German actress Margit Carstensen dead at 83
BERLIN, Germany—German stage and screen actress Margit Carstensen, star of iconic films by influential director Rainer Werner Fassbinder, has died aged 83, her agent said on Friday, June 2.
Carstensen died on Thursday in a hospital near Hamburg, the agent said, after a long illness.
She was best known for playing the titular role in Fassbinder’s 1972 all-female “The Bitter Tears of Petra von Kant”—a predatory narcissist who gets her comeuppance in an affair with a younger woman (Hanna Schygulla).
The performance won her a German Film Award.
Two years later the Kiel-born actress would headline in Fassbinder’s drama about an abusive marriage, “Martha,” followed by a series of movies exploring the trappings of traditional gender roles including “Chinese Roulette” and “Women in New York.”
Article continues after this advertisementIn a theatre career that saw her perform on the most prominent stages of Germany and Austria, Carstensen had a fruitful collaboration with iconoclastic director Christoph Schlingensief, who cast her as Magda Goebbels in “100 Years of Adolf Hitler.”
Article continues after this advertisementHe also directed her in a production of Elfriede Jelinek’s “Bambiland” at Vienna’s renowned Burgtheater in 2004, the same year Jelinek won the Nobel Prize for Literature.
Her biggest commercial success was 1999’s “Sonnenallee,” a sweet-natured comedy about life in communist East Berlin in the 1970s.
Most recently, she joined Schygulla and Irm Hermann on the wildly popular German television crime series “Tatort,” in which they portrayed a trio of older women who say they were morally compelled to murder.
In 2019 she accepted Germany’s prestigious Goetz George lifetime achievement prize, with the jury praising her “intense and uncompromising performances, her transgressive portrayals and her focus… which invariably casts a spell over audiences.” /ra
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