Sneha Girap (Editor)

Peter Sturm

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Occupation
  
Actor

Years active
  
1936–1983

Name
  
Peter Sturm


Peter Sturm

Full Name
  
Josef Michel Dischel

Born
  
August 24, 1909 (
1909-08-24
)
Vienna, Austro-Hungarian Empire

Died
  
May 11, 1984(1984-05-11) (aged 74) Berlin, German Democratic Republic

Peter sturm tagtraum


Josef Michel Dischel (24 August 1909 – 11 May 1984), known by his adopted stage name Peter Sturm, was an Austrian and an East German actor.

Contents

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Early life

Dischel was born into a religious Jewish family in Vienna. His father was a tailor, originally from the Polish regions of the Habsburg Empire, and died in 1915. His mother was born in Hungary.

Dischel had taken up an apprenticeship as a textile merchant, but abandoned it. He then decided to become an actor, and began taking drama lessons from renowned Austrian performer Raoul Aslan. While studying, he worked as a radio mechanic. After completing his studies, he assumed the stage name Peter Sturm. He joined the Social Democratic Party of Austria when he was nineteen years old, and later turned to an active member of the Communist Party of Austria, that was declared illegal by Chancellor Engelbert Dollfuss. In 1935, he was convicted of high treason and condemned to two and a half years in prison. Sturm eventually served eighteen months, in the Stein an der Donau prison and in the Wöllersdorf detention camp. In 1936, subsequent to his release, he joined the cast of Brettl am Alsergrund, a political, left-leaning kabarett in Vienna's Alsergrund district, that was managed by Leon Askin and commonly known as Das ABC Kabarett. The actor was one of the cabaret's three declared communists, alongside Jura Soyfer and Robert Klein-Lörk.

Holocaust

In May 1938, after the Anschluss, Sturm was arrested and sent to the Dachau concentration camp. In August, he was transferred to the Buchenwald concentration camp, where he was held in the same barrack with actor Fritz Grünbaum. He was registered as an Austrian political prisoner. In April 1939, Sturm was released from Buchenwald and allowed to leave Germany. He emigrated to Italy, spending three months in Milan. Then, he illegally crossed the border into France, settling in Marseilles. After the Second World War broke out in September, he was interned in the Camp des Milles, where he acted in the camp's makeshift theater. On 27 June 1941, shortly after France surrendered to Germany, the camp's residents were to be evacuated on a train to Bayonne. Sturm managed to escape. He lived in Marseilles until August 1942, when he was deported to the Drancy internment camp, from which he was sent to the Auschwitz concentration camp. He was held in the Blechhammer sub-camp, where he was forced to serve as a barber. Occasionally, when the guards authorized it, he participated in theater evenings. In January 1945, the prisoners were evacuated to Buchenwald in a death march. Sturm survived it and wrote an account on the march shortly after arriving in Buchenwald. He joined the camp's communist underground organization. While in Buchenwald, he was a member of the building detachment headed by Robert Siewert. During the Holocaust, his mother was murdered in Auschwitz. Buchenwald was liberated on 11 April 1945.

Later years

Sturm returned to Vienna, where he resumed his acting career and worked as a radio presenter. He appeared regularly on the stage of the Theater in der Josefstadt, and later joined the cast of the New Theater in the Scala in the city's Wieden district, then in the Soviet-administrated zone. The theater, opened in 1948, was founded by communist exiles who returned to Austria after the end of the war. Sturm made his debut on screen in the 1956 film adaptation of the operetta Gasparone. During the same year - after the Soviet withdrawal from Austria left it without financial and political support - the Scala had to be closed. With several other fellow actors from the theater, Sturm left Vienna and emigrated to the German Democratic Republic, settling in East Berlin. There, director Wolfgang Langhoff took him into the Deutsches Theater, in which he remained a member of the regular cast. In 1960, he performed the role of August Rose, a Buchenwald prisoner who betrays his friends, in a television production based on Bruno Apitz's novel Naked Among Wolves. On 30 March 1961 Sturm was awarded the Art Prize of the German Democratic Republic. In 1963, when he was requested to play August Rose once more for Frank Beyer's film remake of the series, Apitz and Beyer had to convince him to agree. Sturm was badly depressed by the work on Naked Among Wolves, and became very ill after the filming ended. He was involved in the commemoration of Buchenwald's victims until his departure.

Sturm had a long career as an actor with DEFA and DFF in East Germany, appearing in more than fifty cinema and television productions.

Filmography

Actor
1983
Der Koffer (Short) as
Sprecher
1983
Bühne frei (TV Series) as
Alfred Zierwind
- Die alte Liebe (1983) - Alfred Zierwind
1983
Martin Luther (TV Series) as
Hans Luther
- Das Gewissen (1983) - Hans Luther
1983
Meine fünf Frauen (TV Movie)
1983
Bruno H. Bürgel - Berliner Firmament (TV Movie) as
August Jost
1983
Abends im Kelch (TV Movie) as
Wirt
1982
Hotel Polan und seine Gäste (TV Series) as
Dr. Levi / Dr. Silberstein
1981
Der ungebetene Gast (TV Series) as
Prof. Eduard Sennhöfer
- Zweiter Teil (1981) - Prof. Eduard Sennhöfer
1981
Jockei Monika (TV Series) as
Herr Zaubel
- Guten Tag, Borkenbrunn (1981) - Herr Zaubel
- Erfinder lieben praktisch (1981) - Herr Zaubel
- Aufgalopp (1981) - Herr Zaubel
1981
Die Kolonie as
Rudi Baden
1981
Two Lines in Small Font as
Byvshiy zaklyuchennyy kontslagerya (as P. Sturm)
1981
Chirurgus Johann Paul Schroth - Eine Geschichte aus den Anfängen der Charité (TV Movie) as
Meister Roland
1981
Die Stunde der Töchter as
Brigadier Fuchs
1980
Regine oder Die Falle (TV Movie) as
Ludwig Blume
1980
Max und siebeneinhalb Jungen as
Max
1980
Albertine oder Das schlimme Ding, sich in eine Braut zu verlieben (TV Movie)
1980
Eine Anzeige in der Zeitung (TV Movie) as
Alfred Just
1980
Draußen im Heidedorf (TV Movie) as
Harmonikaspieler
1980
Johann Sebastian Bachs vergebliche Reise in den Ruhm as
Nachbar
1980
Kotorski mornari as
Von Gusseck
1979
Der Staatsanwalt hat das Wort (TV Series) as
Dr. Feigel
- Zur Feier des Tages (1979) - Dr. Feigel
1979
Einfach Blumen aufs Dach as
Portier Kleinstadthotel
1977
Goldene Zeiten - Feine Leute (TV Series) as
Kobosil
- Fritz und Willi (1977) - Kobosil
1977
Die Liebe und die Königin (TV Movie) as
Joshua
1975
Police Call 110 (TV Series) as
Alter Mann
- Ein Fall ohne Zeugen (1975) - Alter Mann (uncredited)
1974
Jacob the Liar as
Schmidt
1974
Somow und andere (TV Movie)
1974
Tod am Mississippi (TV Movie) as
Tucker
1974
Spätsaison (TV Mini Series) as
Psychiater (1974)
1974
Geheimprozess Grusinius und andere (TV Movie) as
Grusinius
1974
Ein Freudenfeuer für den Bischof (TV Movie) as
Reiligen
1973
The Great Battle as
Generaloberst Walter Model
1973
Der kaukasische Kreidekreis (TV Movie) as
Mikha Loladse, Arzt, Milchbauer, Hinkender
1972
Der Adjutant (TV Series) as
Douglas
- Dritter Teil (1972) - Douglas
- Zweiter Teil (1972) - Douglas
1971
Der Unfallzeuge (TV Movie) as
John Babcock
1971
Die Unbequemen (TV Movie) as
Lucke
1971
Osvobozhdenie: Napravlenie glavnogo udara as
Generalfeldmarschall Walter Model
1971
KLK an PTX - Die Rote Kapelle as
Krapotschkin
1970
Jeder stirbt für sich allein (TV Mini Series) as
Politischer Leiter
- Erster Teil (1970) - Politischer Leiter
1970
Osvobozhdenie: Proryv as
Generaloberst Walter Model
1970
Osvobozhdenie: Ognennaya duga as
Generaloberst Walter Model
1970
Die Flamme (TV Mini Series)
1968
Ich - Axel Caesar Springer (TV Series) as
Justiziar
- Der gemachte Mann (1970) - Justiziar
- Seid nett zueinander (1968)
1969
Die Pferdekur (TV Movie) as
Pferdebesitzer
1969
Jede stunde meines lebens (TV Movie)
1969
Die Dame aus Genua (TV Movie)
1969
Lebende Ware as
Mahlmann
1969
Krupp und Krause (TV Series) as
Piaschowski
- Warum ist es am Rhein so schön? (1969) - Piaschowski
1968
Stunde des Skorpions (TV Mini Series)
1968
König Karl (TV Movie) as
Sander
1968
Heroin as
Doboka
1967
Kleiner Mann - was nun? (TV Movie) as
Bettenverkäufer
1966
Blaulicht (TV Series) as
Wemhoff / Koch
- Der vierte Mann (1967) - Wemhoff
- Maskenball (1966) - Koch
1967
Brennende Ruhr (TV Movie)
1967
Der Schatten eines Kämpfers (TV Movie) as
James Gallicker
1966
Die Ermittlung - Oratorium in 11 Gesängen (TV Movie) as
Arthur Breitwieser, Angeklagter
1966
Die Perser (TV Movie)
1962
Fernsehpitaval (TV Series) as
Ministerialrat Heigl
- Die Synagoge brennt (1966)
- Die Affäre Heyde-Sawade (1963) - Ministerialrat Heigl
- Auf der Flucht erschossen (1962)
1966
Die Rebellion des Patrick Wright (TV Movie) as
Goldstein
1965
Karla as
Hartmann
1965
Episoden vom Glück (TV Movie) as
Mühlmann
1965
Dr. Schlüter (TV Series) as
Prof. Tolsett
- Die Insel (1965) - Prof. Tolsett
1965
Eiche und Angora (TV Movie) as
Maschnik
1965
Solange Leben in mir ist as
Ober
1965
Die Heinitzer (TV Movie) as
Wünsche
1965
Ein mittlerer Held (TV Movie) as
Karl Görges
1965
Parkstraße 13 (TV Movie) as
Dr. Elken
1964
Heiraten ist immer ein Risiko (TV Movie) as
Oberst John Brocklesby
1963
Vanina Vanini (TV Movie) as
Fürst Vanini
1963
Die Spur führt in den 7. Himmel (TV Series) as
Hermann Müller
- Fünfte Folge (1963) - Hermann Müller
- Vierte Folge (1963) - Hermann Müller
- Dritte Folge (1963) - Hermann Müller
- Zweite Folge (1963) - Hermann Müller
- Erste Folge (1963) - Hermann Müller
1963
Reserviert für den Tod as
Zugschaffner
1963
Naked Among Wolves as
August Rose
1962
Zum goldenen Anker (TV Movie) as
Panisse
1962
Keine Zeit für Helden (TV Movie) as
Dr. Alois Vestry
1962
On the Sunny Side as
Intendant
1961
Das Stacheltier - Recht gute Besserung (Short) as
Jochen Emsig
1961
Der Tod hat ein Gesicht as
Alter Mann im Leichenschauhaus
1961
Mord an Rathenau (TV Movie) as
Hugo Stinnes
1961
Professor Mamlock as
Dr. Hirsch
1961
Die unbekannte Größe (TV Movie) as
Dr. Johann Kolbing
1961
Steinzeitballade as
Berger
1960
Das Stacheltier - Die Frau seiner Träume (Short) as
Abteilungsleiter Krause
1960
Herr Puntila und sein Knecht Matti
1960
Nackt unter Wölfen (TV Movie) as
Rose
1960
Der Moorhund as
Karl Schultz
1960
Der Raub der Sabinerinnen (TV Movie) as
Prof. Martin Gollwitz
1960
Kein Ärger mit Cleopatra as
Mathias Kahlow
1960
Sommerwege as
Kleinmann
1960
Neger Kuoli (TV Movie) as
Kil Kuoli
1960
Einer von uns
1959
Eine alte Liebe as
Heinrich Rantsch
1959
Ware für Katalonien as
Mr. Dupont
1955
Gasparone
Self
1962
Das Künstlerporträt (TV Series documentary) as
Self
- Peter Sturm (1962) - Self

References

Peter Sturm Wikipedia


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