Richard Süssenguth

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Richard Süssenguth (born May 22, 1914 in Königsberg (Prussia) , East Prussia , German Empire ; † unknown) was a German actor and radio play speaker .

Live and act

After graduating from drama school, Süssenguth began his career in the 1930s at less important theaters in Freiburg, Elbing (East Prussia), Schneidemühl (Pomerania) and in his native Königsberg. Stage engagements after the Second World War led him to the comedy on Kurfürstendamm ( The beaver pelt by Gerhart Hauptmann in a production by Herbert Maisch). From 1946 to 1950 he was director of the art theater.

Süssenguth made his debut in front of the camera in the 1950 film Familie Benthin with Maly Delschaft . His best-known television roles include that of Edgar in the 1980s political satire No Beautiful Land and that of the Gestapo officer in A Man Who Wins Nothing .

Süssenguth played alongside Siegfried Rauch in the television series It doesn't always have to be caviar , to which he owes a certain degree of popularity. As a radio play speaker, he was heard several times in the Adventures of Odysseus series and in Benjamin Blümchen .

His brother was the actor and voice actor Walter Süssenguth .

Filmography

Radio plays

  • The misanthropist (SFB) as Dubois, servant at Alcestes
  • Formality (SFB) as a railway official
  • House without heirs (book: Joachim Barckhausen , SFB) according to the ARD radio play archive
  • The face that holds my face captive according to the ARD radio play archive
  • The Adventures of Odysseus (radio play series)
  • Benjamin Blümchen as Santa Claus as Santa Claus

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Joachim Werner Preuss, Theater in the East / West Political Environment: Interface Berlin 1945–1961, Iudicium 2004, p. 96.