Sascha Hehn

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Alexander Josef Alberto "Sascha" Hehn (born October 11, 1954 in Munich ) is a German actor and voice actor .

Life

Sascha Hehn is one of the four sons of the film actor Albert Hehn from his fourth marriage to Gardy Artinger, an assistant director and prompter . After his parents divorced, he grew up with his mother in the Munich suburb of Grünwald . At the age of five he made his film debut in Hubertusjagd . Other film and TV roles followed. After all, he was so involved in his career as an actor that he left business school before he graduated from secondary school .

In the 1960s, Hehn appeared in television films such as Der doppelte Nikolaus , Sometimes Heaven plays with and in 1961 in the Vico Torriani Show . Later he also starred in erotic films (e.g. Housewife Report , Schoolgirl Report , Melody in Love ).

To avoid military service , Hehn registered his primary residence in West Berlin and served a five-week prison sentence for it. In 1982 he was a soldier with the mountain troops in Landsberg am Lech for several months , but was released early.

In 1976, he starred alongside Andrew Keir in the 13-part Australian adventure series Goodbye, Charlie (The Outsiders). Even after that, Hehn occasionally took part in international productions, for example in 1987 as tennis baron Gottfried von Cramm in the television film Poor rich girl - The story of Barbara Hutton .

He became known to a nationwide television audience in the 1980s through his roles as Dr. Udo Brinkmann in the Black Forest Clinic next to Klausjürgen Wussow , who played the chief doctor, and known as chief steward Victor in the television series Das Traumschiff .

He also played theater. In 1972 he made his debut on tour alongside O. W. Fischer as Masham in A Glass of Water , then from 1980 to 1981 at the Salzburg Festival as Orlando in Shakespeare's As You Like It as partner of Barbara Sukowa , alongside Judy Winter in Cocteau's The Double Eagle and as Brigg in Tennessee Williams ' The Cat on the Hot Tin Roof . In 1989 he played Egmont in Goethe's Egmont at the Ernst-Deutsch-Theater .

In the seven-part family series Love on Probation from 1992, Hehn played the leading role alongside Gila von Weitershausen . From 1994 to 1997 he played the gynecologist Dr. Markus Merthin in the television series of the same name. This was followed by a love Mallorca and other television productions, u. a. the two “specials” for the 20th anniversary of the Black Forest Clinic (2005). In 2007 he was seen in the ARD television film once a thief, always a thief as thief Jean Berlinger, who falls in love with the kindergarten teacher Julia Weber ( Christina Plate ). In 2012 he played the globetrotter Richard Travis alongside Marion Kracht in the Austrian love film A Summer in Scotland, directed by Michael Keusch . From March 2013 he was in the ZDF - sitcom Lerchenberg to see where he plays himself.

In January 2014, Hehn succeeded Siegfried Rauch as captain Victor Burger on the dream ship . In 2018 he gave up the role after he was dissatisfied with the further development of the series and criticized allegedly falling quality standards in the series.

In March 2020 it was announced that Hehn would take on the title role of the Prince of Oil in the play of the same name at the 2020 Karl May Festival in Bad Segeberg.

As a voice actor, Hehn spoke, among other things, the title role in the films Shrek - The daring hero , Shrek 2 , Shrek 3 and Shrek forever . As early as 1966, Hehn lent his voice to the role of Eric in Karlsson vom Dach by Astrid Lindgren . He also spoke for the video release of the series He-Man, the eponymous hero. Hehn currently lives in Mittergars, Bavaria .

Filmography

Radio plays

  • Shrek: The original radio play for the movie , edelKids
  • Shrek 2: The original radio play for the movie , edelKids
  • Shrek the Third: The original radio play for the movie , edelKids

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. "The Dream Ship" Sascha Hehn: From Stewart to Captain. Retrieved October 10, 2012
  2. Sascha Hehn leaves the "dream ship" sS spiegel.de. Retrieved May 24, 2018
  3. Sascha Hehn stops at the “dream ship”: He's doing himself and us a favor. In: welt.de. May 25, 2018, accessed January 1, 2019 .
  4. Sascha Hehn and Katy Karrenbauer plunge into adventure. In: karl-may-games. Retrieved March 7, 2020 .
  5. Sascha Hehn - He-Man at hordak.de. ( Memento from February 22, 2014 in the Internet Archive )