Hanna Schygulla

Cast, Director, Screenplay, Director of photography, Editing, Sound, Music, Producer
Kattowitz (heute Katowice, Polen)

Biography

Hanna Schygulla was born in Kattowitz (today Katowice, Poland) on December 25 1943, moving with her mother to Munich in 1945. Following graduation and an Au-pair-year in Paris, she began studying German and Roman languages at Munich University in 1964, taking acting lessons on the side. Introduced by Rainer Werner Fassbinder, she joined the Action-Theater in 1967, and one year later co-founded the antiteater alongside Fassbinder, Peer Raben and others.

Until 1969, she appeared in numerous of Fassbinder's stage productions, while also appearing in smaller roles in films by Jean-Marie Straub, Peter Fleischmann and Reinhard Hauff. "Liebe ist kälter als der Tod" was her first film under Fassbinder's direction, and in 1970 she was awarded the Federal Film Prize for her performance. Until 1972, she starred in all of Fassbinder's films except one, and also played in many stage productions. Soon, Schygulla was celebrated as the "Superstar of Subculture", and Fassbinder's TV series "Acht Stunden sind kein Tag" made her also known to a broader audience. But following their first box-office hit "Fontane Effi Briest", Fassbinder and Schygulla temporarily ended their creative collaboration.

Until 1977, she starred in films by other directors, for instance in Wim Wender's "Falsche Bewegung" and in "Ansichten eines Clowns" by Vojtech Jasny. In 1978, she and Fassbinder reteamed for the post-WWII melodrama "Die Ehe der Maria Braun", and again Schygulla garnered numerous awards for her performance, receiving the German Film Prize and the Silver Bear of the IFF Berlin. The film was also celebrated abroad and followed by the international success of "Lili Marleen". The same year, she also played the role of Eva in Fassbinder"s sumptuous adaptation of Döblin's "Berlin Alexanderplatz".

In 1979, Schygulla worked at the Münchner Kammerspiele, and went on several theatre tours. From time to time, she starred in international productions, among them films by Jean-Luc Godard, Carlos Saura, Margarethe von Trotta and Andrzej Wajda. In 1983, she was awarded a prize at IFF Cannes for her performance in "Storia di Piera". In 1985, Schygulla appeared in her first US production, playing Katharina the Great in the TV miniseries "Peter the Great". After that, she was cast again and again in European and American film productions of great variety. Living in Paris, Schygulla also gave numerous concerts, singing chansons by Jean-Marie Senia.

After a longer hiatus, Schygulla returned to German cinema with the tragicomic love story "Die blaue Grenze", in which starred together alongside Dominique Horwitz. It marked the beginning of her successful movie comeback, followed by Hans Steinbichler's "Winterreise" and her impressive performance as a grieving mother in Fatih Akin's multi-award winning drama "Auf der anderen Seite", for which she was nominated in the category "Best Supporting Actress" at the 2008 German Film Prize.

In recent years, she appeared in Aleksandr Sokurov's "Faust" (RU 2011), Emmanuelle Antille's "Avanti" (F/CH 2012) and Sam Garbarski's "Vijay und ich" (D/BE/LU 2013). At the 2010 Berline IFF, Schygulla presented her shorts "Alicia Bustamante" and "Moi et Mon Double".

Several times, Schygulla went on concert tour, singing chansons based on compositions by Jean-Marie Sénia and Bertolt Brecht. Her performances took her across Europe, to the former Soviet Union and to South America.

In 2013, Hanna Schygulla, who lives alternately in Paris and Berlin, published her autobiography "Wach auf und träume". Her "Traumprotokolle", a spatial installation of a series of short videos directed by her, was presented in exhibitions in Paris, New York and Berlin in 2013 and 2014.

Also in 2014, she was awarded the honorary prize 'Golden Ox' at the Film Art Festival Mecklenburg-Vorpommern. Over the next few years, she starred in international productions, such as in the Swedish drama "The Quiet Roar" (2014), in which she portrayed the psychotherapist of an incurably ill woman, in the social drama "Unless" (CN/IR 2016) as a writer and the mentor of the main character, and she had a lead role in Aelrun Goette's much-praised "Tatort" episode "Wofür es sich zu leben lohnt" (2018) as one of the roommates in a mysterious senior citizens' flat.

She was also part of the ensemble of the Italian social drama "Fortunata" (2017) and the French production "La prière" ("The Prayer", 2018). In 2017, Schygulla received the honorary prize of the Deutscher Schauspielpreis (German Actors Award) for her lifetime achievement.

She was then seen in the French science fiction series "Ad Vitam", which aired on ARTE and in which Schygulla appeared in five of six episodes in a small role as a subversive high priestess. In 2019, "Le mystère Henri Pick" ("The Mystery of Monsieur Pick") was released in German cinemas, a French-Belgian comedy set in the library milieu with Schygulla as an exiled Russian and former girlfriend of the main character. She also took on a supporting role in the Spanish series "Alive and Kicking," which aired in German-speaking countries on the FOX Channel in April 2021, as well as in François Ozon's assisted suicide drama "Tout s'est bien passé" ("Everything Went Fine", FR/BE), released in German theaters a year later, which had already premiered at the Cannes Film Festival in July 2021.

Filmography

2021/2023
  • Cast
2017-2021
  • Voice
2014/2015
  • Participation
2011
  • Cast
2009
  • Director
  • Screenplay
  • Director of photography
  • Editing
  • Sound
  • Producer
2009
  • Director
  • Screenplay
  • Producer
2009
  • Cast
2008
  • Voice
2006/2007
  • Cast
  • Director
  • Screenplay
  • Producer
2005/2006
  • Cast
2005/2006
  • Cast
2004/2005
  • Cast
2005
  • Participation
1976/2005
  • Cast
  • Director
  • Director of photography
  • Sound
  • Producer
2002/2003
  • Participation
1997
  • Participation
1995/1996
  • Cast
1994/1995
  • Cast
1994/1995
  • Participation
1993/1994
  • Cast
1992/1993
  • Cast
1992/1993
  • Cast
1991/1992
  • Cast
1987
  • Cast
1982/1983
  • Cast
  • Vocals
1982
  • Cast
1980/1981
  • Cast
  • Voice
1980
  • Cast
  • Vocals
1979/1980
  • Cast
1978/1979
  • Cast
1976/1977
  • Cast
1974/1975
  • Cast
1972-1974
  • Cast
1972/1973
  • Cast
1972
  • Cast
1970/1971
  • Cast
  • Vocals
1970/1971
  • Cast
1970/1971
  • Participation
1971
  • Cast
1970/1971
  • Cast
1969
  • Cast
1969
  • Cast
1969/1970
  • Cast
1969
  • Cast