Albert Hetterle
Albert Hetterle | |
---|---|
Born |
Petersthal, Odessa, Ukraine | 31 October 1918
Died |
17 December 2006 88) Berlin, Germany | (aged
Occupation |
Actor Theatre director |
Political party | SED |
Spouse(s) | Monika Göppert/Hetterle (b. 1940) |
Children |
Marc Hetterle Alexander Hetterle |
Albert Hetterle (31 October 1918 – 17 December 2006) was a German actor who also became a Berlin theatre director.[1]
Life
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.[2] 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.[2] 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.[3] He was briefly conscripted for military service, but early in 1945 he was released again for reasons of "serious illness".[2]
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).[2]
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.[4]
From 1968 till 1994 Hetterle formed and developed the Maxim Gorki Theatre as its Intendant ("director").[4] 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).[2] 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.
- 1955: Ernst Thälmann – Führer seiner Klasse
- 1956: Drei Mädchen im Endspiel
- 1956: Thomas Müntzer – Ein Film deutscher Geschichte
- 1957: Spur in die Nacht
- 1959: Maibowle
- 1960: Leute mit Flügeln
- 1962: Das zweite Gleis
- 1963: Geheimarchiv an der Elbe
- 1965: Solange Leben in mir ist
- 1972: Trotz alledem!
- 1973 Das unsichtbare Visier (Television series)
- 1979: Stine (TV)
- 1979: Einfach Blumen aufs Dach
- 1986: Der Hut des Brigadiers
- 1990: Die Übergangsgesellschaft (Television version 1990)
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.[1]
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
References
- 1 2 "Albert Hetterle: Langjähriger Intendant des Maxim Gorki Theaters gestorben: Er spielte die Hauptrolle im DEFA-Film "Das zweite Gleis" und war fast 30 Jahre lang Intendant am Maxim Gorki Theater in Berlin. Gestern starb Albert Hetterle im Alter von 88 Jahren in Berlin.". Der Spiegel (online). 18 December 2006. Retrieved 14 June 2015.
- 1 2 3 4 5 Bernd-Rainer Barth. "Hetterle, Albert (Alfred) * 31.10.1918, † 17.2.2006 Schauspieler, Regisseur, Indentant des Maxim-Gorki-Theaters" (in German). Bundesstiftung zur Aufarbeitung der SED-Diktatur: Biographische Datenbanken. Retrieved 14 June 2015.
- ↑ Harry Waibel (2011). Diener vieler Herren : Ehemalige NS-Funktionäre in der SBZ/DDR.. Lang, Frankfurt am Main. p. 137. ISBN 978-3-631-63542-1.
- 1 2 dpa, Hamburg (18 June 2006). "Berliner Intendant Albert Hetterle gestorben .... Der frühere langjährige Intendant des Berliner Maxim Gorki Theaters, Albert Hetterle, ist tot. Der Schauspieler und Regisseur starb am Sonntag im Alter von 88 Jahren in Berlin. "Wir trauern um einen verehrten Theaterkollegen, der vielen im Haus als Intendant und Schauspieler in bester Erinnerung ist", sagte Theaterchef Armin Petras.". Die Welt (online). Retrieved 15 June 2015.
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