Ellen Schwiers (1930-2019)
German collectors card in the Star Revue series. Photo: Sokal Film / Bavaria / Gabriele. Ellen Schwiers in Helden/Arms and the Man (Franz Peter Wirth, 1958).
Last Friday, 26 April 2019, German film and stage actress Ellen Schwiers passed away at the age of 88. The versatile actress often appeared as the dark, passionate woman, enmeshed in her own sensuality or another fate. During her 60 year-career she played in ca. 50 films and 150 television productions, but she also worked as a stage actress, director and intendant.
Ellen Schwiers was born in 1930, in Stettin, Germany (now Szczecin, Poland). She was the daughter of stage actor Lutz Schwiers. Her brother, Holger Schwiers, was also an actor. Ellen was trained to be a baker and a gardener, and before her breakthrough as an actress, she worked as a prompt. Her father gave her acting classes and she made her first stage appearance at the Stadttheater in Koblenz. Engagements in München (Munich), Frankfurt a.M., Göttingen and Zürich followed. In 1949 she made her film debut in the romance Heimliches Rendezvous/Secret Rendezvous (Kurt Hoffmann, 1949). In the following sixty years she would play dozens of film roles. She had her breakthrough in the cinema in the mid-1950s. She then appeared in box office hits like the war drama 08/15–2. Teil/ 08/15 Part 2 (Paul May, 1955), Anastasia – Die letzte Zarentochter/Anastasia: The Czar's Last Daughter (Falk Harnack, 1956) with Lilli Palmer, Skandal um Dr. Vlimmen/Scandal Around Dr. Vlimmen (Arthur Maria Rabenalt, 1956) and the Oscar nominated comedy Helden/Arms and the Man (Franz Peter Wirth, 1958) with O.W. Fischer and Lilo Pulver. In France, she appeared opposite Fernandel in the classic comedy La vache et le prisonnier/The Cow and I (Henri Verneuil, 1959). She was offered a seven-year-contract by a major Hollywood studio, but she rejected to move to Los Angeles due to her family. She was married to film producer Peter Jacob (the ex of Leni Riefenstahl) from 1952 till his death in 1992. They had two children, actress Katerina Jacob (born in 1958) and actor Daniel Jacob. Daniel died tragically from a tumor in 1985, only 21 years old.
Ellen Schwiers often played problematic, seductive women, who stir up the well-ordered community like in Das Erbe von Björndal/ Heritage of Bjorndal (Gustav Ucicky, 1960), the Krimi Der letzte Zeuge/The Last Witness (Wolfgang Staudte, 1960), Frau Irene Besser/Mrs Irene Besser (John Olden, 1960), and Der Satan mit den roten Haaren/Red-haired Satan (Alfons Stummer, 1964). One of her best parts was Buhlschaft in the film adaptation of Hugo von Hofmannsthal’s Jedermann/Everyman (Gottfried Reinhardt, 1961) opposite Walter Reyer. When the German film industry got in a crisis during the the 1960s, she started to focus on television, and appeared in such hit series as Derrick and Tatort. On stage she starred as Lady Macbeth in Shakespeare’s Macbeth (1972) or Lysistrata in Hochhuth’s Lysistrata und die Nato (1974). During the 1970s, she appeared in the international productions Novecento/1900 (Bernardo Bertolucci, 1976) with Robert de Niro, Gérard Depardieu and Donald Sutherland, and Fedora (Billy Wilder, 1978) with William Holden, Marthe Keller and Hildegard Knef. In 1982 Ellen Schwiers founded the Tourneetheater Ensemble together with her husband and her daughter. In 1989 she was awarded the Bundesverdienstkreuz. Today she is still managing this ensemble, for which she also directs plays. Her last feature film was Scarmour (Sikander Goldau, 1997). She regularly appears on German television. Recent TV-films were the thriller Mord am Meer/Murder at the Lake (Matti Geschonneck, 2005), the tragi-comedy Mein Vater und ich/My Father and I (Rolf Silber, 2005) with Dietmar Schönherr, and Eine Liebe in Königsberg/A Love in Königsberg (Peter Kahane, 2006). Later she appeared in the popular crime series SOKO 5113. Ellen Schwiers passed away in Berg on Lake Starnberg. She was the grandmother of actress Josephine Jacob.
Sources: Stephanie D'heil (Steffi-Line.de), Prisma, Wikipedia and IMDb.
Ellen Schwiers (1930-2019)
German collectors card in the Star Revue series. Photo: Sokal Film / Bavaria / Gabriele. Ellen Schwiers in Helden/Arms and the Man (Franz Peter Wirth, 1958).
Last Friday, 26 April 2019, German film and stage actress Ellen Schwiers passed away at the age of 88. The versatile actress often appeared as the dark, passionate woman, enmeshed in her own sensuality or another fate. During her 60 year-career she played in ca. 50 films and 150 television productions, but she also worked as a stage actress, director and intendant.
Ellen Schwiers was born in 1930, in Stettin, Germany (now Szczecin, Poland). She was the daughter of stage actor Lutz Schwiers. Her brother, Holger Schwiers, was also an actor. Ellen was trained to be a baker and a gardener, and before her breakthrough as an actress, she worked as a prompt. Her father gave her acting classes and she made her first stage appearance at the Stadttheater in Koblenz. Engagements in München (Munich), Frankfurt a.M., Göttingen and Zürich followed. In 1949 she made her film debut in the romance Heimliches Rendezvous/Secret Rendezvous (Kurt Hoffmann, 1949). In the following sixty years she would play dozens of film roles. She had her breakthrough in the cinema in the mid-1950s. She then appeared in box office hits like the war drama 08/15–2. Teil/ 08/15 Part 2 (Paul May, 1955), Anastasia – Die letzte Zarentochter/Anastasia: The Czar's Last Daughter (Falk Harnack, 1956) with Lilli Palmer, Skandal um Dr. Vlimmen/Scandal Around Dr. Vlimmen (Arthur Maria Rabenalt, 1956) and the Oscar nominated comedy Helden/Arms and the Man (Franz Peter Wirth, 1958) with O.W. Fischer and Lilo Pulver. In France, she appeared opposite Fernandel in the classic comedy La vache et le prisonnier/The Cow and I (Henri Verneuil, 1959). She was offered a seven-year-contract by a major Hollywood studio, but she rejected to move to Los Angeles due to her family. She was married to film producer Peter Jacob (the ex of Leni Riefenstahl) from 1952 till his death in 1992. They had two children, actress Katerina Jacob (born in 1958) and actor Daniel Jacob. Daniel died tragically from a tumor in 1985, only 21 years old.
Ellen Schwiers often played problematic, seductive women, who stir up the well-ordered community like in Das Erbe von Björndal/ Heritage of Bjorndal (Gustav Ucicky, 1960), the Krimi Der letzte Zeuge/The Last Witness (Wolfgang Staudte, 1960), Frau Irene Besser/Mrs Irene Besser (John Olden, 1960), and Der Satan mit den roten Haaren/Red-haired Satan (Alfons Stummer, 1964). One of her best parts was Buhlschaft in the film adaptation of Hugo von Hofmannsthal’s Jedermann/Everyman (Gottfried Reinhardt, 1961) opposite Walter Reyer. When the German film industry got in a crisis during the the 1960s, she started to focus on television, and appeared in such hit series as Derrick and Tatort. On stage she starred as Lady Macbeth in Shakespeare’s Macbeth (1972) or Lysistrata in Hochhuth’s Lysistrata und die Nato (1974). During the 1970s, she appeared in the international productions Novecento/1900 (Bernardo Bertolucci, 1976) with Robert de Niro, Gérard Depardieu and Donald Sutherland, and Fedora (Billy Wilder, 1978) with William Holden, Marthe Keller and Hildegard Knef. In 1982 Ellen Schwiers founded the Tourneetheater Ensemble together with her husband and her daughter. In 1989 she was awarded the Bundesverdienstkreuz. Today she is still managing this ensemble, for which she also directs plays. Her last feature film was Scarmour (Sikander Goldau, 1997). She regularly appears on German television. Recent TV-films were the thriller Mord am Meer/Murder at the Lake (Matti Geschonneck, 2005), the tragi-comedy Mein Vater und ich/My Father and I (Rolf Silber, 2005) with Dietmar Schönherr, and Eine Liebe in Königsberg/A Love in Königsberg (Peter Kahane, 2006). Later she appeared in the popular crime series SOKO 5113. Ellen Schwiers passed away in Berg on Lake Starnberg. She was the grandmother of actress Josephine Jacob.
Sources: Stephanie D'heil (Steffi-Line.de), Prisma, Wikipedia and IMDb.