Siegfried Weiß

Siegfried Weiss
Born Siegfried Weiss
(1906-04-18)18 April 1906
Chemnitz, German Empire
Died 8 October 1989(1989-10-08) (aged 83)
Berlin, German Democratic Republic
Occupation Actor.
Years active 1924–1984

Siegfried Weiss (18 April 1906 – 8 October 1989) was an East German actor.

Biography

Weiss made his artistic debut on the stage of the Halberstadt Theater, at 1924. He continued his career in the theaters of Luebeck, Koenigsberg, Magdeburg, Leipzig and Berlin, where he acted in the Berlin Ensemble, among others.[1]

Weiss' film career started already in the Nazi era, with the 1937 Sherlock Holmes inspired movie Die Graue Dame (The Gray Lady), and had lasted for almost fifty years.[2] After the Second World War he returned to acting on screen, working with the East German studio DEFA and with the television producers DFF. He appeared in more than fifty independent GDR productions and in co-productions with other Eastern Bloc countries, such as the epic movies Ernst Thaelmann, Karl Liebknecht and Liberation.[3] He retired in 1984.[4] Weiss retired at 1987, making his last appearance on stage in the Berlin Ensemble on 25 October that year.[5]

Selected Filmography

References

  1. Verband der Theaterschaffenden der DDR. Theater der Zeit. Henschel (1986). Page
  2. Siegfried Weiss on the GDR Lexicon.
  3. Siegfried Weiss on DEFA Stars.
  4. Siegfried Weiss on Kino-Teatr.ru(with picture).
  5. Various authors. Notate, Volume 10. Brecht-Zentrum der DDR (1989). Page 17.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.