Rainer Ewerrien

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Rainer Ewerrien (born May 28, 1960 in Bad Homburg vor der Höhe ) is a German actor and author . He appears in the theater, in film and on television.

Life

Rainer Ewerrien grew up in Frankfurt am Main . He attended elementary school there and then the integrated comprehensive school in Stierstadt . From 1983 to 1986 he trained in acting and pantomime at the Fe Reichelt theater workshop in Frankfurt am Main. From 1994 to 1998 Ewerrien worked as an actor, author and presenter mainly in Berlin . He went on tour nationwide with the comedy program Trio Blamage . The comedy was also recorded by the Hessischer Rundfunk . In 1999 he made the short film Wolf Men . From 1999 further theater productions followed in Frankfurt am Main and Neu-Isenburg . Together with the magician Pit Hartling, he is co-initiator and actor at the Magic Monday Show in the Frankfurt satirical theater "Schmiere".

From 1999 he increasingly took on roles in film and television . He appeared in several episodes of the television series Tatort and Polizeiruf 110 . In the medical comedy Die Aufschneider , for which Ewerrien had also written the script , he played the comedic role of the hospital senior physician Dr. Klaus Kunze . In 2008 he played alongside Lisa Martinek in the television comedy For my children, I do everything . He also had minor roles in the fairy tale films King Drosselbart (2008) and The Goose Girl (2009). He is co-author of the 6-part ZDF series Götter wie wir and played one of the two main roles. He is co-author of films such as Männerhort (2014) and System Fehler - Wenn Inge tanzt (2013).

He is divorced and has three children. He lives in Frankfurt.

Awards

  • 1999: Alfred Edel Audience Award at the Frankfurt Film Show for his short film Wolfsmänner
  • 2013: German television award in the “Best Comedy” category for gods like us
  • 2013: Hessian TV Prize (special jury prize) for gods like us

Filmography (selection)

Theater (excerpt)

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Magische Welt , No. 6, 53rd volume, 2004, page 311
  2. Die Aufschneider Filmkritik on filmszene.de