Karl Heinz Stroux Explained

Karl Heinz Stroux
Birth Name:Karl-Heinz Stroux
Birth Date:25 February 1908
Birth Place:Hamborn, Germany
Death Place:Düsseldorf, Germany
Alma Mater:German: Schauspielschule of the German: [[Volksbühne]] theatre
Known For:Director of the Düsseldorfer Schauspielhaus

Karl Heinz Stroux (25 February 1908 – 2 August 1985) was a German actor, film and theatre director, and theatre manager. As the director of the Düsseldorfer Schauspielhaus from 1955 to 1972 he opened the new building in 1970.[1]

Career

Born Karl-Heinz Stroux, the son of a physician, in Hamborn (now a district in the city of Duisburg), he studied in Berlin, history and philosophy until 1930. Parallel, he studied acting at the German: Schauspielschule of the German: [[Volksbühne]] theatre. From 1928 to 1930 he worked as an assistant to stage directors Karlheinz Martin and Jürgen Fehling, and as an actor. From 1930 to 1934 he worked at several Berlin theatres including Deutsches Theater and the German: [[Theater am Schiffbauerdamm]] where he staged Eugene O'Neill's German: [[All God's Chillun Got Wings (play)|Alle Kinder Gottes haben Flügel]] as a studio production.[2] By the late 1940s he had been a senior director at several German theatres including ones in Darmstadt, Berlin (Hebbel-Theater) and Wiesbaden. From 1951 to 1955 he was the senior director at Berlin's Schiller Theater and Schlosspark Theater. At the Schlosspark, he directed the German premiere of Samuel Beckett's Waiting for Godot in 1953 with the author in the audience.[3]

In 1955 he succeeded Gustaf Gründgens as German: [[Theater manager|Generalintendant]] of the German: [[Düsseldorfer Schauspielhaus]]. He staged the premiere in German of Beckett's Happy Days in Düsseldorf in 1961. He also worked closely with the playwrights Eugène Ionesco and Heinrich Böll. His actors included Bernhard Minetti and Ernst Schröder, Elisabeth Bergner, Elisabeth Flickenschildt, Paula Wessely, Ernst Deutsch and Fritz Kortner.[4] His production of Ionesco's German: [[Exit the King|Der König stirbt]] was performed in the first Berliner Theatertreffen (Berlin theatre meeting) in 1964. He also staged works by Arthur Miller and Sławomir Mrożek.[5] During his era, a new building of the German: Düsseldorfer Schauspielhaus was built that he opened in 1970. Occasionally he still acted, for example as narrator in Shakespeare's Perikles at age 77.

Stroux died in Düsseldorf. His sons pursued similar careers: (born 1943) is also a theatre director,[6] and (born 1945) is also an artist, theatre director and an actor.[7] On the occasion of his centenary in 2008, Düsseldorf arranged an exhibition of his 50 years of work for the theatre.

Notes and References

  1. (12 August 1985) Gestorben / Karl Heinz Stroux, Der Spiegel
  2. http://www.munzinger.de/search/portrait/karl+heinz+stroux/0/2122.html Karl Heinz Stroux
  3. Craig, George; Fehsenfeld, Martha Dow; Overbeck, Lois More (eds.) (2011). The Letters of Samuel Beckett:, Volume 2; Volumes 1941 - 1956, p. 718. Cambridge University Press
  4. http://www.onb.ac.at/sichtungen/berichte/dumont-1a.html Theatermuseum der Landeshauptstadt Düsseldorf, Dumont-Lindemann-Archiv
  5. (31 July 2008) Karl Heinz Stroux zum 100. Geburtstag, musenblaetter.de
  6. APA (5 June 2007). "Thomas Stroux erhält Goldenes Verdienstzeichen der Republik Österreich". Retrieved 8 July 2013
  7. http://www.stephanstroux.de/stroux/stroux_biographie_en.html Stephan Stroux