Margarethe von Trotta

21.02.1942, Berlin, Germany

In the beginning of her career she acted in films (among others in Fassbinder’s); successfully worked with her husband, Volker Schlöndorff, with whom she is a co-director of Katherina Blum’s Lost Honor. Von Trotta’s films often have political or feminist themes and are usually better accepted by critics then general audiences. She is especially interested in questions regarding contemporary life in Germany.

Director

Von Trotta is a German actress, director and screenwriter and one of the leading names of the new German film as well as one of the most famous directors who deals with feminist issues.  
She moved to Paris from her hometown Berlin and worked for different film collectives co-writing screenplays and co-directing short feature films. After returning to West Germany in the early 1960’s she studied art, German and Romanian languages and took acting classes. She began her acting career in some smaller films and acted in several TV series. She worked mostly with these two directors: Rainer Werner Fassbinder and Volker Schlöndorff. She starred in Fassbinder's dramas Götter der Pest (1970), Der amerikanische Soldat (1970) and Warnung vor einer heiligen Nutte (1971). She worked with Schlöndorff on his TV adaptation of Bertolt Brecht’s play Baal (1970), TV drama Der plötzliche Reichtum der armen Leute von Kombach (1971) and feature films Die Moral der Ruth Halbfass (1972), Strohfeuer (1972) and Der Fangschuß (1976). She married Schlöndorff in 1971. They wrote screenplays for his films together, and even directed the film The Lost Honor of Katharina Blum (Die verlorene Ehre der Katharina Blum, 1975). Trotta directed the drama The Second Awakening of Christa Klages (Das zweite Erwachen der Christa Klages, 1978). After the film Sisters or The Balance of Happiness (Schwestern oder Die Balance des Glücks, 1979), she proved herself as a director with the drama Marianne & Juliane (Die bleierne Zeit, 1981), which was inspired by the life and suicide of the member of the Baader-Meinhof terrorist group Gudrun Ensslin, and her sister Christiane’s investigation of her death. It is a great example of a political feminist film that she became known for. The film won the Golden Lion and the FIPRESCI award at the Venice Film Festival, award for best film at the German Film Awards in 1982 and the David di Donatello award for best director in that same year. Her next film Heller Wahn (1983) did not achieve much attention, but once again she made a great success with her biopic Rosa Luxemburg (1986). In late 1980’s she directed unnoticed Love and Fear (Paura e amore, 1988). She directed the drama L'africana (1990) with one of her frequent actresses Barbara Sukowa and with the Italia acting crew she filmed Il lungo silenzio (1993). One of her most important films from the 1990’s is The Promise (Das Versprechen, 1995) after which she directed three TV films. She also directed the mini TV series Jahrestage (2000). Her next film for the big screen was Rosenstrasse (2003), drama about the peaceful protest in Berlin in 1943, which attracted the audience’s and critics’ attention once again. She received the SIGNIS and Unicef award at the Venice Film Festival in 2003. She also won the Italian Golden Globe for best film in 2004 and the David di Donatello award for best European film (together with Von Trier’s Dogville) in that same year. Drama I Am The Other Woman (Ich bin die Andere, 2006) did not achieve much success unlike the biopic Vision (Vision - Aus dem Leben der Hildegard von Bingen, 2009) once again starring Sukowa. Her biggest success in the later period was the biopic Hannah Arendt (2012), starring Sukowa as the Jewish-German philosopher. Currently her last film is The Misplaced World (Die abhandene Welt, 2015), and The Odd Couple is in pre-production. Besides working on films she also teaches at the European Graduate School in Saas-Fee in Switzerland.

Filmography

The Odd Couple (2017) (in pre-production)
Die abhandene Welt (2015)
Mai per amore (2012) (TV series, 1 episode)
Die Schwester (2010) (TV)
Vision - Aus dem Leben der Hildegard von Bingen (2009)
Tatort  (2007) (TV series, 1 episode)
I Am The Other Woman (Ich bin die Andere, 2006)
The Other Woman (Die andere Frau, 2004) (TV)
Rosenstrasse (2003)
Jahrestage (2000) (TV series, 4 episodes)
Dunkle Tage (1999) (TV)
Mit fünfzig küssen Männer anders (1999) (TV)
Winterkind (1997) (TV)
Promise (Das Versprechen, 1995)
Il lungo silenzio (1993)
L'africana (1990)
Love And Fear (Paura e amore , 1988)
Felix (1988) (omnibus, segment "Eva")
Rosa Luxemburg (1986)
Heller Wahn (1983)
Marianne & Juliane (Die bleierne Zeit, 1981)
Sisters or The Balance of Happiness (Schwestern oder Die Balance des Glücks, 1979)
The Second Awakening of Christa Klages (Das zweite Erwachen der Christa Klages, 1978)
The Lost Honor of Katharina Blum (Die verlorene Ehre der Katharina Blum, 1975) (co-director)


Films by this director

Lost Honor of Katherina Blum

(Die verlorene Ehre der Katharina Blum, West Germany, 1975)

Directed by: Margarethe von Trotta
PHOTOGRAPHY: Jost Vacano
Synopsis:

Katharina Blum works in a lawyer’s office. One day she comes home with a man and spends the night with him. Next morning he is gone and the police are after her. Katharina does not say anything to the police because she does not even know anything about the man. But, the gossip newspaper publishes an article in which she is accused of being a collaborator of a dangerous anarchist…

color, 106'

The Second Awakening of Christa Klages

(Das zweite Erwachen der Christa Klages, 1977)

Directed by: Margarethe von Trotta
PHOTOGRAPHY: Franz Rath
Synopsis:

Christa Klages is a young divorced mother who decides to rob a bank with two assistants, to be able to finance her alternative center. Shortly after she finds out that her center cannot accept that money, but the story does not end here. A young woman, who was a hostage in the bank, starts following Christa. Soon the only solution is to leave the country.

color, 92 min

Rosa Luxemburg

(1986.)

Directed by: Margarethe von Trotta
PHOTOGRAPHY: Franz Rath
Synopsis:

This is a historical biopic about the Polish-German political activist and leftist-pacifist revolutionary legend, Rosa Luxemburg, who was murdered in 1919 upon the German government’s order. The film follows her as a grown woman from the beginning of her political fight when she encouraged the worldwide revolution of the proletariat until her premature death after the WW I. She had her biggest supporter, both privately and professionally, in her partner Leo Jogiches, who later became her traitor...

digital, color, 123 min

Hannah Arendt

(Germany, 2012)

Directed by: Margarethe von Trotta
PHOTOGRAPHY: Caroline Champetier
Synopsis:

The story begins when Israel secret service arrest Adolf Eichmann. They take him to Jerusalem where he will be on trial for crimes he committed against Jews during WW II. Hannah Arendt, an esteemed Jewish-German philosopher who was forced to emigrate from Germany and move to the US, is also in Jerusalem to report about the trial for The New Yorker. Based on the “”trial of the century” she wrote her book “Report on the Banality of Evil” that caused many controversies...

color, digital, 113 min

Marianne and Juliane

(Die bleierne Zeit, Germany, 1981)

Directed by: Margarethe von Trotta
PHOTOGRAPHY: Franz Rath
Synopsis:

The story takes place in Germany in 1968 and the protagonists are two sisters, Marianne and Juliane. They both want, in their own ways, for the society to advance. With that goal in mind Juliane becomes an engaged journalist and Marianne joins a terrorist group. After Marianne is caught and put in solitary, Juliane is the only person permitted to visit her. After Marianne’s alleged suicide, Juliane starts an investigation and at the same time has to take care of her nephew.

color, digital, 106 min
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