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Jörg Schüttauf

Date of Birth
12/26/1961 - 12:00
Geburtsort
Karl-Marx-Stadt (heute Chemnitz)
Biography

Jörg Schüttauf, born December 26, 1961, in Chemnitz (then Karl-Marx-Stadt), made his stage debut already at the age of six in the city's Pioniertheater and mainly performed in productions of fairy tales. He left school after the tenth grade and started training as a theatrical technician at the Chemnitz opera. After finishing military service, Schüttauf was accepted at Leipzig's theatre school where he stayed until his graduation in 1986. In 1984, while he was still studying, he played his first leading role in a movie, Ete, in Peter Kahane's realistic comedy "Ete und Ali". In 1986, Schüttauf won the Young actor"s award at the fourth national GDR feature film festival.

After graduating from drama school, Schüttauf became a cast member of Hans Otto Theater in Potsdam and stayed in Potsdam for five years. In 1989, he starred in "Die Architekten" ("The Architects"), one of the last DEFA films and at the same time a swansong for the GDR, again directed by Peter Kahane. After the end of the GDR, Schüttauf at first focused on his theatre career again but soon appeared more and more in TV productions. He starred in the leading role in Egon Günther's TV production "Lenz" about the poet Jakob Michael Reinhold Lenz who is slowly drifting into insanity. With this performance, Schüttauf made his breakthrough as an actor. He also won his first Grimme award – and three more Grimme awards until 2008.

From 1992 to 1996, Schüttauf was seen alongside Klaus Wennemann in 46 episodes of the TV crime series "Der Fahnder" in the role of Thomas Becker. Furthermore, he starred in several other TV series, including the crime series "Ein Fall für zwei", "Wolffs Revier", "Sperling", "Der Alte", as well as gangster Axel in Nico Hofmanns TV movie "Der große Abgang" (1995) and as Matt in Jo Baier highly-praised mini-series "Der Laden" ("The Store", 1998). During this time he also performed on stage, at theatres in Berlin and Magdeburg.

Jörg Schüttauf again collaborated with Egon Günther for the movie "Die Braut" ("The Mask of Desire") about Christiane Vulpius and Goethe, where he played four different servants. In 1997, Schüttauf won another Grimme award for his performance in Peter Welz's comedy "Viel Spaß mit meiner Frau" (1997). Furthermore, Schüttauf won the German TV award in 2000 for his part as a gangster in "Warten ist der Tod" ("Waiting Means Death"), directed by Hartmut Schoen, and for "Ich habe Nein gesagt" by Markus Imboden. In 2001, Schüttauf returned to the big screen in Hannes Stöhr's "Berlin is in Germany" as a prison inmate who was sentenced in the GDR and is released after the German reunification took place and who has to cope with this completely new world. The association of German film critics named him Best leading actor for this role. Schüttauf was also seen on the big screen in "September" (2003) and "Nachbarinnen" ("Wanted!", 2004).

From 2002 to 2010, Schüttauf starred as detective Fritz Dellwo alongside Andrea Sawatzki in the Frankfurt branch of the "Tatort" TV crime series. The episode "Herzversagen" won the Grimme award in 2005. And in 2007, Schüttauf won another Grimme award for the TV crime drama "Arnies Welt", directed by Isabel Kleefeld.

Also in the following years, Schüttauf starred in a great number of TV movies and series, his filmography including more than 100 productions. Among his most important TV works are roles in Udo Witte's caper crime movie "Die Blücherbande" (2009), in Peter Keglevic's military crime movie "Kongo" (2010), in the comedies "Stankowskis Millionen" (2011) and "BlitzBlank" (2013) as well as in the two-part crime movie "Tod eines Mädchens" (2015). Schüttauf could rarely be seen on the big screen during that time. He played an important supporting role as the bourgeois brother of an impostor (Devid Striesow) in the social drama "So glücklich war ich noch nie" ("I've Never Been Happier ", 2009); in Lars Kraume's award-winning "Der Staat gegen Fritz Bauer" ("The People vs. Fritz Bauer", 2015) he played a corrupt staff member of the Federal Criminal Police Office.

It was not before 2017 that he finally starred again in a lead role on the big screen. In the comedy "Vorwärts immer!" he portrays a GDR state actor, who in 1989 slips into the role of Erich Honecker to reverse a shoot-to-kill order and ends up in the house of Margot Honecker. For this role, Jörg Schüttauf was awarded with the Bayrischer Filmpreis 2017.

The contents of this entry were funded with the support of the DEFA-Stiftung.

Filmography
2024/2025
Im Schatten der Angst - Der Skorpion
  • Cast
2024/2025
Feste feiern
  • Cast
2025
Neues Land
  • Cast
2022/2023
Ein Fest fürs Leben
  • Cast
2022/2023
Wolfsjagd
  • Cast
2022/2023
Die nettesten Menschen der Welt
  • Cast
2022/2023
Tod den Lebenden
  • Cast
2019-2021
Leander Haußmanns Stasikomödie
  • Cast
2020/2021
Das Mädchen mit den goldenen Händen
  • Cast
2019-2021
Lieber Thomas
  • Cast
2019-2021
Die Toten von Marnow [Staffel 1]
  • Cast
2020/2021
Wir könnten genauso gut tot sein
  • Cast
2020
Ein paar Worte nach Mitternacht
  • Cast
2019/2020
Faking Bullshit
  • Cast
2019/2020
Der letzte Schrey
  • Cast
2018-2020
Unterleuten - Das zerissene Dorf
  • Cast
2019/2020
Herbst
  • Cast
2019
Kranke Geschäfte
  • Cast
2018/2019
Es gilt das gesprochene Wort
  • Cast
2017-2019
Walpurgisnacht - Die Mädchen und der Tod
  • Cast
2018
Pauls Weihnachtswunsch
  • Cast
2016-2018
Werk ohne Autor
  • Cast
2016-2018
Bad Banks [Staffel 1]
  • Cast
2017
Macht euch keine Sorgen!
  • Cast
2015-2017
Der gleiche Himmel
  • Cast
2015-2017
Vorwärts immer!
  • Cast
2014/2015
Der Staat gegen Fritz Bauer
  • Cast
2015
Am zwölften Tag
  • Cast
2014
Krauses Geheimnis
  • Cast
2010/2011
Unter Null
  • Cast
2011
Tödliche Nähe
  • Cast
2009/2010
Am Ende des Tages
  • Cast
2009/2010
Kongo
  • Cast
2009/2010
Weil sie böse sind
  • Cast
2008/2009
Architektur eines Todes
  • Cast
2008/2009
Neuland
  • Cast
2007-2009
Die Blücherbande
  • Cast
2008/2009
So glücklich war ich noch nie
  • Cast
2008
Der tote Chinese
  • Cast
2007/2008
Der frühe Abschied
  • Cast
2007
Bevor es dunkel wird
  • Cast
2007
Wir sind das Volk - Liebe kennt keine Grenzen
  • Cast
2006/2007
Unter uns
  • Cast
2006/2007
Meine schöne Nachbarin
  • Cast
2006
Der Tag des Jägers
  • Cast
2005/2006
Das letzte Rennen
  • Cast
2005/2006
Außer Gefecht
  • Cast
2005
Arnies Welt
  • Cast
2005
Leerstand
  • Cast
2004/2005
Wo ist Max Gravert?
  • Cast
2004/2005
Die letzte Schlacht
  • Cast
2004
Mörderische Suche
  • Cast
2004
Herzversagen
  • Cast
2003/2004
Janus
  • Cast
2004
Der Stich des Skorpion
  • Cast
2003/2004
Nachbarinnen
  • Cast
2003
Das Böse
  • Cast
2002/2003
Frauenmorde
  • Cast
2002/2003
September
  • Cast
2002
Oskar
  • Cast
2002
Operation Rubikon
  • Cast
2002
Freitagnacht
  • Cast
2001
Zuckerbrot und Peitsche
  • Cast
2000/2001
Berlin is in Germany
  • Cast
2000
Tod des Models
  • Cast
2000
Vor Sonnenuntergang
  • Cast
2000
Der Freund von früher
  • Cast
1999
Abschied im Licht
  • Cast
1999
Ich habe nein gesagt
  • Cast
1998/1999
Die Braut
  • Cast
1997
Freiwild
  • Cast
1997/1998
Der Laden
  • Cast
1997/1998
Liebesfeuer
  • Cast
1998
Jagdfieber
  • Cast
1998
Bis zum Horizont und weiter
  • Cast
1996/1997
Ein Schloß für Rita
  • Cast
1997
Rebeccas Vater
  • Cast
1996
Viel Spaß mit meiner Frau
  • Cast
1995
Der große Abgang
  • Cast
1992/1993
Rache
  • Cast
1992
Lenz. Ich aber werde dunkel sein
  • Cast
1991
Mit dem Anruf kommt der Tod
  • Cast
1990
Die Ritter der Tafelrunde
  • Cast
1989/1990
Die Architekten
  • Cast
1989/1990
Korczak
  • Dubbing
1989/1990
Der Drache Daniel
  • Cast
1989
Immensee
  • Cast
1989
Drei Flaschen Tokaier
  • Cast
1986/1987
Unter einem Dach
  • Cast
1984/1985
Ete und Ali
  • Cast
Source-URL: https://www.filmportal.de/en/person/jorg-schuttauf_f30e945936ce4636e03053d50b375b89