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Source: WDR, © WDR/Sandra Hoever
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"Der Novembermann" (2007)
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Burghart Klaußner, born September 13, 1949, in Berlin, attended actor's training at Berlin's Max Reinhardt seminar from 1970 to 1972. He then performed at Berlin's Schaubühne and Schillertheater, as well as at theatres in Köln, Frankfurt, Stuttgart, or Hamburg, and worked with directors such as Lietzau, Stein, Palitzsch, Minks, or Düggelin. In 1983, Klaußner made his movie debut in "Ziemlich weit weg". He then appeared regularly on TV, for instance as minister-president in "Einmal Macht und zurück - Engholms Fall" (1993), or as Dr. Heimeran, head of the criminal investigation department, in "Adelheid und ihre Mörder" (1993 to 2001). Klaußner was also seen regularly on the big screen, for instance as a father in "Kinderspiele" (Child's Play", 1992), as Tabatier in "Rossini" (1997), as Robert Stadlober's father in "Crazy" (2000), as Daniel Brühl's father, who had fled the GDR, in "Good Bye, Lenin!" (2003), or as a kidnapped entrepreneur in "Die fetten Jahre sind vorbei" ("The Edukators", 2004), a role that won Klaußner a German film award in 2005.
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Since then, Klaußner starred in several striking supporting parts on
the big screen, for instance, as a near bankrupt business man in Christian Petzold's award-winning film "Yella" and as a head physician in the hospital satire "Die Aufschneider". For his role as the father in Hans-Christian Schmid's
"Requiem" he was nominated German film award in 2006. Klaußner also
played leading roles in the relationship drama "Der Novembermann"
alongside Götz George and in Dito Tsintsadze's
"Der Mann von der Botschaft" ("The Man from the Embassy") that features
Klaußner once more as a person of authority and bureaucrat whose
well-arranged life is turned upside down by several unexpected events.
For this role Klaußner was awarded the "Golden Leopard" in Locarno. Furthermore, Klaußner has toured Germany with his swing band and a program of chansons by Charles Trenet. In 2009, Klaußner was seen in two fairly different, yet equally
distinctive leading roles on the movie screen: In the tragicomedy
"Alter und Schönheit" ("Age and Beauty", 2009), he played a member of a
clique of old buddies who accompany a friend on his deathbed, while in
Michael Haneke's award-winning social parable "Das weiße Band – Eine
deutsche Kindheitsgeschichte" ("The White Ribbon"), Klaußner is seen as
the pastor of a German village who is confronted with mysterious,
occult-seeming incidents on the brink of the outbreak of World War I.
Also in 2009, Klaußner again collaborated with director Dito
Tsintsadze: The crime drama "Mediator" ("Murder in the Theatre"),
starring Klaußner in the leading role, depicts a murder case from the
perspectives of different persons. Furthermore, in 2010, the film
"Goethe!" is going to open in cinemas. In the film, Klaußner plays the
father of a young woman who start a love affair with the legendary poet
and womanizer from Frankfurt.
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(
Burghard Klaussner )
*13.09.1949
Berlin
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