Liselotte Pulver
From The Art and Popular Culture Encyclopedia
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Liselotte Pulver (born October 11, 1929), sometimes credited as Lilo Pulver, is a Swiss actress.
Pulver was one of the stars of German cinema in the 1950s and 60s, where she often was cast as a tomboy. Despite a wide variety of roles, she is best remembered for the hearty and joyful laughter she displayed in comedies.
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Personal life
Pulver was born in Bern to civil engineer Fritz Eugen Pulver and his wife Germaine. In 1960, she met German actor Helmut Schmid on the set of "Gustav Adolfs Page" and married him the following year. The couple had two children, son Marc-Tell (born 1962) and daughter Melisande (born 1967).
Her daughter committed suicide in 1989. Her husband died in 1992 of a heart attack. She lives secluded in Perroy, Canton Vaud on the shores of Lake Geneva.
Career
From 1945 on she attended commercial school. After graduating in 1948, she worked as a model and took acting classes at the Bern conservatory. Following small parts at the Stadttheater Bern (city theatre), she appeared at the renowned Schauspielhaus Zürich, one of the most prestigious German-speaking theatres. Her breakthrough movie role was "Vreneli", the wife of the lead in "Ueli der Knecht", made after the novel of Swiss author Jeremias Gotthelf. One of her most recognizable roles in American cinema is that of James Cagney's sexy secretary in Billy Wilder's One, Two, Three. For her role as a Russian woman in A Global Affair she was in 1963 nominated for the Golden Globe Award as best supporting actress.
From 1978 to 1983 she worked for the German edition of Sesame Street.
Awards
- 1999 Bavarian Film Awards Honorary Award
Filmography (excerpt)
- Heidelberger Romanze (Paul Verhoeven, 1951) (opposite O. W. Fischer)
- Ich denke oft an Piroschka (Kurt Hoffmann, 1955) (opposite Gustav Knuth and Gunnar Möller)
- Heute heiratet mein Mann (Kurt Hoffmann, 1956) (alongside Johannes Heesters and Paul Hubschmid)
- The Adventures of Arsène Lupin, der Millionendieb (Jacques Becker, 1957) (opposite O.E. Hasse)
- Bekenntnisse des Hochstaplers Felix Krull (Kurt Hoffmann, 1957) (opposite Horst Buchholz)
- Die Zürcher Verlobung (Helmut Käutner, 1957) (with Paul Hubschmid und Bernhard Wicki)
- A Time to Love and a Time to Die (Douglas Sirk; USA, 1957) (starring John Gavin and Erich Maria Remarque)
- Das Wirtshaus im Spessart (Kurt Hoffmann, 1958) (with Carlos Thompson, Hubert von Meyerinck and Wolfgang Neuss)
- Helden (a German version of Arms and the Man) (Franz Peter Wirth, 1958) (opposite O. W. Fischer)
- Buddenbrooks (Alfred Weidenmann, 1959) (starring Hansjörg Felmy, Lil Dagover and Werner Hinz)
- Gustav Adolfs Page (Rolf Hansen, 1960)
- Das Glas Wasser (Helmut Käutner, 1960) (opposite Gustaf Gründgens)
- Das Spukschloß im Spessart (Kurt Hoffmann, 1960) (opposite Georg Thomalla)
- One, Two, Three (Billy Wilder; USA, 1961) (alongside James Cagney, Hanns Lothar, Horst Buchholz, Hubert von Meyerinck and Leon Askin)
- Kohlhiesels Töchter (Axel von Ambesser, 1962) (opposite Dietmar Schönherr)
- A Global Affair (Jack Arnold; USA, 1964) (starring Bob Hope)
- Dr. med. Hiob Prätorius (Kurt Hoffmann, 1965) (opposite Heinz Rühmann)
- The Nun (Jacques Rivette, 1966) (starring Anna Karina)
- Hokuspokus oder: Wie lasse ich meinen Mann verschwinden...? (Kurt Hoffmann, 1966) (opposite Heinz Rühmann)
- Herrliche Zeiten im Spessart (Kurt Hoffmann, 1967) (alongside Harald Leipnitz, Vivi Bach und Hannelore Elsner)
- Le Tiroir secret (1986) TV mini-series
- René Deltgen — Der sanfte Rebell (Michael Wenk; Luxembourg, 2004, documentary) (alongside Götz George, Nadja Tiller, Artur Brauner and Michael Verhoeven)