#Zuckmayer
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TikTok, des Teufels General, das Känguru, die SPD und Hessi James
Warum mich TikTok schockiert hat und ich unter der Woche an den Teufels General, das Känguru, Provokantes auf LinkedIn, Hessi James, die SPD und meine Borussia denken musste. Persönliche #Wochenschau der KW49-2023
Ein Thema hat mich die Woche besonders bewegt: Nachdem ich ein Konto auf TikTok angelegt habe, wurden mir sofort und massiv Kurzvideos der AfD und von rechten Spinnern in meinen Feed gespült. Warum? Ist das genereller so? Ich bin besorgt, dass gerade junge Leute massiv mit den Lügen und sogenannten einfachen Wahrheiten der AfD in Kontakt kommen. Passend zum Thema Nazis und Rassisten: Frank hat…
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Heimat ist nicht dort, wo man herkommt, sondern wo man sterben möchte.
Home is not where you come from, but where you want to die.
Carl Zuckmayer (1896 – 1977), German writer
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So wie du aussiehst, wirst du angesehen. — Carl Zuckmayer
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“Muß n schönes Gefühl sein, wenn man auf einmal mit Herr Leutnant angeredet wird, das schmeichelt den Gehörknöchelchen. Wissen Sie, ich sage immer: vom Gefreiten aufwärts beginnt der Darwinismus. Aber der Mensch, der Mensch fängt erst beim Leutnant an, is nich so, is nich so?”
– aus Der Hauptmann von Köpenick (1931) von Carl Zuckmayer
#gerade mal wieder den hauptmann in die hand genommen aus... gründen#muss bald mal wieder nen zuckmayer lesen merk ich#der hauptmann von köpenick#carl zuckmayer#1930s#zitate
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And I know the movie is based on a true story etc but still. the Fraktur lettering in the title made it look like an adaptation of Zuckmayer's "Der Hauptmann von Köpenick" soo much I'm tempted to give him at least a bit of credit for inspiring it
#yeah the stories have nothing in common except they take place during ww2 and a hauptmann uniform gets stolen. so what#also i know fraktur is translated to gothic in english but i won't call it that#carl zuckmayer#der hauptmann von köpenick#der hauptmann 2017#⚓
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MAN KANN NICHTS VERLIEREN
Man kann nichts verlieren,
was man je wesentlich erfaßt
und besessen hat.
Das innere Bild bleibt bestehen.
(Carl Zuckmayer)
Foto: by Sarah Fuchs on Instagram
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Towards the end of his life, the actor Adrian Schiller, who has died unexpectedly aged 60, found success and sudden fame in two blockbuster TV shows: The Last Kingdom (2018-22), on Netflix, in which he played the richest man in medieval Wessex, Aethelhelm; and ITV’s drama Victoria (2016-19), as Cornelius Penge, a footman in the royal household.
In both, a fleeting glance would suggest that here was a naturally authoritative actor, blessed with gravitas and style. This camouflaged the demonic comic spirit within, which had informed so many of his memorable stage performances since he first appeared in the German Expressionist Carl Sternheim’s 1911 play The Knickers at the Lyric, Hammersmith, in 1991. In a delicious comic performance, he played a weak-chested Wagner-loving barber thunderstruck by a flash of discarded lingerie as the Kaiser drove by, suggesting, said the Times critic, “a tousle-headed combination of Charlie Chaplin, Egon Schiele and Gollum, whose idea of romance is reading extracts from the Flying Dutchman”.
Schiller proceeded to leading roles with the Royal Shakespeare Company in the 1990s – his Porter in a disappointing 1996 Macbeth was the funniest I had ever seen, while his entertaining Touchstone in an awful 2000 designer knitwear production of As You Like It rescued another dud evening.
He was less prominent in some strange productions at the National – Peter Handke’s wordless The Hour We Knew Nothing of Each Other in 2008, as one of 27 actors playing 450 characters in a town square, coming and going with no interaction, and as a revolutionary tailor in a poor 2013 retread of Carl Zuckmayer’s 1931 Captain of Kopenick, in which Antony Sher did not eclipse memories of Paul Scofield in the NT’s 1971 production.
On the other hand, he was outstanding in Chekhov’s Three Sisters, superbly directed, and modernised, by Benedict Andrews at the Young Vic in 2012, playing Kulygin, a leather-jacketed schoolteacher tragically infatuated with his own disloyal wife; and he was a compelling, original, quietly spoken and sympathetic Shylock in The Merchant of Venice at the Wanamaker, the candle-lit indoor venue at Shakespeare’s Globe, in 2022. The Merchant rekindled the current noise around the play – is it antisemitic or about antisemitism?
In an interview with the Jewish Chronicle, Schiller tilted towards the second view. He averred that he was “a Jew, but not Jewish”.
Schiller was born in Oxford, the second of four children of Judith (nee Bennett), a teacher, and Klaus Schiller, a gastroenterologist whose family had emigrated from Austria to Britain in 1938. When Klaus was appointed a consultant at St Peter’s hospital, Chertsey, the Schillers moved to Surrey.
Adrian was educated at Kingston grammar school and Charterhouse, in Godalming, Surrey, where he pursued a busy life in stage productions. Instead of drama school, he took a good degree in philosophy (after switching from architecture) at University College London, although he always self-deprecatingly said that he majored in “plays and partying”.
His early television career encompassed series such as Prime Suspect, A Touch of Frost, Judge John Deed and much else, through to the first series of Endeavour in 2013. He also popped up in the Channel 4 series The Devil’s Whore (2008) set in the English civil war, and the Doctor Who story strand The Doctor’s Wife in 2011.
One of his most effective cameos on screen was as the barman in a striking government-sponsored advert in the anti-drink-driving campaign in 2007. He leaned deep into the camera with a series of non-equivocal questions to a bemused, unimpressed young glass-holding customer who may or may not have grasped the seriousness of the interrogation.
But he always returned to the theatre, seeking out the most demanding roles with companies who would accommodate him. He gave an almost ideal Cassius, wirily intellectual while bubbling passionately underneath, said Michael Billington, for David Farr’s 2005 RSC touring version of Julius Caesar. In the title role of Tartuffe at the Watermill, Newbury, in 2006, he was cool and venomous, as well as understated, and clearly the star of the show.
And for Stephen Unwin’s English Touring Theatre in 2007, he rebooted the remorseless villain, De Flores, in Middleton and Rowley’s Jacobean shocker, The Changeling. He was more than notable, too, opposite Sher’s Sigmund Freud, as a vividly hilarious Salvador Dalí, in their great encounter scene in Terry Johnson’s Hysteria at the Hampstead theatre, revived there in 2013, 20 years after its Royal Court premiere.
His feature film credits were not extensive, but in 2014 he was well cast as the sardonic high priest Caiaphas in Son of God, Christopher Spencer’s biblical epic. In Sarah Gavron’s Suffragette (2015), scripted by Abi Morgan, he was an imposing Lloyd George, coming round to the persuasion of the militant vote-seeking women led by Meryl Streep as Emmeline Pankhurst and Carey Mulligan as a fictional worker fuelled by the excitement of change and protest.
His last movie, yet to be released, is Red Sonja, in which he plays the king of Turan in a remake of the 1985 sword-and-sorcery Marvel Comics fantasy.
Back on stage in 2023, he returned to questions of Jewish identity and survival in three short new plays at the Soho theatre and a more substantial Holocaust drama, The White Factory by Dmitry Glukhovsky, at the sparky new Marylebone theatre (formerly the Steiner Hall), in which he was a powerful, wise presence in the story of a survivor of the Łódź ghetto in Poland, played by Mark Quartley, adapting to American life in the Brooklyn of the 60s.
At the time of his death, Schiller – who was also a skilled sculptor and guitarist – had just returned from Sydney and the triumphant international tour of The Lehman Trilogy, directed by Sam Mendes, and had been looking forward to the next leg of the tour in San Francisco.
He is survived by his partner, Milena Wlodkowska, a laboratory support technician, and their son, Gabriel, and by his sister, Ginny, and brothers, Nick and Ben.
🔔 Adrian Townsend Schiller, actor, born 21 February 1964; died 3 April 2024
Daily inspiration. Discover more photos at Just for Books…?
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532- La mitad de la vida es suerte, la otra disciplina; y ésta es decisoria ya que, sin disciplina, no se sabría por dónde empezar con la suerte.
(Carl Zuckmayer)
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Bahnhof Zoo. Aug 2023
Blick Richtung Romanisches Café.
Grad erzählt in einem youtube-Video mir wieder irgendein Typ, wie wichtig es doch sei, "seine Komfort-Zonen" zu verlassen um voranzukommen. Im Leben, in der Kunst, in der Photographie.
Da denk ich mir: Was bin ich froh, in den letzten Jahren endlich mal ein bißchen Komfortzone gefunden zu haben! Da will ich nicht mehr raus, da kette ich mich drin fest. Endlich Ruhe haben. Glücklich auf dem Sofa vegetieren, ohne daß ständig irgendwelche Treibsätze im Hinterkopf gezündet werden.
Eigtl wollte ich ja zum Romanischen Café. Carl Zuckmayer beschreibt, wie er bei Blitzeis als junger Hungerleider in B ankommt und ausgerechnet auf Brecht* trifft. Wie man sich im Romanischen Café besäuft und immer wieder gemeinsam auf die Schnauze fällt.
Jeder, der das Deutschland des 20. Jahrhunderts, die Nazizeit verstehen will, muss Zuckmayer gelesen haben. Vorher gar nicht erst anfangen, drüber zu sprechen. Etwas schwülstiger Titel. "Horen der Freundschaft". Eins der wichtigsten Bücher in meinem Leben... Noch wichtiger als Klemperer.
So wichtig, da es doch gerade wieder losgeht – mit den Kriegsgeilen und den Judenmördern und uns mindestens ein Bürgerkrieg ins Haus zu stehen scheint mit den ganzen Antifa-Islamisten, die unbedingt "auf der richtigen Seite" der Geschichte stehen wollen, zusammen mit den Ayatollahs.
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* Wenn ich mich recht erinnere, an meine damalige Lektüre. Aus dem Bücherschrank meiner kleinen Schwester. Ich glaub, das Buch habe ich ihr geklaut.
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Carl Zuckmayer und die Rheinische Erlösung ➡️ https://www.die-tagespost.de/kultur/literatur/carl-zuckmayer-und-die-rheinische-erloesung-art-247728
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Birthdays 12.27
Beer Birthdays
Gerardus Johannes Mulder (1802)
Louis Pasteur (1822)
Rudolph Rhineboldt (1827)
John A. White (1839)
Philip Ackerman (1841)
Paul Kalmanovitz (1905)
Jean Van Roy (1967)
Rick Sellers (1977)
Five Favorite Birthdays
Maryam d'Abo; actor (1960)
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Louis Pasteur; scientist (1822)
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Famous Birthdays
John Amos; actor (1939)
Jean Bartik; computer scientist and engineer (1924)
Karla Bonoff; pop singer (1951)
Terry Bozzio; rock drummer (1950)
Louis Bromfield; writer (1896)
Johannes Vodnianus Campanus; Czech poet, playwright(1572)
George Cayley; scientist, aerial navigator (1773)
Timothée Chalamet; French-American actor
Nick Chubb; football player[ (1995)
Chyna; wrestler & actress (1970)
Lily Cole; English model (1987)
Wilson Cruz; actor (1973)
Marlene Dietrich; German actor, singer (1901)
Jay Ellis; actor (1981)
Veronica Giuliani; Italian Capuchin mystic (1660)
Ian Gomez; actor (1964)
Sydney Greenstreet; actor (1879)
Hinton Helper; writer (1829)
François Hemsterhuis; Dutch philosopher (1721)
Mary Howard; English author (1907)
Mick Jones; rock guitarist (1944)
Eva LaRue; model and actress (1966)
Oscar Levant; pianist, composer (1906)
Mina Loy; British modernist poet and artist (1882)
William H. Masters; physician, sex researcher (1915)
Scotty Moore; guitarist and songwriter (1931)
Agnes Nixon; soap opera writer (1927)
Charles Olson; poet (1970)
Carson Palmer; football player (1979)
Hermann-Paul; French painter and illustrator (1864)
Mike Pinder; English rock keyboardist (1941)
Theresa Randle; actress (1964)
Cokie Roberts; television journalist (1943)
Teofil Rutka; Polish philosopher (1622)
Matt Slocum; rock guitarist (1972)
Erin E. Stead; illustrator (1982)
Willem van Otterloo; Dutch conductor and composer (1907)
Kristoffer Zegers; Dutch pianist and composer (1973)
Carl Zuckmayer; German author and playwright (1896)
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Die Welt wird nie gut, aber sie könnte besser werden.
The world will never be good, but it could become better.
Carl Zuckmayer (1896 – 1977), German writer
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BİLİM DOSYASI : ATATÜRK VE ALMAN BİLİM ADAMLARI
ATATÜRK VE ALMAN BİLİM ADAMLARI – *Alfred Kantorowicz* – *Philipp Schwartz* – *Hans Reichenbach* – *Walther Kranz* – *Von Aster* – *Albert Eckstein* – *Zuckmayer* – *Holzmeister* – *Carl Ebert* – *Paul Hindemith* – *Dessauer* – *Rudolf Nissen* – *Erich Frank* – *Von Hippel* – *Von Mises* – *Fritz Arndt* – *Finlay Freundlich* – *Freundlich* – *Dessaur* – *Kessler* – *Kantorowicz* –…
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“Und da hat nu schließlich der Mensch seine Muttersprache, und wenn er nischt hat, denn hat er die immer noch. Det glaubense jar nich, wie scheen Deutschland is, wenn man weit wech is und immer nur dran denkt.”
– aus Der Hauptmann von Köpenick (1931) von Carl Zuckmayer
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Now that I think about it Schiller might even be my second favorite German playwright? He would be first hadn't Zuckmayer completely derailed my brain when I first read Des Teufels General. But the grandeur of Schiller's historical plays is so fantastic I honestly dream of one day seeing his Wallenstein trilogy on stage in a production that really commits to it 💞
#none of that modern adaptation bullshit or minimalistic theater. you'd need set designs that completely blow your brains out#⚓
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