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Albert Hetterle

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Children
  
Marc Hetterle

Movies
  
The Second Track

Role
  
Actor

Name
  
Albert Hetterle


Born
  
31 October 1918 (
1918-10-31
)
Petersthal, Odessa, Ukraine

Died
  
December 17, 2006, Berlin, Germany

Spouse
  
Monika Hetterle (m. ?–2006)

Political party
  
Socialist Unity Party of Germany

People also search for
  
Monika Hetterle, Marc Hetterle, Joachim Kunert

Occupation
  
ActorTheatre director

Albert Hetterle


Albert Hetterle (31 October 1918 – 17 December 2006) was a German actor who also became a Berlin theatre director.

Contents

Early years

Albert Hetterle was born in Petersthal a few weeks after the First World War had ended in defeat for Germany. His father was a farmer. Petersthal was a small village near Odessa. It had been settled as a German colony a century or so earlier. Albert Hetterle studied Pedagogy and was also trained in acting by Ilse Fogarasi. In 1936 he became a trainee-actor with the Odessa Theatre Collective. This was a German-language traveling theatre company in the Odessa region. In 1937 he joined the same company as an actor. During the early 1940s Ukraine was occupied by Germany, and although fighting across much of the region was savage, in Odessa, which in 1941 was administratively transferred to Transnistria, Hetterle was able to continue working in the German-language theatre. In 1944, however, as the tide of the war turned against Germany, there was a massive relocation of ethnic Germans from central and eastern Europe, towards the west: Hetterle moved to what would shortly be redesignated as the Soviet occupation zone within what remained of Germany. Along the way, at one stage during 1944, he was employed in Troppau as an official of the Hitler Youth organisation. He was briefly conscripted for military service, but early in 1945 he was released again for reasons of "serious illness".

War ended, formally, in May 1945, and from 1945 till 1947 he worked at the Chiemsee Peasant Theatre (Chiemseer Bauernbühne). Then, till 1949, his theatre career took him to Sondershausen, with subsequent engagements in Greifswald, Altenburg, Erfurt (1951-1953) and Halle (1953-1955).

Maxim Gorki Theater

In 1955 he was recruited by Maxim Vallentin to the recently established Maxim Gorki Theater in Berlin, where he took the part of Karl Moor in Schiller's "Die Räuber". For Hetterle this was the start of a partnership with the Maxim Gorki Theater that would last for more than three decades.

From 1968 till 1994 Hetterle formed and developed the Maxim Gorki Theatre as its Intendant ("director"). His focus, especially after 1971, was on staging contemporary Soviet works, along with some of the classics. Examples included Gorky's Vassa Zheleznova / Васса Железнова (1970), Nachtasyl / Night Lodging / На дне (1977), The Petty Bourgeoisie /Мещане (1982) and Barbarians / Варвары (1987). His productions of the German classics included Lessing's Minna von Barnhelm and, from the western socialist repertoire various works by Juan Gelman. There were also guest productions in Karl-Marx-Stadt (as Chemnitz was then known) and Dresden.

During the 1980s the theatre under his direction increasingly staged plays by Soviet authors critical of the political "status quo" in Moscow and, by implicit extrapolation, in Berlin. A decisive production, in 1988, was of Die Übergangsgesellschaft (The Transition Society) by Volker Braun, in which the dramatist anticipated the demise of the East German dictatorship.

Screen work

Starting in the late 1950s, Hetterle also made frequent screen appearances in the cinema and on television. This included a lead role in the television version of Die Übergangsgesellschaft which was shown on East German television during the country's actual transition year, 1990.

Awards, honours and memberships

  • 1962 National Prize of East Germany for arts and literature
  • 1967 Became member of Berlin Party Leadership Team (SED-Bezirksleitung)
  • 1967 Goethe Prize from the City of Berlin
  • 1977 National Prize of East Germany for arts and literature
  • 1978 Patriotic Order of Merit
  • 1993 Juror for the Alfred Kerr Theatre Prize
  • Filmography

    Actor
    1999
    Hans Warns - Mein 20. Jahrhundert
    1993
    Wer zweimal lügt as
    Philipp Binger
    1992
    Die Antigone des Sophokles nach der Hölderlinschen Übertragung für die Bühne bearbeitet von Brecht 1948 (Suhrkamp Verlag) as
    Tiresias
    1991
    Mein Kampf (TV Movie) as
    Lobkowitz
    1990
    Die Übergangsgesellschaft (TV Movie) as
    Wilhelm Höchst
    1986
    Der Hut des Brigadiers as
    Bauleiter Ronnseil
    1986
    Ernst Thälmann (TV Movie)
    1981
    Kabale und Liebe (TV Movie) as
    Kammerdiener
    1979
    Einfach Blumen aufs Dach as
    Minister
    1979
    Stine (TV Movie) as
    Graf von Haldern
    1978
    Marx und Engels - Stationen ihres Lebens (TV Series) as
    Heinrich Marx
    - Zwei vom Rhein (1978) - Heinrich Marx
    1977
    Die Letzten (TV Movie) as
    Iwan Kolomizew
    1973
    Das unsichtbare Visier (TV Series) as
    Erster Kundschafter des MfS
    - Das Nest im Urwald (1973) - Erster Kundschafter des MfS
    - Der römische Weg (1973) - Erster Kundschafter des MfS
    1972
    Trotz alledem! as
    Paul Schreiner
    1969
    Lebende Ware as
    Rathey
    1966
    Die Ermittlung - Oratorium in 11 Gesängen (TV Movie) as
    Franz Lucas, Angeklagter
    1966
    Die Nacht zwischen Donnerstag und Freitag (TV Movie) as
    Richard Hellberg
    1965
    Solange Leben in mir ist as
    Paul Schreiner
    1965
    Der Teufelsschüler (TV Movie) as
    Pastor Anderson
    1965
    Seine Kinder (TV Movie) as
    Karl Sorge
    1964
    Sieh' den Menschen. Eine Episode um Käthe Kollwitz (TV Movie)
    1964
    Onkel Wanja (TV Movie) as
    Iwan Wojnizki, genannt Onkel Wanja
    1963
    Die rote Kamille (TV Movie) as
    Timur
    1963
    Alle Menschen sind gleich geboren (TV Movie)
    1963
    Geheimarchiv an der Elbe as
    Oberst Rybin
    1962
    Das zweite Gleis as
    Walter Brock
    1962
    Der Weg nach Füssen (TV Movie) as
    Unbekannte
    1961
    Die letzte Nacht (TV Movie) as
    Oberleutnant
    1961
    Das Rabaukenkabarett as
    Herold
    1961
    Und das am Heiligabend (TV Movie) as
    Vater
    1961
    Ein Sommertag macht keine Liebe as
    Vater Lammers
    1961
    Hoffnung auf Kredit (TV Movie) as
    Oberst Grimm
    1960
    Haus im Feuer
    1960
    Flucht aus der Hölle (TV Mini Series) as
    Mitarbeiter im Magistrat
    - Die letzte Chance (1960) - Mitarbeiter im Magistrat
    1960
    Die heute über 40 sind as
    NKDW-Offizier
    1960
    Leute mit Flügeln as
    Aljoscha
    1960
    Spotkania w mroku as
    Dr. Häußler
    1960
    Das Leben beginnt as
    Jähnisch
    1960
    Signal in der Nacht (Short)
    1959
    Die Dame und der Blinde (TV Movie) as
    Der Blinde
    1959
    Maibowle as
    Gustav Lehmann
    1959
    Kapitäne bleiben an Bord as
    Geelhaar
    1959
    Fernsehpitaval (TV Series) as
    Hauptmann Pabst
    - Der Fall Jörns (1959) - Hauptmann Pabst
    1958
    Öl für Frisco (TV Movie) as
    Steve Gregg, Ingenieur
    1957
    Das tote Tal (TV Movie) as
    Andrej Getmanow
    1957
    Spur in die Nacht as
    Offizier
    1956
    Thomas Müntzer as
    Päpstlicher Legat Aleander
    1956
    Der Weg nach Füssen (TV Movie) as
    Unbekannter
    1956
    Drei Mädchen im Endspiel as
    Paul Schmidt
    1954
    Gefährliche Fracht as
    Stock
    Director
    1980
    Nachtasyl (TV Movie)
    1972
    Der Egoist (TV Movie)
    Self
    1992
    Zur Person (TV Series) as
    Self
    - Günter Gaus im Gespräch mit Albert Hetterle (1992) - Self
    1960
    Rendezvous am Wochenend (TV Series documentary) as
    Self - Host

    References

    Albert Hetterle Wikipedia


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