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Bei M. am „runden Tisch“ wurde über Kunst, Politik und Methodik des Theaterberufs diskutiert sowie darüber, wie die DDR verändert werden kann. Bei den Gesprächen waren oft auch ihre Enkelkinder und ihr wichtigster Freund, der Dresdner Maler Christoph Wetzel, anwesend. Auch in Dresden spielte sie große Charakterrollen wie Marthe Rull im „Zerbrochenen Krug“ von Heinrich von Kleist oder - als großen Abschluss eines langen Theaterlebens - die Maude in Harold Pinters „Harold und Maude“. – Ihre wichtigsten Filmrollen spielte M. erst im hohen Alter, u.a. 1989 in „Die gestundete Zeit“ (Regie: Bernd Böhlich), 1990 in „Kein Wort Einsamkeit“ (Regie: Bernd Böhlich) sowie in dem 1992 erschienenen Film „Das alte Lied“ (Buch und Regie: Ulla Stöckl). – Für ihre Verdienste wurde M. mit der Verdienstmedaille der DDR ausgezeichnet und erhielt 1979 den Martin-Andersen-Nexö-Kunstpreis der Stadt Dresden für ihr Lebenswerk.
Auch in Dresden spielte sie große Charakterrollen wie Marthe Rull im „Zerbrochenen Krug“ von Heinrich von Kleist oder - als großen Abschluss eines langen Theaterlebens - die Maude in Harold Pinters „Harold und Maude“. – Ihre wichtigsten Filmrollen spielte M. erst im hohen Alter, u.a. 1989 in „Die gestundete Zeit“ (Regie: Bernd Böhlich), 1990 in „Kein Wort Einsamkeit“ (Regie: Bernd Böhlich) sowie in dem 1992 erschienenen Film „Das alte Lied“ (Buch und Regie: Ulla Stöckl). – Für ihre Verdienste wurde M. mit der Verdienstmedaille der DDR ausgezeichnet und erhielt 1979 den Martin-Andersen-Nexö-Kunstpreis der Stadt Dresden für ihr Lebenswerk.





Revision as of 18:33, 9 June 2019

Lotte Meyer (22 February 1909 - 7 June 1991) was a German stage and screen actress.[1]

Biography

Lotte Meyer was born in Bremen. She was born into a theatre family. During the nineteenth century her grandparents had run their own theatre company based in Merseburg, and which had toured across Germany, Russia, Austria and Switzerland. He mother, born Fanny Musäus, was a stage actress who had learnt her profession from her own parents. Alfred Meyer, Lotte Meyer's father, was a stage actor and comedian. Preparing to follow in the family tradition, she took acting lessons from Alice Verden at the Dresden State Theatre (Staatstheater).[1]

Meyer was just 19 when she made her stage debut, playing "Lucy", the daughter of the police chief, in Leopold Jessner's production of The Threepenny Opera at Chemnitz. After that she had a successful stage career at the Dresden State Theatre (Staatstheater) between 1930 and 1935. Her sons Christoph and Peter were born in 1937 and 1940: she took a break from her stage work till 1945.[1] Sources are silent about Mr. Schroth, the boys' father. After Lotte Meyer returned to the stage in 1945, her two sons shared their mother's itinerant theatrical lifestyle as they grew up.[2][3]

Returning to the stage in 1945 she became part of the group around Erich Ponto, supporting his efforts to rebuild the "Staatsschauspiel" theatre in Dresden and resume its theatrical traditions. She also appeared at the city's newly founded "Komödienhaus" (loosely, "Comedy Theatre").[1] The central third of Germany, including Dresden, had ended the war administered as the Soviet occupation zone, to be relaunched in October 1949 as the Soviet-sponsored German Democratic Republic (East Germany). It was in East Germany that Lotte Meyer now built her career. Towards the end of the 1940s she began to travel around more (always within East Germany), appearing at theatres in Stralsund, Schwerin and then, via Eisenach, joining the Berlin-based Berliner Ensemble theatre company.[1] Here she worked with Bertolt Brecht, a convinced Marxist who remained an iconic figure for the political left even if he was by now becoming a thorn in the side of the "Marxist" East German Politburo. For Meyer, work with Brecht was a constant learning opportunity.[1]

Later she appeared at Erfurt, at the Theatre of the Young Generation in Dresden, the (East) German National Theatre in Weimar and at the Maxim Gorki Theatre in Berlin. In 1951, while Brecht was still very much alive, she took the lead as "Pelagea Vlassova" in Die Mutter ("The Mother") in the playwright's own production at the "Deutsches Theater". Other roles for which Meyer is remembered include that of "Lyubov Ranevskaya", the lynch pin character in The Cherry Orchard, Mrs. Alving in Ibsen's Ghosts and the title role in Helmut Baierl's "Mrs. Flinz". There were many more major character roles, generally from the more serious end of the theatrical canon.[1]

Lotte Meyer returned to Dresden in 1967, meaning that her career had both its beginnings and its endings at the Dresden State Theatre (Staatstheater). This was also where her father had enjoyed his greatest comedic stage triumphs. She remained closely involved with the Dresden theatre till shortly before her death. She was much loved by comrade thespians, and during the immediate run-up to the changes which heralded the beginnings of a democratic East German state and then, half a year later, reunification, Meyer's apartment was used as a meeting point for many members of the "Dresden ensemble" community. Her home was also the scene of various round-table-style meetings, discussing art, politics and the methodologies of the theatrical profession, with a focus on how the situation in East Germany might be changed. Participants included Meyer's own grandchildren and frequently also took place in the presence of her most important friend, the Dresden artist Christoph Wetzel.[1]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h Kathka Schroth (7 October 2012). "Meyer Lotte, Schauspielerin". Institut für Sächsische Geschichte und Volkskunde, Dresden. Retrieved 8 June 2019.
  2. ^ Karin Rätzel (Oberbürgermeisterin Stadt Cottbus) (29 November 2003). "Würdigung der Verdienste von Herrn Christoph Schroth um die Stadt Cottbus" (PDF). Stadt Cottbus/Chóśebuz, Amt der Oberbürgermeister. Retrieved 9 June 2019.
  3. ^ Wolfgang Hörmann (30 July 2018). "Warum Pension Schöller ein Heimspiel ist". Theatermann Peter Schroth findet Philipp Klapproth, Koppenbrück und Kyritz an der Knatter klasse: Ein Interview mit dem Erfinder der Schöller-Festspiele, die dieses Jahr in die 9. Auflage gehen. Verlagsgesellschaft Madsack GmbH & Co. KG (Märkische Allgemeine), Hannover. Retrieved 9 June 2019.