Christine Görner
Life and career
After her vocal training Görner was engaged at the age of 22 by the Staatsoper Hamburg. After a few years she went to Munich to the Staatstheater am Gärtnerplatz. There she appeared in Fanny (with Trude Hesterberg), the first musical which was produced at Gärtnerplatz, as well as Miesmies in the premiere of the play opera Spiegel, das Kätzchen (with Ferry Gruber),among others. She performed at the Cologne Opera, the Deutsche Oper Berlin and the Bayerische Staatsoper.
In the 1950s she was also active as an actress and performed leading roles in several film productions parallel to her stage appearances. In 1958 she played the title role in the operetta movie Countess Maritza. From 1988 Görner worked mainly as an acting and singing teacher (voice coaching), first for five years at the acting school of Ruth von Zerboni, later in her own studio. She was also successful as a performer of songs by Kurt Weill and Bertolt Brecht as well as of chansons of the 1920s, and also in radio and television appearances.
Discography (partial)
- Operettenquerschnitte, with Benno Kusche (EMI)
- The Merry Farmer/Der Vogelhändler, with Benno Kusche (Amiga)
- Robert Stolz - Meine schönsten Melodien, with Benno Kusche (Europa)
- Christine Görner - Benno Kusche (Telefunken)
- Weltstars singen Lehár (Electrola)
- Ein Sommer lang/In mir klingt ein Lied (Telefunken)
Filmography
- 1958: Wenn Mädchen ins Manöver zieh’n[1]
- 1958: Mein Mädchen ist ein Postillion
- 1958: Zauber der Montur
- 1958: Gräfin Mariza
- 1959: Zwischen Glück und Krone[2]
- 1959: Mein Schatz, komm mit ans blaue Meer
- 1959: Mandolins and Moonlight
- 1959: Immer die Mädchen
- 1959: What a Woman Dreams of in Springtime
- 1960: Final Destination: Red Lantern
References
- Wenn Mädchen ins Manöver zieh’n on cinema.de
- Zwischen Glück und Krone on Filmportal
External links
- Literature by and about Christine Görner in the German National Library catalogue
- Christine Görner Homepage
- Christine Görner at IMDb
- Christine Görner discography at Discogs