Rachel Ohm

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Rahel Ohm (born July 28, 1962 in Berlin ) is a German theater and film actress .

Life

Ohm grew up in East Berlin with her mother, who came to the GDR from Munich in 1953 . Her grandmother Else Wolz worked as an actress at the Berliner Ensemble , her grandfather is the director Walter Ohm . Ohm initially worked as a kindergarten teacher . From 1983 she completed her acting studies at the Rostock Drama School . She later moved to the Berlin Academy of Dramatic Arts "Ernst Busch" and was already working at the theater before graduation.

She belonged u. a. to the ensemble of the German National Theater Weimar , was engaged at the Kleist-Theater Frankfurt (Oder) , the Schauspiel Leipzig , the Staatstheater Kassel and the Hans Otto Theater Potsdam. She worked u. a. with the directors Andreas Kriegenburg , Leander Haußmann , Wolfgang Engel , Thomas Bischoff and Armin Petras . She also works in film and television, theater projects, as a presenter , radio play and as a voice actress . For example, she loaned her in the Soviet film in 1987 ... and tomorrow, War was her voice for actress Natalja Negoda in the role of Sina.

One of her greatest successes in 2005 was her solo in Oskar and the Lady in Pink by Éric-Emmanuel Schmitt . In 2007 she received the Roswitha-Ring , the audience award of the Gandersheim Cathedral Festival . In 2011, the solo piece was nothing more beautiful by Oliver Bukowski with Rahel Ohm for the Theatertreffen nominated. Rahel Ohm has been an ensemble member at the Schauspiel Stuttgart since 2009 and has a daughter.

Filmography

Radio plays

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Heidi Jäger: Monologue about dying. In: Potsdam's latest news . March 23, 2005.
  2. Verena Großkreutz: Nothing more beautiful - Oliver Bukowski's theater monologue at the Stuttgart State Theater. Nachtkritik.de