Ute Lubosch (born 10 March 1953 in Erfurt) is a German actress, who began her career in East German theater, film, and television.[1][2][3][4]

Background edit

Ute Lubosch studied acting at the Theaterhochschule Leipzig and in the drama studio of the Dresden State Theatre in Dresden. While in Dresden, she had her first commitment for longer engagements at the State Theatre Nordhausen and the Rostock People's Theatre. Since the early 1970s she starred in many DEFA films.[5] Her first starring role was in 1979, as Louise Wilhelmine "Minna" Jägle, the fiancée of playwright Georg Buchner (as played by Hilmar Eichhorn) in Lothar Warneke s Addio, piccola mia. Other leading roles followed, including her role as Fräulein Broder in the 1980 film Glück im Hinterhaus [de] (Backyard Bliss), based upon the Günter de Bruyn novel Buridans Esel.

Career edit

From 1990, she worked primarily in theater, then was directed by Roland Oehme in the Störtebeker Festival in Ralswiek, through 2005 in Gents in Berlin with Gesine Danckwart's Should be: breaking point. In addition, she has held teaching positions at the Konrad Wolf Academy of Film and Television in Babelsberg, the Mittweida (FH) and the Ernst Busch Academy of Dramatic Arts in Berlin. Since 2006 Ute Lubosch has been making repeated appearances in the Müritz Saga.

Ute Lubosch has been married since 2008.[2] Her son Marc Lubosch played as a teenager and starred in a number of DEFA films, including the 1989 Grüne Hochzeit [de], in which she played his character's mother.

Filmography edit

Television edit

  • Deines Nächsten Weib (1980)
  • Aus der Franzosenzeit (1981) as Friederike Voß
  • Adel im Untergang (1981) as Mia von Fuchs-Nordhoff
  • Der ungebetene Gast(2 episodes, 1981) as Vreni
  • Stimmung unterm Dach (1982) as Kerstin Gärtner
  • Das Mädchen und der Junge (1982)
  • Märkische Chronik (10 episodes, 1983)
  • Ich, der Vater (1983)
  • Bühne frei (1983)
  • Schauspielereien]' (1 episode, 1984)
  • Paulines zweites Leben (1984)
  • Franziska]' (1985)
  • Irrläufer (1985)
  • Händel aus Halle (1985)
  • Das Doppelleben des Monsieur Tourillon (1985) as Irma
  • Zwei Nikoläuse unterwegs (1985) as Barbara Bach
  • Das wirkliche Blau (1986) as Conception
  • Weihnachtsgeschichten (1986) as Rose Freitag
  • Alfons Zitterbacke (6 episodes, 1986) as Mutter Zitterbacke, Director Andreas Schreiber
  • Johanna (7 episodes, 1989) as Johanna
  • Garantiert ungestört (1990) as Cippolina
  • Der Staatsanwalt hat das Wort (2 episodes, 1978–1991) as Renate, Stubenfrau
  • Hüpf, Häschen, hüpf (1991)
  • Feuerwache 09 (2 episodes, 1991)
  • Der Landarzt (1 episode, 1993) as Frau Heller
  • Der Mann auf der Bettkante (1995) as Jenna Wissbach
  • Polizeiruf 110 (6 episodes, 1980–1995)
  • Der König (1 episode, 1996) as Tina Wohlbrück
  • Liebe Lügen (1997)
  • Sardsch (1 episode, 1997)
  • Abgehauen (1998) as Christa W., Director Frank Beyer
  • Die Cleveren (1 episode, 2000) as Maria Blücher
  • Balko (1 episode, 2001) as Roswitha Herrmann
  • Wolff's Turf (2 episodes, 1995–2003) as Frau Groll, Greta Baumer
  • Leipzig Homicide (1 episode, 2006) as Prosecutor Schiffner
  • Tatort (3 episodes, 2000–2008) as Asha, Dr. Hildebrandt

Film edit

References edit

  1. ^ InBaseline. "Ute Lubosch". Movies & TV Dept. The New York Times. Baseline & All Movie Guide. Archived from the original on 30 January 2013. Retrieved 30 September 2012.
  2. ^ a b "Interview: Ute Lubosch". Coco Berliner (in German). June 2012. Retrieved 30 September 2012.
  3. ^ Rinke, Andrea (2006). Images of women in East German cinema, 1972–1982: socialist models, private dreamers and rebels. Lewiston, NY: Edwin Mellen Press. ISBN 978-0-7734-5684-6.
  4. ^ Pflaum, Hans Günther; Prinzler, Hans Helmut (1993). Cinema in the Federal Republic of Germany. Inter Nationes. pp. 498, 493, 501.
  5. ^ "Mueritz Saga 2013". Mueritz Saga (in German). Archived from the original on 11 February 2013. Retrieved 30 September 2012.
  6. ^ Jaffe, Ira (2008). Hollywood Hybrids: Mixing Genres in Contemporary Films. Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield. p. 145. ISBN 978-0-7425-3951-8.

External links edit