Tatiana Ivanov

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Tatjana Iwanow (born May 14, 1925 in Berlin ; † October 6, 1979 in Hamburg ) was a German actress and singer .

Life

Education and theater

Tatjana Iwanow completed an acting training at the drama school of the German Theater in Berlin; among her teachers there was Agnes Windeck . She completed her training in 1943. At the Deutsches Theater Berlin, she also received her first theater engagement in the roles of “young heroine” and “young people naive”. She made her stage debut as a theater actress in 1944, shortly before the war-related closure of all theaters, at the Deutsches Theater Berlin as Perdita in Shakespeare's late work Das Wintermärchen . After the Second World War she had engagements at the Münchner Kammerspiele (season 1946/1947), at the Schauspielhaus Frankfurt (season 1947/1948) and at the Stadttheater Konstanz (1948–1950), where she was a beginner, among others, directed by Heinz Hilpert when Rosalinde appeared in Shakespeare's comedy As You Like It ; With this production Iwanow made a guest appearance in 1949 at the Theater am Besenbinderhof in Hamburg.

Since 1951 Iwanow was a permanent member of the ensemble at the Deutsches Theater Göttingen . Her stage roles there included: Katharina in The Taming of the Shrew , Beatrice in Much Ado About Nothing , Sally in the comedy Das Lied der Taube by John Van Druten , Belisa in the play In his Garden, Don Perlimplin loves Belisa by Federico García Lorca and also the Rosalinde in As You Like It . In 1955 she played Marie in Woyzeck there .

Ivanov also played as a guest at the Fritz Rémond Theater in Frankfurt am Main . She has made international guest appearances at the Princess Theater and the Pilgrim Theater in Melbourne , Australia.

In 1966 she took on the title role in the German-language premiere of the musical Hello, Dolly! At the Düsseldorfer Schauspielhaus . where she did not play the role as American Dolly Levi, as in the original version, but in a version tailored to her body as Russian Dolly Wassiljewa. In 1967, a record recording was made with the original German cast of the musical .

In 1977 she appeared at the Gandersheim Cathedral Festival in Bad Gandersheim and received the " Roswitha-Ring ".

Movie and TV

In the 1950s, Ivanov was seen in a few post-war films, mostly in smaller roles. In the war drama Night fell over Gotenhafen in 1959 she played the maid Meta, directed by Frank Wisbar . She had other roles in the crime comedy Nick Knatterton's Adventure - The Robbery of Gloria Nylon (1959) and in the war film Dogs, Do You Want to Live Forever (1959). In 1967 she was at DEFA in the German-German joint production Die Heiden von Kummerow and her funny pranks in the role of Frau Düker. Ivanov later mainly took on the role of salon lady , among other things as Countess Beate von Treuenfels in the Hedwig Courths-Mahler film adaptation of Griseldis (1974) or, alongside Erika Pluhar , as Prudence Duvernoy, the friend of the female title role, in the film adaptation of the novel The Lady of the Camellias (1978), directed by Tom Toelle .

From the late 1960s, Ivanov worked as an actress, singer and presenter mainly for television , which made her well known. In 1970 Iwanow made music recordings from the now forgotten operetta Kaiserin Katharina von Rudolf Kattnigg ; these recordings, which are considered rarities, were later re-released on CD by EMI Electrola . In 1971 she starred in two operetta adaptations for ZDF : alongside Heinz Erhardt as a no longer very young, morally strict Madame Palmira Beaubuisson in Der Opernball and alongside Horst Niendorf as the fun-loving Russian Countess Olga in The Dollar Princess . The film adaptation of the operetta Der Opernball was regularly repeated on the ZDFtheaterkanal.

She took part in several television shows ( Musik durch drei , ARD 1969; Scala heute , ZDF 1971). In 1968 she appeared as an artist in Wiesbaden in the program one will win . In 1970 she presented the music show Sommernotenschau on ZDF , in which well-known composers presented their latest compositions. A long-playing record was also produced from this program , on which Ivanov sang the song The Great Romanoff . In 1973 she was a guest of the entertainer Heinz Schenk in his program Zum Blauen Bock .

She performed several times with Ivan Rebroff and interpreted Russian folklore; joint recordings were also made.

Private

Ivanov was married three times. Her son Andreas Seyferth , who also became an actor, comes from her early first marriage to the actor Wilfried Seyferth . Her second marriage was in 1959 to the actor Gert Fröbe , who adopted her son Andreas. In 1975 she married the third marriage to the film producer Walter Koppel .

On October 6, 1979, Tatiana Iwanow succumbed to longstanding cancer in Hamburg.

Filmography (selection)

literature

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Agnes Windeck biography at steffi-line.de
  2. Theater without stars . In: Die Zeit , No. 45/1949
  3. Hello Dolly. In: blumine.net. Retrieved on August 14, 2018 (LP; original German recording 1967).
  4. THE ROSWITHARING award winners
  5. The Lady of the Camellias ( Memento of the original from March 21, 2009 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. Filmarchiv Austria (production details and cast) @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / filmarchiv.at
  6. Rarities of operettas track list at ArkivMusic
  7. The Opera Ball roles and cast
  8. The Opera Ball (cast and photos)
  9. The Opera Ball  ( 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. ZDFtheaterkanal@1@ 2Template: Toter Link / theaterkanal.zdf.de  
  10. ^ Bully Buhlan ( Memento from July 31, 2012 in the web archive archive.today ) singer of the fifties
  11. ^ ZDF-Notenschau - Happening in Love WDR.de , record bar from June 20, 2010
  12. Gert Fröbe biography at steffi-line.de
  13. I am the secret adoptive son of Gert Fröbe BZ ; May 18, 2007
  14. Walter Koppel Hamburgische Biographie-Personenlexikon, Volume 2
  15. As Dolly she remains unforgettable in Hamburg Hamburger Abendblatt of October 9, 1979