Corny Collins (born 18 December 1933) is a German retired actress.[1] She was married to the actor Christian Wolff.
Corny Collins | |
---|---|
Born | 18 December 1933 | (age 91)
Occupation | Actress |
Years active | 1957–1991 (film) |
Her life
editAfter leaving school, Corny Collins completed an apprenticeship as a medical assistant. Günter Pfitzmann discovered her at a theater doctor for the cabaret. There she performed with Wolfgang Neuss and Ursula Herking. In order to advance professionally, she took acting lessons. She made her first theater appearance in the play Ein Tag im siebten Himmel. The director and actor Axel von Ambesser noticed her talent and hired her in 1957 for a role in the film Die Freundin meines Mannes, together with Peter Kraus. Although Corny Collins was now already 25 years old, she continued to play teenage roles in films. As a voice actress, she lent her voice to Ruby Dee (Black Power) and Marion Ross in the family series Happy Days, among others.[2]
From the mid-1960s, she was increasingly seen in television productions. She made her last film, Journey of No Return, in 1989, after which she only appeared on stage.
Selected filmography
edit- Voyage to Italy, Complete with Love (1958)
- Father, Mother and Nine Children (1958)
- My Ninety Nine Brides (1958)
- The Muzzle (1958)
- Immer die Radfahrer (1958)
- I Was All His (1958)
- Heart Without Mercy (1958)
- Freddy, the Guitar and the Sea (1959)
- Der lustige Krieg des Hauptmann Pedro (1959)
- Crime After School (1959)
- The Day the Rains Came (1959)
- Until Money Departs You (1960)
- Genosse Münchhausen (1962)
- The Post Has Gone (1962)
- Wild Water (1962)
- The Indian Scarf (1963)
- ...denn die Musik und die Liebe in Tirol (1963)
- If You Go Swimming in Tenerife (1964)
- High Season for Spies (1966)
- Hotel by the Hour (1970)
- The Priest of St. Pauli (1970)
References
edit- ^ Bergfelder p.259
- ^ "Deutsche Synchronkartei | Sprecher | Corny Collins". www.synchronkartei.de. Retrieved 2024-08-30.
Bibliography
edit- Bergfelder, Tim. International Adventures: German Popular Cinema and European Co-productions in the 1960s. Berghahn Books, 2005.
External links
edit