Siegfried Fetscher

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Siegfried Fetscher (born February 22, 1922 in Munich ) is a German actor .

Life

Fetscher began his acting career in 1940 as a “romantic hero and lover” at the Klagenfurt City Theater , where he played Jakob in a production of Max Halbe's Der Strom . In 1942 he moved to the Göttingen City Theater for two years . Here he played various leading roles such as Faust in Johann Wolfgang von Goethe's Urfaust and Gyges in Friedrich Hebbel's Gyges in Gyges and his Ring . After a stage stint at the Junge Theater Stuttgart, Fetscher joined the ensemble of the Württemberg State Theater in Esslingen in 1950 . There he played Claudio in William Shakespeare's Much Ado About Nothing and Erich Spitta in Gerhart Hauptmann's Die Ratten . Other stages were the Badisches Staatstheater Karlsruhe , the Staatstheater Kassel , the Contra-Kreis-Theater Bonn, the Hamburg Ernst-Deutsch-Theater and the Munich Schauspielhaus , where he played as Möbius in Franz Herterich's production of Dürrenmatt's Die Physiker alongside Isolde Stiegler and Gustl in 1965 Bayrhammer played. He also performed in Santiago de Chile and gave a tour of South America. On November 14, 1964, he took part in the Salzburg premiere of Bert Brecht's mother Courage and her children .

1977 Fetscher played at the Stadttheater Ingolstadt in Fritz Meingast's socially critical play Die Gnadenlosen von Rechthal , which tried to thematize the aggressive exclusion of the disabled in a Lower Bavarian community in the form of a Schwank. Nevertheless, Ernst Klee attested to the piece in the ZEIT that it was “ pretty much the first attempt to cope with handicapped problems on stage ”. Fetscher portrayed the village pastor who stirred up the mayor ( Alexander Golling ).

Fetscher was rarely seen in film and television productions. He took on guest roles in series such as Raumpatrouille - The fantastic adventures of the spaceship Orion , Löwengrube and Butler Parker as well as in crime series such as Stahlnetz , Tatort and in a total of four episodes of Das Kriminalmuseum . In the socially critical miniseries The Iron Way , he played the father of the main character played by Horst Kummeth .

Filmography (selection)

literature

  • Herbert A. Frenzel , Hans Joachim Moser (ed.): Kürschner's biographical theater manual. Drama, opera, film, radio. Germany, Austria, Switzerland. De Gruyter, Berlin 1956, DNB 010075518 , p. 166.
  • Who's Who in the Arts and Literature , Vol. 2: Applied Arts and Music , Karl Strute and Theodor Doelken (Eds.), 3rd edition, Zurich: red series 1983, p. 176.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Who's Who in the Arts and Literature , Vol. 2: Applied Arts and Music , Karl Strute and Theodor Doelken (Eds.), 3rd edition, Zurich: red series 1983, p. 176.
  2. Marilen Andrist (Ed.): We step on !, Dölling & Galitz 2001, p. 141
  3. ^ Who's Who in the Arts and Literature , Vol. 2, p. 176.
  4. ^ The Salzburg Year, Residenz-Verlag 1965
  5. Ernst Klee: Hunting on the idiots  ( page no longer available , search in web archivesInfo: The link was automatically marked as defective. Please check the link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. , in: Die Zeit of April 8, 1977@1@ 2Template: Dead Link / www.zeit.de