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Regina Ziegler
Regina Ziegler
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Regina Ziegler (born 8 March 1944) is a German film and television producer.

Key Information

Life and career

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Born in Quedlinburg, the daughter of a journalist, Ziegler briefly studied law at the Free University of Berlin, before dropping her studies to work at the Sender Freies Berlin as a production assistant.[1][2][3] Germany's first female film producer,[4] she started her own independent company Ziegler Films in 1973.[2] She produced about 500 works between cinema and television,[5] including the Golden Lion winner film A Year of the Quiet Sun by Krzysztof Zanussi, as well as works by Volker Schlöndorff, Andrzej Wajda, Ulrich Schamoni and her life-partner Wolf Gremm.[2][5]

During her career Ziegler received various awards and honours, including a Romy Award for her career,[6] a Lifetime Carl Laemmle Produzentenpreis [de], and the Federal Cross of Merit 1st Class.[5] She served as a juror at the 44th Venice International Film Festival.[7] In 2006, her career was the subject of a retrospective at the Museum of Modern Art in New York.[2][5]

See also

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References

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from Grokipedia
Regina Ziegler is a German film and television producer known for founding Ziegler Film in 1973 and producing more than 500 motion pictures, television films, series, documentaries, and theater recordings over five decades. Born on 8 March 1944 in Quedlinburg, she briefly studied law before beginning her career as a production assistant at Sender Freies Berlin (SFB), which led her to establish her own independent production company at age 29. Her debut production, Ich dachte, ich wäre tot (1973), directed by Wolf Gremm, achieved unexpected commercial success and won the Bundesfilmpreis, quickly positioning her company as a key address for the New German Cinema. Ziegler has collaborated with prominent international and German directors, including Andrzej Wajda, Volker Schlöndorff, Krzysztof Zanussi, and Rainer Werner Fassbinder, on projects ranging from arthouse features to popular television formats. Notable works include Korczak (1990), Weissensee (2010–2018), Return to Montauk (2017), and the international Erotic Tales short film series, which she initiated with contributions from directors such as Susan Seidelman and Nicolas Roeg. Her productions have earned numerous accolades for their artistic ambition and commercial viability, including multiple Grimme-Preise, German Film Awards, and an International Emmy Award. In recognition of her lifelong contributions to German film and television, Ziegler received the honorary Lola (special award of the Deutscher Filmpreis) in 2016 and the Carl Laemmle Produzentenpreis for her life's work in 2018. Together with her daughter Tanja Ziegler, she continues to lead Ziegler Film, one of Germany's most prolific independent production companies, with offices in Berlin, Cologne, Munich, and Baden-Baden.

Early life and education

Regina Ziegler was born Regina Krömer on 8 March 1944 in Quedlinburg, Saxony-Anhalt, Germany. During World War II her mother fled the bombing of Berlin to the family's farm in the Harz mountains, and shortly after the war the family relocated to the Weserbergland region where Ziegler grew up. Her mother worked as a local reporter for the Schaumburger Zeitung, supporting the family while her father remained in Soviet captivity, and frequently took young Regina to film premieres, fostering an early interest in cinema. As a child Ziegler was active in competitive gymnastics, winning around 40 victory wreaths. In 1964 she moved to Berlin to study law. She soon neglected her studies amid the excitement of city life, prompting her parents to discontinue her monthly financial support. Around the same time she began working at Sender Freies Berlin (SFB) as a production and editorial assistant, initially hired for a general support role, and remained in that position for several years, gaining foundational experience in television production.

Career

Entry into the film industry

Regina Ziegler entered the film industry after beginning her professional career in television production. Following her dropout from law school, she started working as a production assistant at Sender Freies Berlin (SFB), the public broadcaster in West Berlin, in 1964. She remained there until 1973, learning the ropes of production within the structured environment of post-war West German public broadcasting, which served as a key training ground for media professionals in the divided city during the Cold War era. In the early 1970s, Ziegler transitioned to independent film work by taking on production management roles. She served as production manager on Rosa von Praunheim's Berliner Bettwurst (1975). She also worked as production manager on Anna und Edith (1975). These early credits marked her shift from assistant-level work in television to active involvement in feature and television film production. Her initial producer credits emerged in the early 1970s, including her first as producer on Ich dachte, ich wäre tot (1973), directed by Wolf Gremm, which received the Bundesfilmpreis in 1974. These experiences led to the establishment of her own production company in 1973.

Founding and development of Ziegler Film

Regina Ziegler founded Ziegler Film on 27 April 1973 in Berlin as an independent production company, marking her entry into independent filmmaking after earlier industry experience. The company quickly established itself as a prominent player in the German film and television landscape. Ziegler Film is headquartered in Berlin and operates additional offices in Cologne, Munich, and Baden-Baden, allowing for broad production capabilities across Germany. Over more than five decades, Regina Ziegler, together with her daughter Tanja Ziegler as co-manager, has overseen the production of more than 500 motion pictures and television films, documentaries, and TV series. The company remains a family-run independent business under their joint leadership, focused on maintaining artistic quality and audience reach in a competitive market.

Notable film productions

Regina Ziegler has produced several acclaimed theatrical films through her company Ziegler Film, often emphasizing arthouse cinema and international partnerships with prominent directors. Her collaboration with Polish filmmaker Krzysztof Zanussi on A Year of the Quiet Sun (1984), a poignant post-World War II romance, earned the Golden Lion at the Venice International Film Festival, marking a key achievement in her career for bridging German and Eastern European cinema. Ziegler also worked with influential German and international directors including Volker Schlöndorff, Andrzej Wajda, Ulrich Schamoni, and Wolf Gremm, contributing to diverse cinematic projects that highlighted her role in New German Cinema and beyond. For instance, she produced Heinrich (1977), an early notable credit reflecting her engagement with historical and dramatic storytelling in German film. In recent years, Ziegler's productions have continued to address historical and biographical themes in theatrical releases. She served as executive producer on From Hilde, with Love (2024), directed by Andreas Dresen, a drama depicting resistance fighter Hilde Coppi during the Nazi era that premiered at the Berlin International Film Festival and received a theatrical release in Germany. She also executive produced Martha Liebermann - Ein gestohlenes Leben (2022) and produced I've Never Been to New York (2019), the latter a comedy-drama adapted from a successful stage musical that earned the "particularly valuable" designation from the German Film and Media Assessment. These works demonstrate her ongoing commitment to impactful narrative features across decades.

Television productions

Regina Ziegler has produced a substantial body of work in German television through Ziegler Film, contributing to numerous long-running series, mini-series, and TV movies primarily for public broadcasters such as ARD and ZDF. These productions often explore historical, crime, and family themes, demonstrating her sustained commitment to episodic and long-form formats. Among her most prominent television projects is the historical drama series Weißensee (internationally known as The Weissensee Saga), which ran from 2010 to 2018 and comprised 24 episodes. The series, set in East Berlin across the late GDR period and the fall of the Wall, garnered widespread critical acclaim and strong audience ratings in Germany. In 2018, Ziegler produced the three-part mini-series Gladbeck, a dramatization of the 1988 Gladbeck hostage crisis that received attention for its intense portrayal of real events. Ziegler has also overseen several long-running crime series, including Kommissarin Heller, which aired from 2014 to 2021 across 10 episodes, and Mordkommission Istanbul (Homicide Unit Istanbul), broadcast from 2008 to 2021 with 23 episodes. These procedurals highlight her involvement in enduring formats that appeal to broad audiences on public television. More recent television work includes the family-oriented series Familie Bundschuh, ongoing since 2015 and planned to continue through 2025, as well as the 2023 production Die Therapie (The Therapy). These projects reflect the longevity and volume of her contributions to German TV, complementing her feature film output by focusing on serial storytelling for public broadcasters.

Personal life

Regina Ziegler was born Regina Krömer in 1944. Her family fled Quedlinburg at the end of World War II and resettled in Obernkirchen in the Weserbergland region. She was first married to Hartmut Ziegler, with whom she had a daughter, Tanja Ziegler (born 1966). The marriage ended in divorce in 1972. In 1977, she married film director Wolf Gremm; they remained married until his death on 14 July 2015. She resides in Berlin-Schlachtensee.

Awards and recognition

Regina Ziegler has received numerous personal awards and honors for her contributions to German and international film and television production over five decades. Her recognitions include the Bundesverdienstkreuz 1. Klasse in 1998, the Berlinale Kamera in 2004, the Platin Romy for lifetime achievement in 2016, the honorary Lola (Ehrenpreis) of the Deutscher Filmpreis for outstanding contributions to German film in 2016, the Carl Laemmle Produzentenpreis for her life's work in 2018, and the Deutscher Gründerpreis for her lifetime achievement in 2024. Additional honors include the American Cinema Foundation Freedom Award, the Innocence in Danger Award in 2008, the Prix Europa Lifetime Achievement Award in 2012, and the Goldene Erbse in 2016 for her social and cultural engagement. Her work was also celebrated with a retrospective at the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) in New York in 2006.

References

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