Nisha Rathode (Editor)

Annie Rosar

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Name
  
Annie Rosar


Role
  
Film actress

Annie Rosar httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsee

Died
  
August 5, 1963, Vienna, Austria

Movies
  
The Golden City, Mozart, For the First Time, Little Mother, The Millionaire

Similar People
  
Marianne Hold, Karl Hartl, Geza von Bolvary, Veit Harlan, Gustav Ucicky

Annie rosar


Annie Rosar (May 17, 1888 – August 5, 1963) was an Austrian stage and film actress who is best remembered today for her appearances in many Austrian comedy films from the 1930s to the early 1960s. In those movies, she was frequently cast in the comic roles of nagging wife (for example in Ungeküsst soll man nicht schlafen gehn opposite Hans Moser), "evil" mother-in-law, or understanding housekeeper, whether in rural (Heimatfilme) or urban settings. She occasionally also appeared in serious films, including her cameo performance as the porter's wife in The Third Man and the filming of the novel The Embezzled Heaven by Franz Werfel in 1958.

Contents

Annie Rosar Annie Rosar ber diesen Star Star Cinemade

Filmstar des Monats: Annie Rosar


Biography

Annie Rosar Annie Rosar ber diesen Star Star Cinemade

Annie Rosar was born in Vienna into a farming family based in Orth an der Donau, near Vienna. Her father Michael Rosar (1850–1927) worked as a conductor on the Vienna tram network.

Annie Rosar Rosar Annie Historische Bilder IMAGNO Bilder und

Having finished grammar school (Gymnasium), Rosar attended the University of Music and Performing Arts and made her stage debut in the Vienna Prater under director Josef Jarno in 1910. One year later she joined the Munich Munich Schauspielhaus ensemble under Otto Falckenberg and subsequently went to Berlin and Hamburg. On her return to Vienna, she had engagements at the Burgtheater (1917–23), the Theater in der Josefstadt (1925–38), where she worked with Max Reinhardt, and the Volkstheater (1939–42, 1947–51).

Annie Rosar Annie Rosar Wikipedia

Rosar initially appeared in classical roles, however, in her advanced years she embodied resolute Viennese women in numerous comedies. She appeared in film as early as in 1919; her popularity was boosted with the development of sound films. After the World War II, Rosar concentrated on film, radio and television work, starring in more than 100 movies during her acting career.

In 1907 Rosar married a Swiss businessman and moved with him to Milan, Italy. After her divorce she remarried in 1930 but was divorced again. Her only son, by her first marriage, was killed in 1943 at the Eastern Front in the Second World War.

Annie Rosar died in Vienna. She is buried in an Ehrengrab in the Zentralfriedhof.

Selected filmography

  • Father Radetzky (1929)
  • Spring Parade (1934)
  • The Young Baron Neuhaus (1934)
  • The World's in Love (1935)
  • Little Mother (1935)
  • Romance (1936)
  • Ungeküsst soll man nicht schlafen gehn (1936)
  • A Mother's Love (1939)
  • My Daughter Lives in Vienna (1940)
  • Die goldene Stadt (1941)
  • Whom the Gods Love (1942)
  • The Millionaire (1947)
  • Anni (1948)
  • After the Storm (1948)
  • The Third Man (1949) as the porter's wife
  • Child of the Danube (1950)
  • City Park (1951)
  • The Mine Foreman (1952)
  • The Devil Makes Three (1952)
  • Anna Louise and Anton (1953)
  • Don't Forget Love (1953)
  • Mask in Blue (1953)
  • A Night in Venice (1953)
  • Men at a Dangerous Age (1954)
  • A Woman of Today (1954)
  • When the Alpine Roses Bloom (1955)
  • Mozart (1955)
  • I Often Think of Piroschka (1955)
  • Your Life Guards (1955)
  • The Priest from Kirchfeld (1955)
  • Beloved Corinna (1956)
  • As Long as the Roses Bloom (1956)
  • The Tour Guide of Lisbon (1956)
  • Mikosch, the Pride of the Company (1958)
  • That Won't Keep a Sailor Down (1958)
  • A Song Goes Round the World (1958)
  • Embezzled Heaven (1958)
  • For the First Time (1959)
  • Drei Liebesbriefe aus Tirol (1962)
  • References

    Annie Rosar Wikipedia