Sabin Tambrea

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Sabin Tambrea (2019)

Sabin Tambrea , Romanian Sabin Țambrea (born November 18, 1984 in Târgu Mureș ), is a German - Romanian theater and film actor .

Life and accomplishments

childhood and education

Sabin Tambrea was born in Romania and comes from a family of musicians. At the time of the Romanian dictator Nicolae Ceaușescu , his father, an orchestral musician, left on a concert tour to France in 1986 . As part of the family reunification , the mother moved with him and his sister to the father in Germany, where they first lived in Marl and later moved to Hagen , where Sabin Tambrea grew up. Tambrea's parents are members of the Hagen Philharmonic Orchestra and the Dortmund Philharmonic Orchestra . His sister Alina Armonas-Tambrea was a member of the Trio Enescu and teaches violin at the Darmstadt Academy for Music .

From the age of four, Tambrea received music lessons on the violin. He also studied viola and piano as well as conducting . Tambrea made his stage debut at the age of six as a soloist in the children's choir of the Hagen Theater . Between 1994 and 2002 he took part as a violinist several times at regional and state level in the Jugend musiziert competition. He took first place six times and then became a member of the State Youth Orchestra of North Rhine-Westphalia.

At the age of 18, Tambrea finished music classes to devote himself to acting. In 2006 he was accepted at the Ernst Busch Academy of Dramatic Arts in Berlin . There Tambrea trained as an actor until 2010.

Work as a theater and film actor

While still studying acting, Tambrea was accepted as a theater actor at the Berliner Ensemble , where he appeared on stage as Melchior in 2008 with other young actors in Claus Peymann's production of Frank Wedekind's Spring Awakening . Further appearances at this theater followed, including as a young warrior and eponymous hero in Boris Jacoby's Philotas (2010), as Jack the Ripper in Robert Wilson's version of Lulu (2011) and in the double role of viola and Sebastian in Katharina Thalbach's production of Shakespeare's Was you want (2012). Looking back, Tambrea stated that from the beginning he had gotten theater roles, "which were actually too big for my abilities at the time, but which allowed me to grow".

While working in the theater, Tambrea began to appear in film and television productions. After speaking roles at Deutschlandradio , he appeared in 2009 as the vain music student André Kollwitz, who was suspected of murder, in the Police Call 110 episode Death and the Girl . In 2011 he made his cinema debut with a small role in Christian Schwochow's drama The Invisible . At the beginning of June of the same year, Tambrea's engagement as the Bavarian “fairy tale king” Ludwig II became known in Marie Noëlle's and Peter Sehr 's film production of the same name , which opened in German cinemas at the end of December 2012. Tambrea plays the youthful regent alongside Hannah Herzsprung , while Sebastian Schipper embodies the adult Ludwig. Tambrea prevailed against more than 360 competitors in the casting and took riding lessons for four months in preparation for the shooting. His portrayal earned him the Bavarian Film Prize , the New Faces Award, the prize for best leading actor at the first historical film festival in Waterloo and a nomination for the German Film Prize . In 2014 Tambrea was seen as Siegfried in Dieter Wedel's film clip for the Nibelungen Festival in Worms . A year later, the lead role as the jealous French lover of Alice Dwyer in Andrina Mračnikar's film Ma Folie followed, as well as the part as the diabolical SS-Untersturmführer Hermann Reineboth in Philipp Kadelbach's TV film Nackt unter Wölfen (both 2015). In the ARD historical drama The Secret of the Midwife , based on Sabine Ebert's “Midwife” saga , Tambrea plays the role of the villain Randolf (2016).

Tambrea lives in Berlin and has been married to actress Alice Dwyer since 2018 .

Plays (selection)

year Play role Director stage
2002 Winner and Loser Julian Lutz Huebner Theater Hagen
2003 In a deep dark forest Main role Paul Maar Theater Hagen
2004 Shakespear's complete works Chris Adam Long, Daniel Singer, Jess Winfield Theater Hagen
2004 India Landlord / priest Alfred Dorfer Theater Hagen
2004 nellie goodbye Jonny Lutz Huebner Theater Hagen
2005 The cousin from Dingsda Hans Eduard Künneke Theater Hagen
2005 Norway Today August Igor Bauershima Theater Hagen
2006 A matter of honor Cem Lutz Huebner Ernst Busch School Theater
2006 The Secret of Irma Vep / Comedy Main role Charles Ludlam Theater Hagen
2006 Anatevka Perchik Jerry Bock Theater Hagen
2007 Liliom Ficsur Hilde Stark Theater Hagen
2008 Hermann Battle Hermann Prof. Margarete Schuler Ernst Busch School Theater
2008/09 Spring awakening Melchior Gabor Claus Peymann Berliner Ensemble
International May Festival , Wiesbaden
2009 Shakespeare's sonnets Woman / Lady Robert Wilson Berlin Ensemble
2010 The little girl from Heilbronn Graf von Strahl Simone Blattner Berlin Ensemble
2010 In the thicket of the cities George Garga Katharina Thalbach Berlin Ensemble
2011 Lulu Jack the Ripper Robert Wilson Berlin Ensemble
2012 Tales from the Vienna Woods Alfred Enrico Luebbe Berlin Ensemble
2012 What you want Viola / Sebastian Katharina Thalbach Berlin Ensemble
2013 Peter Pan Peter Pan Robert Wilson Berlin Ensemble
2014 The cannibals Klaub Philipp Tiedemann Berlin Ensemble
2015 Black Milk of the Morning - The Poet Paul Celan ... Jutta Ferbers Berlin Ensemble
2017 Prince Friedrich of Homburg Prince Friedrich Arthur von Homburg Claus Peymann Berlin Ensemble

Filmography

Speaker in audio books

Awards

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Sabin Tambrea. In: schauspielervideos.de. Retrieved April 3, 2018 .
  2. The fairy tale king as an art lover and visionary . In: Neue Westfälische , July 11, 2011 (accessed via Wiso presse ).
  3. Zander, Peter: Never in front of the camera - and then straight away Märchenkönig at morgenpost.de, December 25, 2012 (accessed on January 4, 2013).
  4. a b Wildermann, Patrick: Your Majesty wants to remain a mystery . In: Tagesspiegel , January 4, 2013, p. 21.
  5. Teipel, Janine: As King Ludwig, Sabin Tambrea felt as if he was in an adrenaline rush at derwesten.de, January 3, 2012 (accessed December 9, 2012).
  6. a b Sieker, Anke ( dapd basic service): Opulent equipment for "Ludwig II." . October 20, 2011, 1:14 PM GMT (accessed via LexisNexis Economy ).
  7. a b Daphne Prize 2013 to Sabin Tambrea. Theatergemeinde Berlin, accessed on December 30, 2018 .
  8. Hoffmann, Anke: Der Junge Spielwütige at derwesten.de, September 5, 2008 (accessed December 9, 2012).
  9. Sabin Tambrea in an interview In: der westen, March 1, 2016
  10. APA / dpa: Actor couple Alice Dwyer and Sabin Tambrea got married. In: Tiroler Tageszeitung online edition. November 18, 2018, accessed December 30, 2018 .
  11. ^ Hagen 58: LUTZ - Shakespeare all works (slightly shortened) | Hagen 58. June 28, 2004, accessed January 8, 2018 .
  12. Anke Hoffmann: A parody of horror films. Rotary Club Hagen, September 18, 2005, accessed January 8, 2018 .
  13. Martin Schrahn: EARLY BLACK MILK - THE POET PAUL CELAN | TheaterPur. 2015, accessed January 8, 2018 .
  14. ^ Corinna Liedtke: Kai & Kira. Art Academy for Media Cologne, 2008, accessed on January 7, 2018 .
  15. Trailer centrifugal force. HamburgMediaSchool, January 18, 2013, accessed on January 7, 2018 .
  16. GFQ German film Squarterly: Wishing Tree. January 18, 2013, accessed January 19, 2018 .
  17. Bella Block - On the Abyss. Filmfest Hamburg, 2017, accessed on January 19, 2018 .