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Judy Winter
Judy Winter
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Judy Winter (pronounced [ˈd͡ʒuː.di ˈvɪn.tɐ] ; born Beate Richard; 4 January 1944) is a German actress. She resides in Berlin.

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from Grokipedia
Judy Winter is a German actress, singer, and voice actress known for her celebrated stage portrayal of Marlene Dietrich and her extensive work as one of Germany's most prominent dubbing voices for Hollywood stars. Born Beate Richard on January 4, 1944, in Friedland, Upper Silesia (now Korfantów, Poland), she chose her stage name as a combination of those of Judy Garland and Shelley Winters. Winter has enjoyed a prolific career spanning theater, film, television, and voice work since the late 1960s, establishing herself as a leading figure in German musical and dramatic performance. She is particularly renowned for her musical theater roles, including her signature interpretation of Marlene Dietrich, and has lent her voice to major international actresses such as Jane Fonda, Faye Dunaway, Louise Fletcher, Shirley MacLaine, Vanessa Redgrave, and Audrey Hepburn in German dubs of films including One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest and On Golden Pond. Her on-screen credits include appearances in German television series such as In aller Freundschaft and Familie Bundschuh, as well as voice roles in animated and live-action productions like the Jim Knopf films. Winter has also contributed to radio plays, released music recordings since the late 1970s, and remains active in the industry into the 2020s. She resides in Berlin, is the adoptive mother of actor and playwright Francis C. Winter, and has been a vocal supporter of HIV/AIDS organizations.

Early life

Birth and background

Judy Winter, born Beate Richard on January 4, 1944, in Friedland, Oberschlesien, Germany (now Korfantów, Poland), is a German actress. Her father was an officer and her mother a dancer. She grew up in Heidelberg. Winter's birth occurred during World War II in what was then German Upper Silesia, establishing her German nationality from birth. She later became associated with Berlin, where she has long resided, though her early years were spent in West Germany.

Acting training

Judy Winter received her professional acting training at the Hochschule für Musik und Darstellende Kunst Stuttgart (State University of Music and Performing Arts Stuttgart). Her education at the institution also included vocal training and classical ballet dance instruction. One profile lists the primary acting education as occurring in 1969 at the Staatliche Hochschule für Musik und darstellende Kunst Stuttgart. This formal preparation established the basis for her work as an actress and voice performer.

Career

Theater work

Judy Winter began her professional stage career in 1961 at the age of 17 with her first engagement at the Stadttheater Ulm, where she worked under director Peter Zadek. In 1962, she moved to the Theater Bremen. In 1966, she appeared in Frank Wedekind's Frühlings Erwachen, playing Wendla Bergmann. From 1963 onward, Winter developed a long-standing association with the Renaissance-Theater Berlin, where she took on roles in classic works such as Patrick Hamilton's Gaslicht, Anton Chekhov's Der Kirschgarten, and Eugene O'Neill's Eines langen Tages Reise in die Nacht as Mary Tyrone. She has maintained ties to other major German stages, including the Thalia-Theater Hamburg and the Ernst-Deutsch-Theater Hamburg, performing in Bertolt Brecht's Mutter Courage und ihre Kinder and Tennessee Williams' Süßer Vogel Jugend as Alexandra del Lago in 2007. Among her most prominent stage achievements is the one-woman play Marlene by Pam Gems, in which she portrayed Marlene Dietrich; it premiered at the Renaissance-Theater Berlin in 1998 and has been performed hundreds of times across Germany, Japan, and other locations. Winter has also excelled in musical theater, starring as Eliza Doolittle in My Fair Lady, Dolly Levi in Hello, Dolly!, and Fräulein Schneider in Cabaret at the Bad Hersfelder Festspiele in 2015. Other notable later roles include the title character in the world premiere of Hilde Knef – Der Teufel und die Diva at the Ernst-Deutsch-Theater Hamburg and appearances in plays such as Neil Simon's Rose at the Komödie Düsseldorf in 2010.

Television roles

Judy Winter has maintained a prolific career in German television since the early 1970s, with numerous guest and supporting appearances across a wide range of series, particularly in crime procedurals. Her early television credits include roles in Hamburg Transit (1971) as Kriminalbeamtin Rauscher and Der Kommissar (1973) as Herta Kapp in the episode "Tod eines Buchhändlers." She soon became a frequent presence in classic German Krimi formats, often portraying wives, professionals, or other supporting characters. Winter appeared in multiple episodes of several long-running crime series, including three episodes of Derrick between 1975 and 1979, such as "Hoffmanns Höllenfahrt" (1975) as Frau Hoffmann, "Das Bordfest" (1976) as Agnes Solms, and "Ein Kongreß in Berlin" (1979) as Dr. Maria Meinrad. She also featured in three episodes of Ein Fall für zwei from 1982 to 1994 and three episodes of Sonderdezernat K1 from 1973 to 1977. In Tatort, she had roles in "Tod eines Einbrechers" (1975) as Birgit Oppermann and "Reifezeugnis" (1977) as Mrs. Fichte, the latter a notable installment directed by Wolfgang Petersen. Additional crime series appearances include Der Alte (1977) as Gabriela Sartorius in "Zwei Mörder." In later decades, Winter took on recurring roles in family and light drama series, including Susanne Bundschuh in nine episodes of Familie Bundschuh from 2015 to 2025, Gräfin Theodora Stuschke in five episodes of Nächste Ausfahrt Glück from 2024 to 2025, and Dr. Renate Wenger in four episodes of Club Las Piranjas (2023). She also appeared in three episodes of In aller Freundschaft (2006–2017) and four episodes of Klinikum Berlin Mitte (2001). Her television work spans over five decades, with dozens of series credits emphasizing supporting and guest performances in crime dramas and contemporary formats.

Film appearances

Judy Winter's appearances in feature films have been relatively limited compared to her extensive work in theater and television, with most of her cinematic roles concentrated in the early part of her career during the 1970s, when she frequently took on supporting and character parts in German productions. She began her film work around 1970, appearing in Das gelbe Haus am Pinnasberg as part of a parodistic sex comedy, Perrak as an inscrutable brothel operator in a thriller, and Und Jimmy ging zum Regenbogen as a paralyzed ex-spy and brothel operator Nora Hill in an adaptation of a Johannes Mario Simmel novel. In 1971, she portrayed Verena Angenfort, the unhappy wife of a banker, in the sociocritical drama Liebe ist nur ein Wort. Her film activity continued sporadically into the 1970s and beyond with roles in … aber Jonny! (1973), Der Lord von Barmbeck (1973) as the wife of a burglar in a character study, and Das Traumhaus (1980). In 1984, she played a pharmacological doctor in the East German feature Ärztinnen (for which she received the Darstellerpreis at the 3. Spielfilmfestival der DDR). Later appearances include the queen in the 1990 German-Czech fairytale film Dornröschen, Sister Lucipha (a mysterious nun) in the 2007 Edgar Wallace parody Neues vom Wixxer, a maternal mentor in the 2017 bittersweet romance Auf der anderen Seite ist das Gras viel grüner, and a neighbour in the 2018 relationship film Wuff – Folge dem Hund. In more recent years, Winter has also contributed voice performances to animated feature films, including Mama Etna in Molly Monster (2016) and Frau Mahlzahn in Jim Knopf und Lukas der Lokomotivführer (2018) and its sequel Jim Knopf und die Wilde 13 (2020). These roles reflect her ongoing involvement in cinema, albeit primarily in supporting capacities and with a shift toward voice work in animated projects.

Personal life

Recognition

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