Ulrich Tukur

Ulrich Tukur

He spent his childhood and youth in Hesse, Westphalia and Lower Saxony. As a teenager he lived in the Wedemark region of Lower Saxony near Hanover. He spent his school years there, completing his high school diploma as an exchange student for the American Field Service AFS in Boston (USA). In 1977 he graduated from high school in Germany. He then did his military service. He then attended the University of Tübingen, where he studied German, English and history. During this time he also worked as a musician. It was at one of these performances that he was discovered for acting. In 1980, Ulrich Tukur started acting training at the Stuttgart State University of Music and Performing Arts. While he was still studying, he played the student and member of the resistance group against the Nazi dictatorship Willi Graf in the film "The White Rose" - directed by Michael Verhoeven. He completed his training in 1983 and then initially played at the Heidelberg Municipal Theater. In Munich, Turkur had another engagement from this period, in which he took part in the play "Illness of Youth". The renowned theater maker Peter Zadek liked his acting skills and subsequently worked with him. It was also Zadek who brought Ulrich Tukur to success on stage in 1984. Tukur portrayed the SS soldier Kittel in the play "Ghetto" directed by Peter Zadek at the Freie Volksbühne Berlin. From 1985 to 1995 the actor was engaged at the Deutsches Schauspielhaus in Hamburg - under Peter Zadek as artistic director. During these ten years a fruitful collaboration developed between the two. Tukur played, among other things, in "As You Like It" by Shakespeare, Marc Anton in "Julius Caesar" based on Shakespeare, in Frank Wedekind's "Lulu" the role of Alwa Schön and in Shakespeare's "Hamlet". Tukur's convincing stage performances were rewarded with the title "Actor of the Year" by German theater critics in 1986. From 1995, Tukur himself was director of the Hamburg Festival as director together with Ulrich Waller - until 2003. A year later, he appeared in a "Tatort" episode for the first time: in "Das Böse" he played Andrea Sawatzki's counterpart and appeared in He shot a mass murderer so brilliantly that he was awarded the German Television Prize for it. In 2009 he played the character of the same name in the film's lead role in the drama "John Rabe". Since 2010 he has been playing the Hessian LKA detective Felix Murot, who fights against crime around Wiesbaden, in the HR series of the international crime production "Tatort". Tukur plays a lonely character who suffers from a brain tumor. The sought-after artist expressed his musical inclination in 1995 by founding the dance band Ulrich Tukur & The Rhythm Boys. Since then he has been touring with the band and releasing his own compositions and cover music. Ulrich Tukur is the front man as a singer, but also plays the piano and accordion keyboards himself. In 2007, the artist made his debut as the author of his collection of stories "The Water Lily in the Dining Room - Venetian Stories", in which he makes a declaration of love for Venice. Ulrich Tukur is a member of the Free Academy of Arts Hamburg. Tukur became the father of two daughters from his first marriage. His second wife Katharina John is a photographer. He lives with her on the island of Giudecca in Venice and in the mountain village of Montepiano, where he also works as a winemaker. Tukur has won numerous prizes and awards, including the 1985 O.E. Hasse Prize and the Boy Gobert Prize, the title of "Actor of the Year" in 1986, the Golden Bear at the Berlinale in 1986 for "Stammheim" and the Golden Camera in 1996 for the portrayal of the sex offender in "The Murderer and His Child". He also received the Hamburg Island Art Prize in 1996, the Adolf Grimme Prize in 2000, the German Television Prize in 2004 - Best Actor for the role of a banker in Tatort "Das Böse", and the German Film Prize in 2006 - Best Actress - Male Supporting Role for " The Lives of Others", the 2009 Bavarian Film Prize in 2008 as Best Actor in "John Rabe", the German Film Prize as Best Actor for "John Rabe" and the German Film Peace Prize for "John Rabe", and the Lower Saxony State Prize in 2010 together with Wilhelm Krull and in 2011 the Golden Camera as Best German Actor for Tatort: "Like Lilly" and the Chevalier de l''Ordre National des Arts et des Lettres.
Ulrich Wickert

Ulrich Wickert

He went to school in Heidelberg and Paris and graduated from the Urspring School in Schelklingen in 1961. Wickert then decided to study political science and law, which he completed in Bonn. From 1962 to 1963 he also studied in the USA on a Fulbright scholarship. In 1968, Wickert passed his state law exam and then worked as a freelance radio writer. Shortly afterwards he came to ARD as an employee and editor. In 1969 he entered television journalism, working as an editor and editor of the political television magazine "Monitor". From 1977 he worked abroad for ARD: He first went to Washington as a correspondent, from where he moved to Paris a year later. Wickert, who seemed to feel at home everywhere, came back to the USA in 1981, where he became ARD studio manager in New York. Three years later he took on the same task in Paris. From 1990, the cosmopolitan moderated the ARD program "Tagesthemen" in Hamburg, succeeding Hanns Joachim Friedrichs. Through his prominent participation in the most important German news program, Wickert became one of the most famous faces in German television culture. However, the presenter has also created numerous radio and television documentaries and published many essays in magazines and anthologies. Not to be forgotten are several book publications. In 1981, Wickert wrote "Freedom I Fear - the State Disempowers Its Citizens," a critical political analysis of the Federal Republic of Germany. His foreign report "New York - Tokyo - Paris" followed in 1986 and the book "France, the wonderful illusion" in 1989. The journalist and publicist received a number of honors and awards for many other books. In 1990, "Champagne Clans. German stories about a French invention" was awarded the German-French Journalist Prize. In 2000, Wickert was honored with the Adenauer-DeGaulle Prize for his contributions to German-French cooperation. The presenter also won prizes such as the "Horizon Award" as "Media Man of the Year" (1992), the German television award "Telestar" (1992) and the "Golden Camera" (1994). In a representative survey by the magazine "TV Today" about the most popular news presenters, the German television audience placed Wickert in third place in the popularity list in July 2003, where he had to give way to the "Tagesschau" spokeswoman Eva Herman and the RTL presenter Peter Kloeppel . At the end of September 2004, Wickert was appointed the first honorary professor at Magdeburg-Stendal University. There he gave lectures in the journalism and media management course from the winter semester of 2004/05. In the winter semester of 2004/05 he became an honorary professor of journalism/media management at the Magdeburg-Stendal University of Applied Sciences. According to a representative survey of the German population in autumn 2004, Wickert took fourth place among the most popular German news presenters. At the end of August 2005 he presented the crime novel "The Desert Queen" to the public. In November 2005 he was made an officer of the Legion of Honor for his services to Franco-German relations. After 15 years, Ulrich Wickert ended his work at "Tagesthemen" on August 31, 2006. His successor will be the journalist Tom Buhrow. Since August 17, 2006, Wickert has moderated the literary program "Wickert's Books" for ARD. Ulrich Wickert has been married to publishing manager Julia Jäkel for the third time since March 1, 2003.

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