Cordula Trantow
- Actress
- Director
- Writer
Cordula Trantow was born and raised in Berlin. Being the daughter of a
composer and a dancing teacher, she took acting and dancing lessons
when still in school, and she began playing minor roles at various
Berlins theatres before graduation. Aged 14 Trantow made her film debut
in Kalle wird Bürgermeister and Aufruhr im Schlaraffenland. After
appearing in the tv feature Die begnadete Angst (after Bernanos) she
was cast by Bernhard Wicki for his epochal film Die Brücke. Trantow has
since played more than 150 roles for film, tv, and theatre. She spoke
in notable radio plays such as Effi Briest, Die Hose, Geordnete
Verhältnisse, Eine Stunde Liebe and Malaparte's Die Haut. She was
engaged at, among others, the Bayerisches Staatsschauspiel in Munich
(1961/62 und 1970/71), the Württembergisches Staatstheater Stuttgart
(1964/65), the Ruhrfestspiele Recklinghausen (1966), and the Münchner
Kammerspiele (1970/71). Since the early seventies Cordula Trantow
worked freelance at theatres in Berlin, Bonn, and Neuss. In 1989 she
wrote and directed the tv feature Besuch (The Visitor), starring Judy
Winter. Since 1988 Ms. Trantow is director of the Summer Theatre
Festival in Weilheim; since 1999 the festival is held in
Garmisch-Partenkirchen. Ms. Trantow speaks English and French. She
lives at the Starnberg Lake near Munich, and she has two sons descended
from her marriage with director Rudolf Noelte. In 2000 Ms. Trantow was
awarded with the Federal Cross of Honor.