siegfried Kienzle: The ghosts that we called. Berlin Schaubühne: Four hours of Robert Wilson's “Death, Destruction & Detroit II” . In: Darmstädter Echo . March 2nd 1987.