Alexander Scheer

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Alexander Scheer
MJK 46293 Alexander Scheer (Deutscher Filmpreis 2019).jpg
Scheer at German Film Award 2019
Born (1976-06-01) June 1, 1976 (age 45)
Occupation
  • Actor
  • musician
Years active1999–present
Partner(s) [de] (former)

Alexander Scheer (born 1 June 1976 in East Berlin) is a German actor and musician. He has won several national awards for his performances in film and theater, including one German Film Award for "Best Actor in a Leading Role" and one Bavarian Film Award for "Best Actor", both in the year 2019.

Biography[]

Scheer studied at  [de] in Berlin with main focus on music. In addition to the singing, he played piano and drums in different bands. He left school after the 11th grade and then took up various occupations.[1] He also occurred as a performer in commercials during this period and turned their own amateur films with his friends. The film series "American Showdown" by André Jagusch, when Scheer stood in front of the camera, became a small festival hit and was shown, for example, at the  [de] (Workshop of the young film scene) and at the  [de] (Weiterstadt Open Air Film Festival). During a casting, he was discovered by the director Leander Haussmann, who cast him in his 1999 film Sonnenallee. After the shooting, Scheer and Haußmann followed to the Schauspiel Bochum theater. There he played among other things in various plays such as Much Ado About Nothing, Leonce and Lena, and The Tempest.

As a result, he worked with the directors like Christoph Marthaler, Frank Castorf, and  [de], played in theaters such as "Berlin Alexanderplatz", "the idiot" at the Volksbühne Berlin, and "The Seagull" at the Deutsches Schauspielhaus in Hamburg. For his acting performances, he was awarded the  [de] (the Ulrich Wildgruber prize). For the personification of the English Shakespearean actor Edmund Kean in Frank Castorf's production of the same name in 2009, Scheer was voted Actor of the Year by the theater magazine Theater heute. In addition to his theater engagements, he was also in the national and international productions such as Viktor Vogel – Commercial Man, Eight Miles High, Mrs Ratcliffe's Revolution, and Carlos (miniseries) which its full 5½-hour version was shown out of competition at the 2010 Cannes Film Festival.

To prepare for the portrayal of Keith Richards in the film Eight Miles High, Scheer founded the band The Rockboys which played concerts for one summer. In 2007 he joined Jan Opoczynski as guitarist in his band  [de]. In the following year, he became the front man of the Viennese band Gruppe Pegel. In 2009 he toured Europe as a percussionist with The Whitest Boy Alive. In 2012 he appeared as Mephistopheles in the Johann Wolfgang von Goethe's tragedy play Faust, Part One.

Scheer played a total of 16 years under the direction of Frank Castorf at the Volksbühne Berlin. The decision of the secretary for cultural affairs of Berlin, Tim Renner, caused Castorf's contract as director not to be extended and Scheer was critical of it. He then asked Tim Renner not to enter the theater again, and when Scheer met Renner there in 2018 after a film screening, he poured a glass of beer over his head.[2]

In the Andreas Dresen's 2018 biographical film  [de] about the East German songwriter, rock musician, and skilled excavator operator Gerhard Gundermann, Scheer played the title role and sang all the songs himself.[3] For this role, he was awarded German Film Award (Deutscher Filmpreis) the most important cinema awards in Germany and the most highly endowed German cultural awards, for the Best Actor in a Leading Role in 2019.

In the television series  [de], he embodied the British musician David Bowie.

Scheer was in a long-term relationship with the fashion designer  [de].[4]

Filmography[]

Film[]

Year Title Role Notes
1999 Sonnenallee
2001 Getting My Brother Laid
2001 Viktor Vogel – Commercial Man
2007 Eight Miles High Keith Richards
2009 12 Paces Without a Head
2010  [de]
2011  [de] Christmas film
2013 West
2014  [de]
2015  [de]
2010  [de]
2016  [de]
2016  [de]
2016 Tschick
2017 The Young Karl Marx Wilhelm Weitling
2017 Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Men Tell No Tales
2018  [de]
2018  [de]
2019 The Aftermath
2020 Enfant Terrible Andy Warhol
2021 Blood Red Sky Eightball

Television[]

Year Title Role Notes
1999 Tatort series, episode  [de]
2003–2005 Berlin, Berlin Lenny series, 60 episodes
2004 SK Kölsch series, episode Schmock
2005 The Eagle: A Crime Odyssey series, episodes 9 and 10 (Kronos)
2008 film
2009 Stralsund series, episode  [de]
2010 Carlos film and miniseries
2011  [de] film
2012  [de] film
2012  [de] film
2014 Alarm für Cobra 11 – Die Autobahnpolizei Leonid Tessla series, season 18, episode #261 Revolution
2014  [de] series, episode Machtspiele
2014 Tatort series, episode  [de]
2015 Tatort series, episode  [de]
2015  [de] series, episode  [de]
2015  [de] series
2016  [de] series, episode  [de]
2016 Morgen hör ich auf series, 3 episodes
2017  [de] film
2018  [de] film
2020  [de] series, 8 episodes
2020  [de] series
2021  [de] series, 2 episodes

Awards[]

  • 2006: Der Faust (a German theater prize), the best performer of a drama performance (nomination)
  • 2008:  [de] (a German theater prize), originality and best actor
  • 2009:  [de], honorary title by the German magazine Theater heute, for Kean
  • 2018:  [de] (a German film awards), best actor for his role in  [de][5]
  • 2019: Bavarian Film Awards, best actor for Gundermann[6]
  • 2019: Berliner Kunstpreis (Berlin Art Prize) for performing arts (Darstellende Kunst)[7]
  • 2019: German Film Award – "Best Actor in a Leading Role" for Gundermann

References[]

  1. ^ Ulf Lippitz, Christiane Peitz (2018-08-20). "Ich will das Biest reiten". Der Tagesspiegel Online. ISSN 1865-2263.
  2. ^ "„Ich will das Biest reiten"". Der Tagesspiegel (in German). Retrieved 2021-07-06.
  3. ^ Bock, Caroline. "Alexander Scheer spielt Gundermann". MAZ - Märkische Allgemeine (in German). Retrieved 2021-07-06.
  4. ^ Claire Beermann, Johannes Dudziak (2019-02-19), "Alexander Scheer: "Du spielst den Text nicht, der Text spielt dich"", Die Zeit (in German), Hamburg, ISSN 0044-2070, retrieved 2019-12-14
  5. ^ "Günter Rohrbach Filmpreis 2018 verliehen | filmportal.de". www.filmportal.de. Retrieved 2021-07-08.
  6. ^ muenchen.de. "muenchen.de - Das offizielle Stadtportal für München". muenchen.de (in German). Retrieved 2021-07-08.
  7. ^ "Kunstpreis Berlin 2019". www.adk.de (in German). Retrieved 2021-07-08.

External links[]

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