Christoph Roethel

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Christoph Roethel (* 1941 in Lübeck ) is a German theater director and drama therapist .

Life

Christoph Roethel grew up in Munich and, after graduating from high school, studied English, German and theater studies in London , Paris and Hamburg . He then completed private training at Theater im Zimmer and directed Arthur Miller's The Death of a Salesman for the first time in 1967 . Since then he has staged around 100 plays in various German cities. In 1974 his play Die Reise nach Chine ... or about the difficulty in Uta Emmer's Modern Theater in Munich's Hans-Sachs-Straße caused a sensation, in which Birgit Zamulo appeared in her role naked with a shaved head. In the comedy Winterhuder Fährhaus he staged Arsen und Spitzenhäubchen in 2001 , in 2002 for the contrast series Samuel Beckett Happy Days with Gerda Gmelin and in 2003 Hermann Burger's Der Orchesterdiener .

In Paris he founded and directed the Théâtre St. André des Arts, in Munich the Moderne Theater II, and in Hamburg in 1988 a school for drama, not to be confused with the school for drama in Hamburg .

After the Theater im Zimmer was closed in 1998, he completed a two-year psychodrama training at Grete Leutz's Moreno Institute in Cologne and has since worked as a drama therapist in the field of addiction and teaches Qigong and Tai-Chi .

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Christoph Roethel , Kulturserver.de , accessed on October 25, 2013.