Wolfgang Kohlhaase: Berlin screenwriter died at the age of 91

by time news
cultural Berlin writer

Screenwriter Wolfgang Kohlhaase died at the age of 91

Screenwriter Wolfgang Kohlhaase

Screenwriter Wolfgang Kohlhaase

Source: dpa

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Wolfgang Kohlhaase was one of the best-known screenwriters in the GDR. The German Film Academy honored him in 2011 for his life’s work. With his films like “Berlin – corner Schönhauser” he wrote German film history.

Dhe screenwriter, director and writer Wolfgang Kohlhaase is dead. He died on Wednesday in Berlin at the age of 91, the Academy of Arts said, citing his wife, the dancer and choreographer Emöke Pöstenyi.

Kohlhaase was one of the best-known screenwriters in the GDR, where he became known for films such as “Solo Sunny” and “Berlin – Ecke Schönhauser”. Later he worked on the screenplays for the films “Summer in front of the balcony” or “In times of waning light”.

Wolfgang Kohlhaase lived in Berlin and in Reichenwalde in Brandenburg. At the Berlinale 2010 he was awarded the Honorary Golden Bear for his life’s work. In 2011 he received the Lola for his life’s work and the Order of Merit of the State of Brandenburg from the German Film Academy.

Marked by the 2nd World War

He was born in Berlin in 1931. The DEFA Foundation describes his career as he discovered writing while he was still at school. His first screenplay was the youth film “Die Störenfriede” by Wolfgang Schleif.

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He worked intensively with Gerhard Klein, Konrad Wolf and Frank Beyer and later directed the film himself. His screenplays, as the foundation describes it online, are characterized by their closeness to life. “The author observes closely, shows unvarnished, authentic realities in the most successful cases.”

His young years were shaped by the Second World War, which he experienced in Berlin-Adlershof. “I tried to talk, write and also make films about the background of my childhood,” he said in an interview with the German Press Agency last year on his 90th birthday. “That was the Nazi era, that was the war. That was my parents’ wasted life.”

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