Rudolf Jürgen Bartsch

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Rudolf Jürgen Bartsch (born October 17, 1921 in Köslin , Pomerania ; † October 22, 2000 in Cologne , North Rhine-Westphalia ) was a German cabaret artist , actor , speaker and writer .

Life

After the Second World War, Rudolf Jürgen Bartsch studied literature and theater studies at the University of Mainz, which was re-established in 1946. From 1948 he was involved in cabaret performances in Mainz. Around 1950, Bartsch was a co-founder of the Mainz room games in the house at the cathedral. Bartsch headed the Zimmer Theater in Mainz for 10 years , which he founded with Hanns Dieter Hüsch , and from 1960 the theater department of the Kiepenheuer & Witsch publishing house .

Works

For the radio he wrote numerous features on cultural history and literature, directed ( radio plays ) and worked as a speaker (for example for 100 masterpieces , later 1000 masterpieces ). He was also heard in one of the famous Paul Temple radio plays , namely in 1966 in Paul Temple and the Geneva case (director: Otto Düben ).

His literary work consists of short stories, poems and time-critical essays, in particular

  • Crows catch ( novel , 1964)
  • In the sinking light ( poems and prose poems from 30 years, published posthumously in 2003)
  • Free spirit and chameleon; Plea for four votes for Christoph Martin Wieland to celebrate his 250th birthday ( Südwestfunk Baden-Baden 1983, 2 LPs)
  • The beautiful coffins. A critical suite in three movements about books, readers, poets and their journeymen (for the 100th anniversary of the Cologne City Library 1991)

Filmography

Radio plays

Web links