Jördis Triebel
0 quotesFilm Actor · Germany · Female
Jördis Triebel (born 1977) is a German film and theatre actress. 2Early life Triebel grew up the second oldest of four sisters in the Prenzlauer Berg locality of Berlin. Through her mother, who before the fall of the Berlin Wall was a props mistress at the "Theater der Freundschaft" (English: Theater of Friendship, today known as the Theater an der Parkaue), she was exposed to the world of theatre early on, sometimes being able to sit in on rehearsals. 2Education From 1997 to 2001, Triebel studied acting at the Ernst Busch Academy of Dramatic Arts. 2Career 3Theatre After she graduated, Triebel was an actress with the Bremer Theater. She belonged to the ensemble cast up until 2004. Whilst there Triebel among other things worked on the production of Henrik Ibsen's Baumeister Solneß (English: The Master Builder), Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet, Hamlet and additionally Mark Ravenhill's Gestochen scharfe Polaroids (English: Some Explicit Polaroids). After cutting ties with the Bremer Theater in 2004, Triebel worked with the Schauspielhaus Zürich (English: The Zürich playhouse) during 2004 and 2005 for a short time, where she acted in Arthur Schnitzler's Das weite Land, a 1911 tragi-comedy about light-bulb producer Friedrich Hofreiter and his affair with his wife's banker's accountant, Adele. In 2006, she personified "Italy" in the Cologne playhouse's production of "Europa für Anfanger" (English: Europe for beginners). 3Television and film After a guest role in the TV series Wolffs Revier in 2005, Triebel gained her first major role in a film as the stubborn-minded pig farmer Emma in Emmas Glüc
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