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IMDbPro

Ruth Leuwerik(1924-2016)

  • Actress
IMDbProStarmeterSee rank
Ruth Leuwerik
Often called the First Lady of German cinema, Ruth Leuwerik was at the peak of her popularity during the 1950's when partnered on screen by the leading male stars of the post-war era: Dieter Borsche, Hannes Messemer, Curd Jürgens and O.W. Fischer. She proved her range by alternating between glamorous damsels and emancipated, resilient heroines in quality productions, invariably directed by master film makers like Wolfgang Liebeneiner, Robert Siodmak or Helmut Käutner.

Young Ruth first became enamoured with acting after watching a movie with Greta Garbo at the age of ten. Julius Martin Leeuwerik, a merchant, was sufficiently prosperous to afford his daughter private acting tuition after she was initially rejected by Berlin's premier acting academy. Undeterred, Leuwerik made her theatrical debut in 1943. The war, however, proved decidedly limiting to further career prospects. Between 1947 and 1949, she was able to gain steady theatrical engagements in Bremen and Lübeck. The following year, she came to the attention of film audiences in the vacation comedy, Dreizehn unter einem Hut (1950). Success was almost immediate and work on the stage henceforth took a back seat to the celluloid medium.

Between 1950 and 1963, Ruth Leuwerik starred in 28 pictures, nearly all of them box-office gold. These ranged from creaky melodramas like Die große Versuchung (1952) and Geliebte Feindin (1955) to prestige pictures like Roses d'automne (1955) (as Effie Briest, based on the novel by Theodor Fontane) and Louis II de Bavière (1955) (as Empress Elisabeth of Austria). Her varied roles encompassed not only the standard Mittel-European aristocratic heroines of the period, but also hardy bourgeois mothers, victims of circumstance and dedicated professional women. She played Maria von Trapp in Die Trapp-Familie (1956) -- long before the musical version with Julie Andrews was conceived -- and showcased her abilities as a serious dramatic actress in the role of a priest's daughter, on trial for murdering her husband, in the title role of Dorothea, La fille du pasteur (1959). Another moving and sympathetic portrayal was that of the physician Hanna Dietrich, tending to 300 German POW's inside a Siberian concentration camp, in the gritty post-war drama L'ange de Sibérie (1958). This particular performance won her the Golden Gate Award at the San Francisco Film Festival. Arguably the culmination of her career was Liebling der Götter (1960), a biopic of the tragic actress Renate Müller. Voted Germany's most popular actress by Bravo, "the magazine for film and television", Leuwerik also picked up four prestigious Bambi Awards in 1953, 1960, 1961 and 1962. She was the first German actress to participate in a Royal Performance in London in 1960.

From 1964 -- having rejected an offer from Hollywood -- Leuwerik began to withdraw from public life and restrict her appearances to occasional guest spots on television. Unlike other screen divas, her personal life was remarkably devoid of scandal and controversy. Her second husband was the famous German opera singer Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau. Ruth Leuwerik died in Munich in January 2016 at the age of 91.
BornApril 23, 1924
DiedJanuary 12, 2016(91)
BornApril 23, 1924
DiedJanuary 12, 2016(91)
IMDbProStarmeterSee rank
  • Awards
    • 12 wins & 12 nominations total

Photos7

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Known for

La famille Trapp en Amérique (1958)
La famille Trapp en Amérique
5.9
  • Baronin von Trapp
  • 1958
L'ange de Sibérie (1958)
L'ange de Sibérie
8.5
  • Hanna Dietrich
  • 1958
Ruth Leuwerik and Peter van Eyck in Liebling der Götter (1960)
Liebling der Götter
6.7
  • Renate Mueller
  • 1960
Roses d'automne (1955)
Roses d'automne
6.3
  • Effi Briest
  • 1955

Credits

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IMDbPro

Actress



  • Inspecteur Derrick (1974)
    Inspecteur Derrick
    6.7
    TV Series
    • Vera Baruda
    • Dr. Marta Schwenn
    • 1978–1983
  • Kaninchen im Hut und andere Geschichten mit Martin Held
    TV Movie
    • Hermann Sternbergs Ex-Frau
    • 1980
  • Buddenbrooks (1979)
    Buddenbrooks
    7.6
    TV Series
    • Elisabeth Buddenbrook
    • 1979
  • Unordnung und frühes Leid (1977)
    Unordnung und frühes Leid
    5.6
    • Frau Gerda Cornelius
    • 1977
  • Hartmut Becker and Jutta Wirschaz in Meine beste Freundin (1976)
    Meine beste Freundin
    TV Movie
    • Katharine Markham
    • 1976
  • Der Kommissar (1969)
    Der Kommissar
    7.6
    TV Series
    • Magda Reger
    • 1974
  • Et Jimmy alla vers l'arc-en-ciel (1971)
    Et Jimmy alla vers l'arc-en-ciel
    6.6
    • Valerie Steinfeld
    • 1971
  • Das weite Land
    7.2
    TV Movie
    • Genia Hofreiter
    • 1969
  • Ninotschka
    8.7
    TV Movie
    • Ninotschka
    • 1965
  • Ruth Leuwerik and Peter van Eyck in Le dernier alibi (1963)
    Le dernier alibi
    6.7
    • Dr. Maria Rohn
    • 1963
  • Hedda Gabler
    9.3
    TV Movie
    • Hedda Gabler
    • 1963
  • La Maison de Montevideo (1963)
    La Maison de Montevideo
    6.2
    • Marianne Nägler
    • 1963
  • Elf Jahre und ein Tag (1963)
    Elf Jahre und ein Tag
    5.9
    • Tina Rodenbach
    • 1963
  • La Femme rousse (1962)
    La Femme rousse
    6.9
    • Franziska Lukas
    • 1962
  • Le Rêve de Mademoiselle Tout-le-monde (1961)
    Le Rêve de Mademoiselle Tout-le-monde
    6.6
    • Autograph hunter
    • 1961

Personal details

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  • Height
    • 1.77 m
  • Born
    • April 23, 1924
    • Essen, Germany
  • Died
    • January 12, 2016
    • Munich, Bavaria, Germany(undisclosed)
  • Spouses
      Dr. Heinz Purper1969 - January 12, 2016 (her death)
  • Publicity listings
    • 3 Interviews
    • 12 Magazine Cover Photos

Did you know

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  • Trivia
    Played "Maria von Trapp" in Die Trapp-Familie (1956), the original version of La Mélodie du bonheur (1965).

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