Susanne Uhlen

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Susanne Uhlen (late 80s)
Signature of Susanne Uhlen

Susanne Uhlen (actually Susanne Kieling ; born January 17, 1955 in Potsdam ) is a German actress and director .

Life

Susanne Uhlen is the daughter of the actor and voice actor Wolfgang Kieling and the actress Gisela Uhlen , the great-niece of the actor Max Schreck and the half-sister of Florian Martens and Barbara Bertram . She has two sons, one from her marriage to the cameraman Charly Steinberger and another from her long-term relationship with the actor Herbert Herrmann . She lives with her partner in Cologne-Rodenkirchen .

Susanne Uhlen grew up with her mother in West Berlin, where she attended high school and at the same time completed dance training at Tatjana Gsovsky's ballet school . She made her film debut as a ten-year-old in the German-Italian crime film The Murderer with the Silk Scarf (1966), in a leading role. In the same year she played the title role in the television film Der Fall Angelika, directed by Rudolf Jugert . This was followed by work for television. In 1968 Uhlen scored the title role in the fairy tale record Peterchens Mondfahrt . In the literary adaptation based on Eric Malpass, When sweetly the moonlight sleeps on the hills (1969) Uhlen was cast in the role of 14-year-old precocious Jenny. Directed by Wolfgang Liebeneiner . The following year she starred in the crime drama Angels Burning Their Wings by Czechoslovakian director Zbyněk Brynych .

In 1975 Uhlen played one of the leading roles in the Simmel film adaptation to the bitter end . Charly Steinberger was in front of the camera. In the same year another literary film was made, in which Susanne Uhlen was cast and Charly Steinberger directed the camera: Hans Habes novel Das Netz with Mel Ferrer , Elke Sommer and Klaus Kinski, filmed by Manfred Purzer . In 1976, Uhlen played one of the leading roles in the cinema drama A Second Hand Girl, alongside Beatrice Kessler and Henner Quest and Annemarie Wendl .

In the children's and family series Nesthäkchen, broadcast in 1983, based on the successful children's book series of the same name by Else Ury , Uhlen played the nanny Lena, who takes care of the children of the Braun family of doctors. In the medical series Praxis Bülowbogen , Uhlen played Regine Maerker, the niece of Dr. Günter Pfitzmann , in four episodes . Brockmann. From 1987 to 1990 she then acted as Kitty Balbeck in 36 episodes of the television series Das Erbe der Guldenburgs . From 1991 to 1993 Uhlen was seen as Baroness Henriette von Sydeck in 21 episodes of the comedy television series Der Hausgeist . In addition to other works for television, Uhlen also worked several times in the crime film series Tatort , Derrick , Ein Fall für Zwei , Der Alte and Siska .

Susanne Uhlen (2008)

In 2009 Uhlen played a recurring role in seven episodes of the family series Geld.Macht.Liebe and was cast as the clear-sighted architect in the German-Austrian feature film Iceland - Hearts in Ice . The actress was also seen in two film adaptations by Rosamunde Pilcher , in the dream hotel in the Maldives, on the dream ship with the destinations Kenya and Thailand, on the cruise to happiness in Australia and as a holiday doctor in Ticino as well as in two episodes of Inga-Lindström- Row .

On the theater stage, Susanne Uhlen, often at the side of Herbert Herrmann , delighted the audience in tabloid comedies. She played leading roles at the Munich Residenztheater and in Berlin in the Theater am Kurfürstendamm and in the Renaissance theater . In the last few years she has increasingly shifted to the theater profession, where she also directed under her maiden name Susanne Kieling. Uhlen sees the choice of this name as an homage to her late father.

Susanne Uhlen has been socially committed to World Vision Germany for 20 years for sustainable poverty reduction and donates part of her fee. Susanne Uhlen is committed to animal welfare and has been supporting the World Animal Welfare Society privately for five years now. So she accompanied the club on one of the missions to Thailand .

In May 2017, she announced that she no longer wanted to work as an actress.

Filmography (selection)

Theater (selection)

Web links

Commons : Susanne Uhlen  - Collection of Images

Individual evidence

  1. ^ New Film-Kurier No. 158: Until bitter end - Susanne Uhlen, October series 1975, p. 7, Verlag Neues Filmprogramm, Vienna.
  2. a b Susanne Uhlen author information on the press portal of randomhouse.de . Retrieved June 17, 2019.
  3. a b Curtain up for Susanne Kieling In: Komödie im Bayerischer Hof Retrieved on June 17, 2019.
  4. a b c d Susanne Uhlen: Directed for the second time In: Bunte.de from November 8, 2012, accessed on June 17, 2019.
  5. Active for World Vision for over 20 years. (No longer available online.) World Vision Germany , archived from the original on July 14, 2010 ; Retrieved July 12, 2010 .
  6. Susanne Uhlen: Where did all her money go? In: Die neue Frau, April 21, 2010, page 58.
  7. Interview with Susanne Uhlen about the help from World Vision World Vision Future for Children adS worldvision.de
  8. World Animal Protection Society eV | Animal welfare starts with humans. Retrieved May 11, 2017 .
  9. “Helping animals is a real need for me” | Welttierschutzgesellschaft eV Accessed on May 11, 2017 .
  10. Susanne Uhlen ends her career On: focus.de on May 12, 2017. Retrieved on June 17, 2019.