
Atuação
Data de nascimento
26 de abril de 1909
Data de falecimento
23 de outubro de 2002
(faleceu aos 93)
Local de nascimento
Rostock, Germany
Popularidade
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Born in Rostock, Hoppe became a leading lady of stage and films in Germany. She was born into a wealthy landowning family and was initially privately educated on her father's private estate. Later she attended school in Berlin and in Weimar, where she began to attend theatre.[1] Hoppe first performed at 17 as a member of Berlin's Deutsches Theater under director Max Reinhardt. In 1935 she was hired by the controversial German actor and Director of the Prussian State Theatre under the Third Reich, Gustav Gründgens. They were married from 1936-46, until their divorce. Speaking years after the marriage had ended Hoppe stated, "He was my love, but never my great love, that was work."[1] One of the characters in the film Mephisto was reportedly based on her. Hoppe made no secret of her contacts with the Nazi elite in the 1930s/40s, including being invited to dinner by Hitler.[2] Her role in Der Schimmelreiter (The Rider of the White Horse, 1934) made her famous almost overnight, while her "Aryan" face made her a darling of the Nazi elite.[1] Later Hoppe would label this period of her life as "the black page in my golden book".[1] During her time acting at the home of the Prussian State Theatre, the Schauspielhaus, Hoppe developed her analytical approach to acting, which she stated consisted in her "taking apart every sentence" and giving the use of language a brilliance. This method was to be associated with Hoppe throughout her working life.[1] In 1946 her only child, Benedikt Johann Percy Gründgens, was born. Four years later after her divorce from Gründgens, Hoppe had a great success as Blanche Dubois in Tennessee Williams's A Streetcar Named Desire, and increasingly played avant-garde roles, written by authors such as Heiner Muller (Quartett, 1994) and Thomas Bernhard, who became her partner in private life as well. She became a favourite of the young and iconoclastic directors Claus Peymann, Robert Wilson and Frank Castorf. Hoppe died in Siegsdorf, Bavaria, in 2002 from natural causes, aged 93. "German theater has lost its queen", said Claus Peymann of the Berliner Ensemble, whose theatre featured Hoppe's last performance, in Bertolt Brecht's Resistible Rise of Arturo Ui, in December 1997.[2] In one of her last interviews Hoppe stated, "I have a go at happiness every day. That takes discipline, a virtue every halfway decent actor should have."




Witness
1970 • 1 episódio

Johanna Martinek
1977 • 1 episódio

Self
1948 • 1 episódio
Self
1998 • 1 episódio
Self
1964 • 1 episódio
Self
1974 • 1 episódio

Johanna Blago
1969 • 1 episódio
Self
1951 • 1 episódio
Self
1984 • 1 episódio
Self
1955 • 1 episódio

Self
1980 • 1 episódio
Self
1979 • 2 episódios

Self
1979 • 1 episódio
Self
1989 • 1 episódio
Self
1964 • 1 episódio
Self
1986 • 1 episódio
Self
1983 • 1 episódio

Mrs. Butler
1962

Claire Maetzig
1986 • 1 episódio

Tante Doda
1979 • 1 episódio