Wolf Redl

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Wolf Redl (* 1939 in Stargard ; † December 17, 2010 ) was a German actor and director .

Life

In 1971 Redl was a member of the founding ensemble of the Schaubühne am Halleschen Ufer in Berlin, whose most influential actors he was in productions such as " Peer Gynt " (directed by Peter Stein , 1971), " Tales from the Vienna Woods " ( Klaus Michael Grüber , 1971), " Summer guests " (Peter Stein, 1974) or "Winterreise" (Klaus Michael Grüber, 1977) belonged to. Redl played some of his most famous roles at the Schaubühne in productions by Frank-Patrick Steckel : in 1976 as "Fatzer" in the world premiere of Bertolt Brecht's fragment "Der Untergang des Egoisten Fatzer", and in 1981 in Ernst Barlach's drama " Der Blaue Boll ", where he embodied in the title role.

Before that, Redl had played the title role in the world premiere of Peter Handke's " Kaspar " (at the Theater am Turm in Frankfurt, director: Claus Peymann ) in 1968 . Wolf Redl was also seen in the title role in Peymann's world premiere of Thomas Bernhard's first play "Ein Fest für Boris" (1971 at the Hamburger Schauspielhaus ). At the Bremen theater, Redl began to direct himself at the end of the 1970s. a. in Bochum and in Frankfurt am Main.

In the 1990s Wolf Redl worked again at the Schaubühne as a director and set designer: "Symposion" (1995, a theater evening based on Plato , director, set design and actor) and "The Language of the Birds" (director: Andrea Breth ), one piece by the Islamic mystic and Persian poet Fariduddin Attar from the 12th century, for whom Redl designed the set in 1997.

Wolf Redl was the step-brother of the actor Christian Redl . His daughter is the actress Caroline Redl .

Filmography

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Caroline Redl at filmportal.de