Mady Rahl

Mady Rahl

Actor

Urodzony(-a) 3 stycznia 1915 w Berlin-Neukölln, Germany

Beautiful, smoky-voiced platinum blonde Mady Rahl was the 'Sportsmädel' of the German cinema in the 1930's and 40's. During the war years, she was touted in Nazi propaganda as an ideal of Germanic femininity. Her association with members of the regime, including the ever roving-eyed Joseph Goebbels, damaged her career in the aftermath of World War II. Nonetheless, she would reemerge in the 1950's as a more versatile actress, if not a bigger star. Mady Rahl was strong-willed and had a commanding, almost aristocratic air about her. Most of all, she possessed that quality called pizzazz. From her early teens, Mady was determined to seek a career in the performing arts. In the process, she financed her expensive acting (at the Ilka Grüning School) and dance classes by doing secretarial work (being an adept typist and stenographer). Rumour has it, that she got her start on the stage (in Leipzig) without having to sit for an audition. Her looks and comportment seemed entirely sufficient. Film work came in due course, after she met a young director named Detlef Sierck (who later found fame and fortune in Hollywood as Douglas Sirk). He starred her in his first film (a short comedy) as, perhaps unsurprisingly, a secretary. Having signed a four-year contract with Ufa, she found herself in yet another clerical role for The Mysterious Mister X (1936). Her first critical acclaim arrived courtesy of a role in the lavish circus drama Truxa (1937), in which she co-starred alongside the dancer La Jana. Then followed a succession of small roles in big Ufa productions like To New Shores (1937) and Hallo Janine (1939) and leads in lightweight romantic comedies (notably Fräulein (1939) and Die lustigen Vagabunden (1940), opposite Johannes Heesters). By the mid-1940's, Mady had become one of the most celebrated stars of German films. After a post-war hiatus, her screen career was reinvigorated with a handful of dramatic character roles as mysterious or genteel women in prestige pictures like Die Dame in Schwarz (1951), Haie und kleine Fische (1957) and Der Greifer (1958). In the early 1960's, Mady returned to the theatre, going on tour with the Munich-based 'Kleine Komödie'. She also became a popular TV guest star, seemingly omnipresent in prime time cop shows. She was also busily doing voice-overs for diverse American actresses, from Gillian Anderson to Arlene Francis. By the mid-1990's, the thrice-married actress had wound down her performing career to concentrate on her other vocation as a successful painter and exhibitor of water colours. Almost blind and afflicted by dementia, Mady Rahl died in August 2009 at the respectable age of 94.

Filmografia

  • 1971
    Bukow and König (English subtitled)
  • 1970
    Tatort: Vienna (English Subtitles) - Season 1
  • 1968
    Horror Of Blackwood Castle
  • 1965
    Situation Hopeless But Not Serious
  • 1963
    The White Spider
  • 1961
    Forger of London

Połączenia

  • Siegfried Lowitz

    Siegfried Lowitz

  • Horst Frank

    Horst Frank

  • Werner Peters

    Werner Peters

  • Karin Dor

    Karin Dor

  • Hans Deppe

    Hans Deppe

  • Hansjörg Felmy

    Hansjörg Felmy

  • Agnes Windeck

    Agnes Windeck

  • Heinz Drache

    Heinz Drache

  • Friedrich Schoenfelder

    Friedrich Schoenfelder

  • Paul Klinger

    Paul Klinger

Gatunki

  • Thriller
  • Action & Adventure
  • Comedy
  • Horror
  • Music Videos & Concerts
  • Military & War
  • Drama
  • Romance
  • Children & Family
  • Musical