- Klaus Havenstein
Klaus Havenstein (born
7 April 1922 inWittenberge ,Germany ; died19 March 1998 inMunich ), was a Germanactor ,cabaret artist, dubbing artist andtelevision presenter .Klaus Havenstein grew up in
Hamburg , where he started an apprenticeship as aretail salesman in 1937. At the same time, against his father's wishes, he took acting lessons from a private teacher.In 1939 Havenstein was called up to the "
Wehrmacht " where he joined theartillery . He took part in theBattle of France , in the occupation ofGreece and in the war againstRussia .In 1945 he was captured as an American
prisoner of war . The Americans recognised his talent and brought him to a special camp inGarmisch-Partenkirchen to entertain imprisoned officers. There, he was discovered as a theatre actor, and it was in the Garmisch theatre that he first appeared on stage, promoted by the famous German actorHans Söhnker among others. In the 1950s and 1960s Havenstein was known all over Germany. Along withUrsula Herking ,Dieter Hildebrandt andOliver Hassencamp , the cabaret artist created a form of sharp-tongued, provocative entertainment of a kind never seen before. In 1956 he was among the founders of the ensemble "München Lach- und Schießgesellschaft", literally "Munich laughter and shooting club" - a mixed-up version of "Wach- und Schließgesellschaft" ("security company"). In 1972 Havenstein left the group but remained active on television and radio.Havenstein married in 1958; his wife's name was Marina.
In 1968 Havenstein played the voice of
King Louie in the dubbed German version of theWalt Disney film "The Jungle Book". He dubbed all the spoken and sung parts. Other voices he dubbed included those ofMichel Galabru ("Le Gendarme de St. Tropez"),Gene Wilder ("Frankenstein Junior", the German version of "Young Frankenstein "),Jack Lemmon ("Mister Roberts"),Alberto Sordi ("Vitelloni") andPeter Ustinov .Havenstein also presented popular children's television programmes such as "Sport-Spiel-Spannung" ("sports, games, fun") and "Zwei aus einer Klasse" ("two from one school class"). He acted in films and began to work with the
Bavaria n broadcasting companyBayerischer Rundfunk . This work lasted a long time: he made around 3,000 programmes over 46 years. One of the highlights of this work was his co-production of the children's series "Jeremias Schrumpelhut", in which he spoke all 50 roles himself. In 1996 he stopped working as a radio presenter to make way for younger blood.From 1990 to 1992 Havenstein directed the festival in
Bad Vilbel .Later, he took on guest roles in various television programmes such as "Rudis Tagesshow" with
Rudi Carrell , where he entertained the crowd along withDiether Krebs andBeatrice Richter .Klaus Havenstein died in spring 1998 of a heart condition and was buried in Munich's Nordfriedhof cemetery.
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German television comedy External links
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:"Much of this article was translated from the German version of February 2007."
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