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1-50 of 236
- Actor
- Producer
- Writer
Gary Weeks is currently best known as for his role as JJ's trouble-making father "Luke Maybank" on the hit Netflix series "Outer Banks."
His credited career spans over 20 years, with over 150 film, TV, and commercial roles. Gary has played alongside many of his heroes along the way. Gary has also written, produced, and directed award-winning films that won over 100 awards.
Gary was raised in rural Morris, GA, where he loved two things: Movies and Basketball (and won two state championships in high school). He started writing & filming short films at an early age, but didn't truly discover acting until late in his college tour. Gary studied at colleges including his beloved University of Georgia. As he tried to focus on school, he moved around to other colleges (Brevard College, Georgia Southwestern, and Georgia State) until he finally gave into his passion for the film industry and moved to Los Angeles.
He studied acting in L.A., but quickly found that his favorite training was on-set, studying the process of filmmaking, writing and producing films. Not only did it make a better actor, but his films won over 100 awards on the indie film circuit. That experience led to his love of film festivals and "The Hill Country Film Festival" was born in Fredericksburg, TX in 2010 along with co-founders Chad Mathews and Amie Miskovsky.- Actress
- Soundtrack
Born Kätherose Derr in Wiesbaden, Karin Dor studied acting and ballet at school and began in films as an extra. The attractive redhead made an indelible impression on Austrian director Harald Reinl (who became her first husband in 1954) and this paved the way to higher profile roles. Her first significant featured appearance was in Reinl's melodrama Der schweigende Engel (1954). Karin subsequently shared top billing in a classroom drama about wayward matriculation students, Ihre große Prüfung (1954). During the initial segment of her career she played nice girls, mainly wide-eyed ingénues, innocent victims and assorted naive juveniles in war and period dramas (As Long as You Live (1955)), Heimatfilms (Almenrausch und Edelweiß (1957)) and operettas (The White Horse Inn (1960)).
By 1960, a more glamorous, lithe and sensual Karin had graduated to juicer roles as heroines in Edgar Wallace potboilers (beginning with Der grüne Bogenschütze (1961)) and a series of Karl May European westerns, invariably directed by Reinl and co-starring Tarzan actor Lex Barker (a combination which proved equally successful for other crime/sci-fi franchises, including The Invisible Dr. Mabuse (1962)). Many of these pictures enjoyed only limited release and were rarely exhibited outside Germany.
Karin succeeded at last to break her stereotyping by playing a pathological serial killer wielding a cutthroat razor in another Wallace/Reinl outing, Room 13 (1964), and - for a total change of pace -- essayed Brunhilde in a two-part filming of the epic 'Die Nibelungen' (also directed by Reinl). With her international appeal now widening, she appeared in The Face of Fu Manchu (1965), a British-West German co-production, as a scientist's daughter menaced by the titular villain. To follow was arguably her best-known international role as an early 'Bond girl', Helga Brandt (alias Number Eleven), a SPECTRE operative whose failure to eliminate J.B. results in her being dropped into a piranha-infested pool by super villain Blofeld (Donald Pleasence) in You Only Live Twice (1967). She was then engaged by Alfred Hitchcock for the part of Cuban resistance leader Juanita de Cordoba in Topaz (1969) in which her character came to a similarly sticky end. Karin's career never quite recovered from this director's rare box-office aberration. British Times reviewer and Hitchcock specialist John Russell Taylor described the picture as "generally flat, undistinguished, and lacking in any sign of positive interest or involvement on his (Hitchcock's) part". In the wake of Topaz, Karin's screen appearances became infrequent, except for a couple of guest spots on American crime shows, followed by an of unsuccessful feature film comeback attempt in the incongruous thriller Warhead (1977). She was latterly seen on German television in several episodes of Rosamunde Pilcher (1993). Karin's third husband was actor and stuntman George Robotham who predeceased her in 2007.- The face of Simone Signoret on the Paris Metro movie posters in March 1982 looked even older than her 61 years. She was still a box-office draw, but the film L'étoile du Nord (1982) would be her last theatrical release; she played the landlady. Signoret had a long film apprenticeship during World War II, mostly as an extra and occasionally getting to speak a single line. She worked without an official permit during the Nazi occupation of France because her father, who had fled to England, was Jewish. Working almost all the time, she made enough as an extra to support her mother and three younger brothers. Her breakthrough to international stardom came when she was 38 with the British film Room at the Top (1958). Her Alice Aisgill, an unhappily-married woman who hopes she has found true love, radiated real warmth in all of her scenes--not just the bedroom scenes. She was the same woman as Dedee, a prostitute who finds true love in Dédée d'Anvers (1948), a film directed by Signoret's first husband, Yves Allégret, a decade earlier. Hollywood beckoned throughout the 1950s, but both Signoret and her second husband, Yves Montand, were refused visas to enter the United States; their progressive political activities did not sit well with the ultra-conservative McCarthy-era mentality that gripped the US at the time. They got visas in 1960 so Montand, a singer, could perform in New York and San Francisco. They were in Los Angeles in March 1960 when Signoret received the Oscar for best actress and stayed on so Montand could play opposite Marilyn Monroe in Let's Make Love (1960). The Signoret film that is shown most often on TV and got a theatrical re-release in 1995, four decades after it was made is the French thriller Diabolique (1955). The chilly character Signoret plays is proof of her acting ability. More typical of her person is the countess in Ship of Fools (1965), a film that also starred Vivien Leigh ,which more than doubled its chances of being in a video-store or library film collection.
- Actor
- Producer
- Soundtrack
John McEnroe is a former professional American tennis player, born in Wiesbaden, West Germany in 1959.
Breaking many records, McEnroe is regarded as one of the greatest tennis players of all time, though he is perhaps equally, if not more known, for his losses of temper on the court. His outbursts became so infamous that he titled his 2002 autobiography "You cannot be serious" after his most-known phrase, and observed in the book as he got older that: "There were times I felt like an old circus act, in a show that was attracting less and less interest. "
Since retiring from the sport, McEnroe has worked as a commentator, and often parodied his own public persona, playing fictional versions of himself in commercials, and movies including You Don't Mess with the Zohan (2008), Anger Management (2003) and Jack and Jill (2011).
McEnroe was formerly married to actress Tatum O'Neal from 1986 to 1994, and is presently married to singer Patty Smyth.- Melody Perkins was born on 28 January 1974 in Wiesbaden, Hesse, Germany. She is an actress, known for Planet of the Apes (2001), Power Rangers in Space (1998) and Power Rangers Lost Galaxy (1999).
- Actress
- Writer
- Additional Crew
Jasna Fritzi Bauer (born in 1989) is a Swiss actress. Since her debut on screen in Pia Marais "At Ellens Age" she has appeared in more than thirty film and TV productions.
In 2012 she graduated from the well known Highschool of Performing Arts "Ernst Busch" in Berlin where she studied acting for about 4 years.
During her time at "Ernst Busch" she was already played parts in various theaters in Berlin, f.e. at Schaubühne am Lehniner Platz in Leo Tolstoy's 'The Power of Darkness', directed by Michael Thalheimer. After her graduation in 2012 she became a permanent member of the ensemble at the famous Burgtheater in Vienna. In 2015 she decided to leave the ensemble but still maintained the status of guest.
She made her leading debut in Andi Rogenhagen's 2010 feature film 'Alive and Ticking', where she embodies the teenager Eva, who is suffering from Tourette's syndrome. For her performance, she was awarded with the Young Artist Award of the Filmkunstfest Mecklenburg-Vorpommern in 2011 and the New Faces Award in 2012. In 2011, Bauer received leading roles in two other feature films: In Christian Petzold's award-winning DDR drama Barbara, she starred opposite Nina Hoss and Ronald Zehrfeld. Under the direction of Bettina Blümner she played the main character in the film adaptation Scherbenpark after Alina Bronsky's novel of the same name.
She is one of the most well known actresses in Germany and has played in various movies and TV productions since. Such as the Netflix series 'Dogs of Berlin' by Christian Alvart, 'Axolotl Overkill' by Helene Hegemann which was awarded with the best camera award at Sundace Film Festival, 'Cut Off' where she played the female lead alongside Moritz Bleibtreu, Fahri Yardim and Lars Eidinger.
Since 2021 she is playing the role of detective Liv Moormann in the famous German TV series Tatort.- Director
- Writer
- Producer
Has studied economy and political sciences as well as at the Institut des Hautes Etudes Cinematographique (IDHEC) in Paris, France. Worked as an assistant director with Louis Malle, Jean-Pierre Melville and Alain Resnais. Founded his own production company Bioskop Film together with Reinhard Hauff and Eberhard Junkersdorf in 1973. Has directed several operas in Frankfurt a/M, Berlin (Germany) and Paris, France. Since 1992 chief executive of the german production company Sudio Babelsberg GmbH (former UFA/DEFA).- Actor
- Director
- Writer
Gustav von Wangenheim was a German actor, film director, and screenwriter from Wiesbaden. He is mostly remembered for playing the character Hutter in the classic horror film "Nosferatu" (1921). His character was based on the character of Jonathan Harker in the novel "Dracula" (1897) by Bram Stoker.
In 1895, Wangenheim was born in Wiesbaden. His father was the prolific actor Eduard von Winterstein (1871-1961, real name: Eduard Clemens Franz Anna Freiherr von Wangenheim), while his mother was theatrical actress Minna Mengers. His paternal ancestors were members of German nobility, the Freiherrs (Barons) of Wangenheim.
Wangenheim made his film debut in 1914, and went on to star in several silent films. Besides "Nosferatu", his best known film was "Woman in the Moon" (1929) by y Fritz Lang. It was among the earliest depictions of space travel in film, and is still considered one of the first "serious" science fiction films.
In 1921, Wangenheim joined the Communist Party of Germany (KPD, 1918-1956). At the time, the KPD was one of the major political parties of the Weimar Republic. During the 1920s, the party became Stalinist in ideology. In 1931, Wangenheim established "Die Truppe '31", a theatrical company consisting exclusively of communists. Wangenheim both wrote and produced three plays for this theatre company between 1931 and 1933.
In 1933, the then-new Nazi regime shut down Wangenheim's theatrical company. His ideology made Wangenheim a target for Nazi persecution, so he soon fled Germany. He settled in the Soviet Union, becoming a long-term resident of the "Hotel Lux" in Moscow. During the 1930s, this hotel housed exiles from about 50 different countries.
In 1933, Wangenheim became the new leader of Left Column, a Soviet theatrical company which consisted primarily of German exiles. He eventually secured enough funding to direct the film "Der Kampf" (1936), a film protesting against the oppressive policies of Nazi Germany.
In 1936, Wangenheim was implicated in the then-ongoing trials of the Great Purge, a repressive political purge within the Soviet Union. He reportedly denounced the actress Carola Neher (1900-1942) and her husband as Trotskyites. According to a testimony from Wangenheim's son, following a lengthy interrogation, his father was forced to sign papers which implicated Neher in an anti-Soviet conspiracy. The charges against her had been prepared, and the authorities needed to convince Wangenheim to serve as a false witness.
In 1943, Wangenheim became a founding member of the "National Committee for a Free Germany". It was an anti-Nazi and pro-Soviet organization formed within the Soviet Union, with most of its members being German exiles or German war prisoners that tried to gain support from the Soviet government.
Following the end of World War II, Wangenheim settled in East Germany. He joined the state-owned film studio DEFA (1946-1992), serving as one of its film directors and screenwriters for several years. In 1954, he had his long-term marriage to the writer and photographer Inge von Wangenheim (1912-1993) annulled.
In 1975, Wangenheim died in East Berlin, at the age of 80. He was buried in the Friedrichsfelde cemetery in Berlin. He remains among the best remembered actors of the German silent film period, in part due to collaborations with well-regarded film directors.- Writer
- Actress
- Producer
Sarah Colonna was born in Wiesbaden, Hesse, Germany. She is a writer and actress, known for Insatiable (2018), Chelsea Lately (2007) and Shameless (2011). She has been married to Jon Ryan since 10 July 2016.- Alexander Finkenwirth was born in 1986 in Wiesbaden, Hessen, Germany. He is an actor, known for The Empress (2022), Bauhaus - A New Era (2019) and Deutschland 89 (2020).
- Marc Schottner is an American and German citizen. He was born in Wiesbaden, Germany and works internationally since 2018. He has also achieved the distinction of being a two-time German series regular. He started his career as a series regular on the German TV show 'Alles was zählt' from 2013 to 2014, where he portrayed a 'rebel without a cause' Dance Student. After that he worked at a Repertory Theatre in Germany, and played ten different lead characters and received the coveted "Young Talent Award" for his character interpretation of Leonardo in Federico García Lorca's "Blood Wedding" at the oldest open-air stage in Germany.
Marc received his Acting MFA from the "Rostock University of Music and Theatre (HMT)" and he started his acting studies at the "Bern University of Arts (HKB)". He additionally trained as an actor in 2015 and 2016 with the renowned Susan Batson.
Marc has enjoyed working in American Television with credits on High Maintenance, Hunters and Quantico.
Right after the Pandemic Marc starred in the German hit series "Rote Rosen" from 2021-2022. - Actor
- Stunts
- Soundtrack
He grew up in Mainz, Bad Soden and Wiesbaden. He found his passion for theater while still at school. He gained his first experience as an actor in student performances. At the age of 16, Janson took an aptitude test as an actor at the Frankfurter Bühnengenossenschaft. He then took acting lessons at the Wiesbaden School for Acting run by Hertha Genzmer. During this time he earned his living as a taxi driver. Following his acting training, he made his stage debut at the Hessisches Staatstheater Wiesbaden in Alfred de Musset's dance drama "Lorenzaccio".
He completed his training in the UFA junior studios. In 1959 he made his screen debut in the first part of Alfred Weidenmann's Thomas Mann film adaptation "The Buddenbrooks". As the captain's son Morten Schwarzkopf, he achieved his breakthrough as an actor alongside Liselotte Pulver as "Tony Buddenbrook". In the same year, 1959, he received the main role in the production "And still cheeky", in which he played the jazz musician "Fred". With his contribution in the Helmut Käutner film "The Glass of Water" in 1960, Horst Janson became a star of German post-war cinema alongside Gustav Gründgens and Liselotte Pulver.
This was followed by numerous leading and supporting roles in German and international productions such as "Das Riesenrad" (1961), "Call of the Wild Gänse" (1961), "Escape from East Berlin" (1962, Tunnel 28), "A Woman Looking for Love" ( 1968) and 1970 "The McKenzie Break" (Wolfpack). From the mid-1960s onwards, Janson often appeared in front of the TV camera. He was seen in crime films such as "The Mystery of Foresthouse" or the romance "The Lovers of Florence" from 1966. In 1969, Jansen celebrated as a series actor with the circus series "Salto mortale" and his role as the trapeze artist Sascha great successes. Alongside Heinz Rühmann, Janson appeared in front of the camera for "The Captain" in 1971. One of his most popular TV roles was that of the student in the television series "Der Bastian" from 1973.
Despite his age of 37, he owed the main role of the student Bastian of the same name to his significantly younger appearance. The start of the series was accompanied by protests because Horst Janson wore his hair too long for the social zeitgeist of the early 1970s. In 1973, the magazine "BRAVO" honored Horst Janson with the "Golden Otto," and a year later, in 1974, he was awarded the "Bambi" media prize. He also produced "Zinc Coffins for the Golden Boys" in 1973, "The Twins from Immenhof" and "Spring on Immenhof" in 1974, in which he played the estate tenant Alexander Arkens. In 1974, Janson replaced the veteran Van Helsing alias Peter Cushing as a professional vampire hunter in the British horror film "Captain Kronos - Vampire Hunter".
In the 1970s he also appeared in films such as "Shout at the Devil" and "Steiner - The Iron Cross, Part 2" with Richard Burton and Robert Mitchum. From 1980 to 1983, Horst Janson directed the children's program "Sesame Street", in which he was repeatedly seen as "Horst" together with Liselotte Pulver. He was also in the 1980s with numerous guest appearances in series such as "Our Most Beautiful Years", "Northern Lights", "Forest Inspector Buchholz", "Forsthaus Falkenau", "Two Rascals in Antalya", "The Country Doctor", "All My Daughters" and "Sylvia - A class of its own". In 1998 he played "Old Shatterhand" in Bad Segeberg based on the novels by Karl May and in 2001 he played "Old Firehand".
He was also featured in crime films such as "Sonderdezernat K l", "A Case for Two", "Smuggler" and "Coast Guard". In 2004 he was seen in the television film "The Wittelsbachers". The passionate sailor found his second star role in 2005 in the character of Bernd Jensen in the ARD TV series "Under White Sails". As an authentic captain, he travels the world's oceans. The production took him to Egypt, Greece and Cuba for over a month each. At the end of 2005, Janson made headlines due to an impending private bankruptcy that was triggered by the purchase of East German real estate in 1995 and was averted shortly afterwards.
Horst Janson lives with his family in Munich. His first marriage was to the actress Monika Lundi, and his second marriage to Hella (née Helgardt Ruthardt) resulted in his daughters Sarah-Jane (born 1984) and Laura-Maria (born 1986), who themselves had a career as Actresses competed.- Actor
- Director
- Casting Department
Darryl Robert Cox was born in a U.S. military hospital in Wiesbaden, Germany. His father was Wayne Windell Cox, an NCO in the U.S. Air Force who eventually achieved the rank of Senior Master Sargeant before his retirement from the Air Force in 1972. His mother was Marian Elizabeth Cox (Thomas). Darryl was the third of three boys (his older brothers were Dan and Frank), with another sister and brother (Nancy and Rick) born after him. As an "Air Force brat" he grew up on or around U.S. embassies and military bases from Yugoslavia to Texas to Spain to Wyoming to Louisiana to England for his entire childhood, before his family finally settled in his father's home state of Oklahoma when he was 14.
He first became seriously interested in acting at Del City High School in Oklahoma at age 15, but when he went to the University of Oklahoma he decided to become a naval officer through the OU NROTC program and was commissioned as an Ensign in May of 1977. He served most of his four years on a destroyer, the USS Forrest Sherman, before deciding to resign his commission in May of 1981 at the rank of Lieutenant and return to OU, determined to return to his first love, acting, at the OU School of Drama graduate acting program.
After two years of graduate work at OU he determined that it was time for him to seriously pursue a professional acting career, focusing on film and television. He began by moving to Dallas, Texas in July of 1983 after signing with an agent there. For the next four years he built his career from the ground up, doing mainly commercials and industrial video work before beginning to book principal roles in film and television and becoming eligible to join SAG and AFTRA. Crucial in developing his career was his training at Film Actor's Lab, run by Adam Roarke. In 1987 he married Carolyn Susanne Ingels and joined SAG/AFTRA, moving to Los Angeles.
After three years in Los Angeles, where he not only worked as an actor but as a writer/producer at a promo production company, Davis*Glick Productions, he returned with his wife to Dallas where he signed with the top regional agent at the time, Kim Dawson Agency. He had previously begun teaching Acting for the Camera, first at Film Actor's Lab and then at the American Film Institute in Los Angeles. This continued along with his acting until he received an offer to teach Acting for the Camera at Oklahoma City University, and then at the University of Oklahoma. He returned to Norman, Oklahoma while still retaining the Kim Dawson Agency in Dallas less than three hours away, and in Norman his wife gave birth to a daughter, Alexandria Camille Cox, in 1995.
He has had a career divided between acting and teaching Acting for the Camera (also at the University of Central Oklahoma and other locations, including the Actor Factory in Norman). He has been directed in his many film and television roles by, among others, Francis Ford Coppola, Wes Anderson, Clint Eastwood, Terrence Malick, Paul Verhoeven, Sterlin Harjo, Bille August, Mark Pellington, Lee Isaac Chung, Paul Dano, Tim Blake Nelson, Adam Arkin, and Oliver Stone. Actors he has worked opposite include Owen Wilson, Jeff Bridges, Jake Gyllenhaal, Tim Robbins, Helena Bonham Carter, Hal Holbrook, Mira Sorvino, Jack Warden, Liam Neeson, Steven Yeun, Joan Cusack, Jason Bateman, Patrick Swayze, Zahn McClarnon, Lou Diamond Phillips, Brandon Lee, Peter Coyote, Armand Assante, Michael Chiklis, Scott Bakula, Helen Hunt, Dennis Quaid, Jimmy Smits, Luke Wilson, Martha Plimpton, Aiden Quinn, Bill Paxton, Dennis Franz, Kelly Preston, Terry O'Quinn, Ron Perlman, Halle Bailey, Timothy Dalton, Chuck Norris, Miguel Ferrer, Peter Weller, Marina Sirtis, Sean Young, JoBeth Williams, Kevin Sorbo, Alan Ruck, and Howard Keel.- Actress
- Soundtrack
Gina Alice Redlinger was born on 22 August 1994 in Wiesbaden, Germany. She is an actress, known for Lian Lian Ju Zhong Ren (2021), Xing fu san chong zou (2018) and Christmas@Home (2021). She has been married to Láng Lang since 2 June 2019.- Ingeborg Schöner was born on 2 July 1935 in Wiesbaden, Hesse, Germany. She is an actress, known for It Happened in Rome (1957), King in Shadow (1957) and Der erste Frühlingstag (1956). She was previously married to Georg Marischka.
- Jens Harzer was born on 14 March 1972 in Wiesbaden, Hesse, Germany. He is an actor, known for Der Lebensversicherer (2006), Tatort (1970) and Ruhe! Hier stirbt Lothar (2021).
- Actor
- Camera and Electrical Department
Daniel Roesner was born on 20 January 1984 in Wiesbaden, Hesse, Germany. He is an actor, known for Alarm für Cobra 11 - Die Autobahnpolizei (1996), Verliebt in Berlin (2005) and A Case for Two (1981).- Actress
- Additional Crew
Gorgeous and voluptuous blonde bombshell Monique St. Pierre was born on November 25, 1953 in Wiesbaden, Germany. St. Pierre graduated from high school in Munich and came to the United States to attend college and nursing school. She speaks fluent French, English and German. Monique was the Playmate of the Month in the November, 1978 issue of "Playboy". She was working for the Wilhelmina modeling agency in New York City when she became a Playmate; the agency fired her after her "Playboy" pictorial was published. St. Pierre was named Playmate of the Year in 1979. Monique continued to work for "Playboy" as a model and as an executive with a top position at the Playboy Channel. She married actor Steve Parrish in 1979; the couple had one son, prior to divorcing in 1982. St. Pierre has acted in a handful of theatrical features and TV mini-series; she was especially memorable as "Debbie the hooker" in the outrageous horror black comedy cult favorite, Motel Hell (1980). Monique has a degree as a psychiatric technician. Monique St. Pierre eventually went on to become a costume designer.- Writer
- Producer
- Additional Crew
Eric Jay Beck was born on 5 April 1983 in Wiesbaden, Hesse, Germany. He is a writer and producer, known for Yellowstone (2018), Vile (2011) and NCIS (2003).- Actor
- Writer
- Director
Alexander Sternberg started as a Theater actor before getting cast for the hit-Series "Verliebt in Berlin " , which made him an established actor in his Country . Alexander Sternberg did not hesitate to work on international productions like " Le Commissariat " , where he gave a stunning performance of the devilish Dr. Werner Best , a ruthless SS-Laywer , co starring Oliver Buchholz , son of Hollywood legend Horst Buchholz. Further roles like the leading role Martin Winter in " Ausgerechnet Afrika " showed his range as a leading man in a romantic Comedy , so he did in the classic German TV Show " Kreuzfahrt ins Glück " . In the Emmy nominated series " Allein gegen die Zeit " he could bring in his comic talent as a foolish and crazy cop ( Wolters) . Alexander Sternberg was well cast as a desperate and depressed Police Officer trying to find shelter in an east German small town in " Entzauberungen". And still Sternberg can be found doing Theater , because it is the only way besides Film , where an actor can find himself , so Sternberg says.- Michael Kessler was born on 24 June 1967 in Wiesbaden, Hesse, Germany. He is an actor and writer, known for Switch: Reloaded (2007), Look Who's Back (2015) and Little Sharks (1992).
- Actor
- Talent Agent
- Writer
Tory Christopher was born on 22 January 1961 in Wiesbaden, Hesse, Germany. He is an actor and talent agent, known for Star Trek: Deep Space Nine (1993), Days of Our Lives (1965) and Frasier (1993). He has been married to Elke Jesgarz since 24 May 1985.- Director
- Writer
- Editor
Katja von Garnier was born on 15 December 1966 in Wiesbaden, Hesse, Germany. She is a director and writer, known for Bandits (1997), Iron Jawed Angels (2004) and Windstorm (2013). She is married to Markus Goller. They have one child.- Eleonore Weisgerber was born on 18 August 1947 in Wiesbaden, Hesse, Germany. She is an actress, known for Ninja Assassin (2009), Auf dem Grund (2022) and Bel Ami (1968). She was previously married to Joachim Bliese.
- Actress
- Producer
- Soundtrack
Kathrin Ackermann was born on 30 January 1939 in Wiesbaden, Hesse, Germany. She is an actress and producer, known for Herrliche Zeiten im Spessart (1967), Tatort (1970) and Ich auf Bestellung (1968).