Leander Haußmann

Leander Haußmann (sometimes Haussmann) (German: [leː.ˈʔan.dɐ ˈhaʊ̯s.man] (listen); born 26 June 1959, Quedlinburg) is a German theatre and film director.

Leander Haußmann upon leaving as director of the Bochum Theatre, June 2000

The son of actor Ezard Haußmann and costume designer Doris Haußmann,[1] he attended the Ernst Busch theatre school in Berlin.

Haußmann was the theatre director of the city theatre in Bochum (Schauspielhaus Bochum). He also wrote and acted in several plays (1995–2000), and had a role in the Detlev Buck film, Männerpension. His feature film breakthrough came with Sonnenallee in 1999. His second feature, Herr Lehmann, followed in 2003. His production of Die Fledermaus in Munich was controversial, compounding the trouble surrounding his production of Peter Pan. As a result, his scheduled production of Romeo and Juliet was cancelled.

Filmography

gollark: It's not like you can measure evilness as a physical property like you can mass or something.
gollark: Moral relativism isn't incompatible with disliking people doing things you consider evil, and what would something being "objectively evil" even mean?
gollark: You can get an extra, not very useful sense.
gollark: The last one is probably "doctor of science".
gollark: You could probably tag cars automatically if you had tons of manually tagged ones for training.

References

  1. "Schauspieler Ezard Haußmann ist tot". Rheinische Post. 2010-11-07. Retrieved 2010-11-30.
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