Nina Franoszek

Nina Franoszek (born March 16, 1963 in Berlin) is a German-American actress[1] and film and theater director. Franoszek was awarded an Adolf Grimme Award for "Outstanding Lead Actress in a Drama Series" for her performance in the TV Mini-Series Sardsch (1998).[2]

Early life and education

Franoszek was born in Berlin, West Germany[3] to the fine artists Sabine Franek and Eduard Franoszek, who was also a professor at the Berlin University of the Arts. She graduated from high school (Abitur) in 1981.

Franoszek began working as a dancer, and also posed as a life model for German neo-expressionist painters Rainer Fetting, G.L. Gabriel and Salomé. In 1982 she played roles in two films, Domino (1982) by Thomas Brasch and Sei zärtlich, Pinguin (English title: Be Gentle Penguin) (1982) by Peter Hajek.

Franoszek studied mime and dance in summer seminars at the University of Music and Performing Arts in Vienna and enrolled at the Free University of Berlin for Japanese Studies and Ethnology. In 1984 she was an exchange student with the Moscow Art Theater School and the Theater Academy Wachtangow in Leningrad, now: Saint Petersburg State Theatre Arts Academy. Franoszek earned a master's degree in Performing Arts (BFA & MFA) from the Hochschule für Musik, Theater und Medien Hannover (HMTMH) in 1986,[4] and began to work in regional and national theatre. She was a working finalist of the Actors Studio West in Los Angeles.

Acting career

Film and television

Franoszek played a range of roles from tragedy to comedy in over 100 feature films, television movies and series. She played a role in Buster's Bedroom, a comedy directed by Rebecca Horn which earned a German Film Award (1992).[5] She also performed in The Pianist by Roman Polanski, had a leading role in the feature film Martha, and guest starred as Greta in the TV series Mad Men.

Franoszek starred opposite Jiří Menzel in Joint Venture,[6] and also performed in The Party-Nature Morte and in Murderous Decision. Kevin Spacey cast her as Patty Duke in Beyond the Sea[7] and she plays the leading role in Visioner directed by Elodie Keene.

She is the first person narrator of Marlene Dietrich in Marlene Dietrich: Her Own Song,[8][9] a documentary directed by Dietrich's grandson, J. David Riva.

Franoszek played a spy in the action-adventure series Berlin Break, for Columbia/Sony Pictures and RTL Germany. In the Twentieth Century Fox TV series The Loop Franoszek guest starred in her first role in Icelandic-language.

She plays the director of the Berlin-Hohenschönhausen Memorial in 12 Means I Love You (German title: 12 Heisst Ich Liebe Dich), a sequel to The Lives of Others, which premiered at the Hof International Film Festival 2007.

In 2008 Franoszek made several guest appearances as Greta in Mad Men and in Illeana Douglas's web series Easy to Assemble,[2] and appeared in an episode of the TV series Children's Hospital. Franoszek plays a recurring role in the second season of the award-winning German TV series The Weissensee Saga.

In 2014, Franoszek played the role of Frau Engel in the video game Wolfenstein: The New Order.[10][11] She once again performed this role in the 2017 sequel.[12][13]

Franoszek is a member of Deutsche Filmakademie, Germany's Academy of Motion Pictures Arts and Sciences, member of the German Directors Guild (BVR), Co–initiator and member of the German Screen Actors Guild (BFFS), member of SAG-AFTRA, member of Villa Aurora Foundation for European American Relation and served as a juror for the International Emmy Awards from 2007-2013.

Theater

Franoszek is an experienced classical actress. She made her stage debut at the Niedersächsisches Staatstheater Hannover, the national theatre in Hanover, Germany in 1985. She performed a range of roles at various national theaters, including Allisen in Look Back in Anger, Honey in Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?, Dunjascha in The Cherry Orchard, to Eve in The Broken Jug by Heinrich von Kleist and Lady Macbeth in Macbeth. She also played the lead role in the Russian plays, Time for Love, by Valentin Kataev and The Sarcophagus by Vladimir Gubarev, a play about the nuclear disaster in Chernobyl.

As a member of the Berlin-based English Theater Group Berlin Play Actors she played Estelle in the existentialist play No Exit by French writer Jean Paul Sartre.

Directing career

In 1999 Franoszek made her debut as a theater director at the Pacific Resident Theatre, Los Angeles with two Strindberg plays starring, among others, Orson Bean, Alley Mills and Paula Malcomson In 2006 she directed her first movie, the courtroom drama "Der große Videoschwindel" (a.k.a. "Spin Doctor"), starring Karoline Eichhorn, Nikki von Tempelhof and Justus von Dohnányi, which premiered in May 2007 and was invited to the International Cannes Film Festival (2007), German Film section.

Filmography

Film

  • 1982: Domino
  • 1982: Sei zärtlich, Pinguin
  • 1991: Buster's Bedroom
  • 1991: The Party – Nature Morte
  • 1993: Ohne Mich
  • 1994: Joint Venture
  • 1995: Silent Night (German: Stille Nacht)
  • 2000: Casting About
  • 2001: Der Zimmerspringbrunnen
  • 2001: Marlene Dietrich – Her Own Song
  • 2002: The Pianist
  • 2004: Beyond the Sea
  • 2005: Miriam[14][15]
  • 2008: Martha

Television

  • 1990: Steuergeheimnisse (German-language TV film)
  • 1992: Die Liebesreise des Herrn Matzke (German-language TV film)
  • 1992: Berlin Break (TV series)
  • 1994: Inspector Rex (Austrian-language TV series, Season 1, Episode 11: Deadly Teddies)
  • 1994: Julie Lescaut (French-language police TV series, episode: L'Enfant témoin)
  • 1995: Zwei Männer und die Frauen (German- Italian TV series)
  • 1997: Nur für eine Nacht (German-language TV film)
  • 1998: SK Kölsch (German-language TV series)
  • 1998: Im Atem der Berge (German-language TV film)
  • 1998: Krambambuli (Austrian-language TV film)
  • 1998: Inspector Rex (Austrian-language TV series, Season 4, Episode 2: Death Of A Student)
  • 1999: Schande (German-language TV film)
  • 1999: Tatort (English title: Crime Scene) (German-language TV series, episode: Tödliches Labyrinth)
  • 1999: Lexx (Canadian TV series)[16]
  • 2002: Tatort (English title: Crime Scene) (German-language TV series, episode: Endspiel)
  • 2002–2003: Körner und Köter (German-language TV series)
  • 2004: Im Namen des Gesetzes (German-language TV series)
  • 2006: Ein Sommer mit Paul (German-language TV film)
  • 2007: 12 heißt: Ich Liebe Dich (German-language TV film)
  • 2007: The Loop (U.S. TV series, season 2 episode 1: "Windows")
  • 2008: Mad Men (U.S. TV series, season 2, episode 11 "The Jet Set")
  • 2009: Beyond the Wall (German: Jenseits der Mauer) (TV film)
  • 2011: Easy to Assemble (U.S.Webseries)
  • 2011: Scharfe Hunde (German-language TV film)
  • 2013: Children's Hospital (U.S.TV series, season 5, episode 51 "The Gang gets Sushi")
  • 2013: Weissensee (German-language TV series)

Awards

  • 1998: Grimme-Preis as "Outstanding Lead Actress in a Drama Series" for her performance in the TV Mini-Series Sardsch
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References

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