tv Arts.21 Deutsche Welle June 21, 2020 3:30pm-4:01pm CEST
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she's a real powerhouse prize winning film director and well known actress who's equally at home in film and television yet still regularly tears up the stage. we meet her at the offices of production company expo during the berlin international film festival when the whole city is in a film fever. the barrel now is celebrating its 70th anniversary. star is really what role does the film festival play for you personally and your career. bellina finnish i feel berlin is my city even though i wasn't born here
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but i've been living here since before the fall of the wall and i think people also identify me at the city and in turn i identify with the festival make them festival . for 10 days the film industry takes over berlin the berlin though attracts stars and filmmakers hollywood productions and independent movies and shot of is in the thick of things she of the festival goes way back. in 1906 when she appeared on the ladies film silent night which was in the competition its 3 main characters are involved in a messy love triangle and decided to try to unpick the situation on christmas eve a different take on the festive season. if any people even try and he said. let's.
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just. let it was he said you. just have to do this is also. a pretty. awful most hostile and i caught a special show in my living nice of silent night became something like a small part of a new era for 90. $999.00 but he is right it was one of the promising actors honored at the berlin dollar. just a year later she was chosen as a member of the film festival's jury a big honor for a young actress. basically it is still haven't been buried for the best actor to miss that denzel washington president. but her most personal and moving festival memory has to be when amy and jaguar was in the competition at the bella now. list in the
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. last. thank you so if you know me. at the premiere in 1999 try to accompany the real lilly voiced aka me down the red carpet the film is based on experience which she 1st recounted in a book at the age of 80. be shot it was awarded the silver bearer for her performance and amy a job for consumers had another issue. that. i mean jack why wasn't your typical film about the nazi era what was so news special and so provocative about that film is it kind of well not a week goes by that i'm not asked repeatedly about amy and jack are. and i think it's because it was the 1st time at least in the german speaking world that a lesbian love story made it onto that they screen and told of homosexual love that didn't and of its own accord to have the most sex. and he says to it and to me in
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a certain way amy and jack you are celebrates the love between these 2 women which doesn't suffer per se from the fact it's a woman loving a woman but rather that the war comes between them and how i know. that's where. her live in 1943 the city is in ruins police are shocking heim is a jew living under an assumed name she doesn't wear yellow star and as a member of the underground though she lives with the constant threat of being caught she retains her dignity and lust for life while the world collapses around her and the last jews in berlin are being rounded up and sent to the death camps. mocks favorite books film also broke a taboo because it depicted the love of a jew for an anti semite that transcended all boundaries.
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she teaches her. solutions. to. the film's touching love story develops in the most adverse of conditions. that it's time to consider new cast because but their happiness proved short lived by these a k jaguar is captured and sent to a concentration camp lily is left behind all alone in your latest work as a director of the netflix mini series unorthodox and once again deals with judaism what's it about it's the. sister the story of a very young woman who grows up in an extremely religious environment namely in the satmar community in williamsburg in brooklyn he was in williamsburg brooklyn
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and deborah 1st languages english is only the 2nd and national did survive to this is and it's a very closed community communities effect she grows up without the internet that she enters into an arranged marriage and that frees herself from this life one and flies to berlin i was living one feet not. that i might. and. this is the 1st time out of earshot it has directed a series estie only gets to meet her future husband once before they marry as part of an ultra-orthodox jewish community in new york her life is dominated by religious rules. i was sort of paints a precise picture of this insular world after the euphoria of the wedding estie becomes her husband's property and is expected to be completely subservient to him . a month in spirit in the fellow in the cup. when he then in the 3rd
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done in. the series is based on deborah feldman's international bestseller an orthodox the scandalous rejection of my house citic roots it tells how she grew up and left he has said except margaret just like her s.t. begins a challenging new life in berlin. my grandparents lost their whole families in the camps i. was there. i.
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you know it's interesting how did you research this it's a unique world into which we have little insight we caught yeah naturally we went to new york a few times to hear about it williams we were in williamsburg and got to know these communities as much as it was possible to with our own eyes. and that i had an hour and we were the guests of different families but of course we also had expert advisors. fuckwit. since i guess what happened to this woman is really a horror story of all process that this is the victim that is the biggest and most important goal i set for myself as the director of this project so i did not let it become a story about which you could easily say it's a horror story. and the ultimate leigh it's about an absolutely
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basic human need to go on sex mentioned the. namely the desire to belong yet retain your individuality. individuality. and in my view that's also the field of tension in which the story in an orthodox takes place he's. not docs this is the most boring thing you can do as a director is to patrol completely predictable characters so. it is. thus unfinished i feel that it's my task to explore and depicts people with their complexities. in their pleasantries and unpleasant sides when i'm in the movie and their desires and their limits.
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hence. where does your interest in jewish culture and characters and their stories stem from. the midfoot something i went to israel for the 1st time when i was 14 i mean that's where i 1st encountered theater to. i've been back to israel many times since and i've worked a lot with one jewish person in particular danny levy and relieved. that it wasn't only a working relationship. and the director danny levy were a couple for years thank you. lady explored his own jewish roots in the giraffe shot of plays a german jewish woman who moves back from new york to germany after her grandfather's factory is set on fire by anti semites then. imo i really hope that your mother gets what. she died in.
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the role of a jew is also a type of label they are all very different individual characters. in darkness you play a jewish woman is nazi occupied poland you have to hide underground or you're in darkness literally what was that experience like. he got in my character he had to spend 14 months in the sewers with 2 small children and her husband. it was claustrophobic and terrible for bush hardly imaginable so. on we shot the film and wastewater tunnels and. you have it in our case they were clean and i said i want to get it. and her family really survived in the sewers for 14 months that's when the. oscar nominated film was based on a true story about
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a group of jews who escaped the deportations and massacres during the liquidation of the luvox ghetto by hiding in the sewers. obvious shot up plays a character who refuses to give up hope in the darkest of times. my. characters are always strong combative and stubborn what makes you want to play certain roles i mean. mostly they probably have a kind of great vitality which has either been buried and concealed or is on the contrary very present or does. this. for you guys in the kitchen yeah. yeah right so if you feel really.
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good. yes it's not funny you can't. hear you know last few years they've gotten. this. because there are very few actors in germany like are successful both in front of the camera and behind it and on top of that they are often on the stage why is theater so important for you to escape. there is nothing that forces an actor to be in the present as much as the stage. one. have to be completely there at and that's very powerful and inspiring. but don't just shout should be a house in hamburg is almost like maria hsia has a 2nd home. come and welcome to the bowels of the building. she is a longstanding member of the ensemble. and this is where i live is here here's the
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wardrobe are these the costumes for tonight. yes exactly. and i have lived here since the beginning since i started on the farm. his 1st big love was the she studied drama at the renowned seminar in vienna at the age of 18 us here in hamburg she's playing martha in edward albee's $962.00 classic about marital strife. and. yes i guessed it. yet it's going to there's a glancing. blow. jobs find sides i found sad that i didn't go. thank the gods day was that i i i.
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guess. it's. just any fashion by leo george he really drunkenly lay into each other is there anything left for us. yes love. an appetite for life restlessness this is a quest for happiness. let us feel that it's even if it's a there's something on fire sin flame to something producing so many white blood cells. creating an energy that chafes me and ensures they don't give up this man and keep. the room. you keep your. job. maria and i play with a great deal of energy. and this contributes to the lively nature of a performance even if something catches on the way as the energy never goes off
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track. it's very moving and each performance is a new adventure. even if it fits. the challenge fieldhouse provides a fixed point in a life full of travel and different roles. these days trotter is also spending a lot of time directing such as the mini series adaptation of an orthodox. for most actors don't really find their way behind the camera why did you choose to take this power schreiber's. the fun i've always wanted to be shaping things to it's just that i started writing screenplays before i started acting in films but. then i learned how to edit and how to write a treatment. how to get funds. and without that i probably would never have dared
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to make a feature length film called as i had to hold. the brings it in the fall how do you integrate your acting experiences into your director. yeah. so i'm going to unlike other starting out with directing i've got the great advantage of having been on many sets as an actress i cherish and i have observed many other directors men and women at work so couldn't even leave us leaving iraq tauriel debut i love life it was about an accessor relationship between a young woman and an older man. but it's about much more isn't it i can feel me. yeah this is after ns i think on the one hand it's an obsessive love affair but on the other say it's also about a family the book i based it on is a young woman's breathless monologue a woman who goes into an unknown space and does things that could be considered
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extremely unfeminist in nature x. i mean this this was probably what made this book so explosive half and powerful women were attracted to the story but also repelled in equal measure. for her 1st foray into directing schröder chose to adapt a controversial bestseller and film it in a foreign country love life is the tale of a young woman tangled up in a very unequal relationship. money complex in the house. this passionate but ill advised affair threatens to destroy our as life from the camera follows her fate up close. though shot or shot her successful debut film in israel the political situation there only plays a peripheral role her focus is on love and dependency trotta demonstrated great empathy for the after. she was very elegant and nice warm with me is
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she's a woman too and she knows she's an actress do and she knows how much. fear is involved . love life is based on. book of the same name. not be as short as adaptation shows a young woman torn between lust breaking taboos and willing submission. yes i feel your most successful film is probably your 2nd one as a director stefan spike farewell to europe what was it about yourself on spike's face that interested you. for difference like into syria. and i would describe it more as a film about exile unless as a film about the writer stefan. high up this wasn't at all possible to relocate
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your homeland. but is home actually how do you deal with language in this kind of cultural uprooting that's the real thing. is this i don't like your team because you're just once hitler rose to power it's spike fled austria he lived in england in the us before emigrating to brazil in 1940 the writer was also an authority on politics start somebody it's profits only movie edition goes at it over its own as he does feel and it's only reasons. for the kind of. the film delves into the psychology of a man torn apart by inner conflicts a universal theme there's a concert of this well you know mario always does projects that move between worlds but really work internationally and are conceived that way. and that's what cinematic language is all about today which means you don't make films just for germany but for the world and that's her greatest contribution. and. kind of
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iraq should be means you want shot. the dean of the. after years in exile spy committed suicide. the film was highly praised for its restrained cinematic language. whether she's in front of or behind the camera shot and never takes the easy way out or her work often tackles big historical themes like the events in the 1980 s. which led to the fall of the berlin wall. and would be. history plays a major role in almost all of your films in the t.v. series deutschland $83.00 covers part of the final decade of communist east germany you play an east german reconnaissance agent and what kind of woman issue. is those who want to follow and then you know what i liked about it from the beginning was that she's a bit of a shadowy character. she plays with people's lives exercises her power and is
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seemingly cold. but in the end in my view she's not simply cold i thought the. rather she actually acts out of political convictions i was on the south. pacific in the us and challenge them to to understand. for her political convictions she goes as far as to sell her own nephew sold to the east german secret service he's to serve as an agent in the west but 1st they have to break his will. do well that's fine and you have. the key to mine 50000 person investment so he's really in. most of the. shot his character appears to be ruthless and without scruples. could more.
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than issue but me it's i was born. since 1000 puckish. i mean in the sequel deutschland $86.00 charges character is at the heart of the action which begins at angola. talk his friends and existence to. keep him in a high position i can't see that. changing faster than i have to do i think i can invest and time is how much i didn't ask to be indeed the cia's mc to the hundreds of the hedge fund he did yeah went back to its own devices that got it going and the friends and i did. the popular series was seen around the world the next season on dating 9 is now in production which try to reprising her role as lenore out. as it has released us prison as an actor the nicest thing about getting to play
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a character like this for 3 seasons is that you grow close to the people who write the character. and you contribute your own ideas. i think here we complemented one another quite nicely of should advise against my your father into your shot after you perform on the theatrical stage of the cut in film you're in front of and behind the camera your artistic ranges is there anything left for you to do for me except this. that's higher writing is the thing i'm most afraid of before i was on top of us is where i'd say i have the fewest tools of the trade s. to get me through crises humpbacks sarik have a very munns if you look at it. this way how that's probably why i have the greatest respect for writers was the spec out for me writers who can come up with their own stories are really the crime delacroix going to classify me either so
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w. this is a deja vue news live from berlin a major corona virus outbreak at a german slaughterhouse raises questions about worker safety. soldiers are deployed to help with mass testing at the facility after more than a 1000 employees are infected also on the show. american president donald trump holds his 1st campaign rally in more than 3 months but turnout was lower than expected the indoor events in tulsa oklahoma took place despite warnings about the risk from coronavirus. and bonus league of football.
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