Lars Eidinger
Lars Eidinger | |
---|---|
Born | 1975 or 1976 (age 48–49) |
Occupation | Actor |
Years active | 2002–present |
Spouse | Ulrike Eidinger |
Children | 1 |
Lars Eidinger (German: [laʁs ˈaɪ̯dɪŋɐ] ; born 1975 or 1976) is a German actor and rapper, based in Berlin. He has appeared in German and international film and television productions, including the 2020 film My Little Sister, the German series Babylon Berlin (2017–2022), the 2023 American miniseries All the Light We Cannot See, and the 2024 film Dying.
Early life and education
Lars Eidinger was born in 1975 or 1976[1] to an engineer and a nurse, and grew up with his older brother in Berlin's Marienfelde district.[2]
He is a graduate of the Ernst Busch Academy of Dramatic Arts, where he studied alongside Fritzi Haberlandt, Nina Hoss,[3] Devid Striesow, and Mark Waschke.[4]
Career
Theatre
Eidinger started his career at Deutsches Theater in 1997. He became a salaried member of the Schaubühne ensemble in 1999 in Berlin,[5][1] with leading roles in Thomas Ostermeier productions such as Hamlet and Richard III.[6] He said that a significant moment in his career came while performing in a production of Troilus and Cressida directed by James Macdonald in 2005, when Macdonald told him to focus on "the words, just the words". It was not until he was rehearsing the "To be, or not to be" soliloquy for a production of Hamlet in 2008 that the meaning sunk in.[5] The role of Hamlet is his favourite one, and in 2015 he estimated that over six years, he had played the role 250 times.[7]
Eidinger has performed on stage in Australia several times: at the 2006 Adelaide Festival in a Schaubühne production of Nora (director Ostermeier's transformation of Henrik Ibsen's A Doll's House); in 2010, in Schaubühne's production of Hamlet for the Sydney Festival; and again to Adelaide in 2017.[1]
In 2016, Ostermeier's Schaubühne production of Richard III was staged at the Edinburgh Festival, with Eidinger's performance described as "a mesmerising Richard – played like a seductive rock star gone to seed" by British theatre critic Lyn Gardner.[8] Richard III, performed in German with English surtitles and occasional English expressions, was one of the opening acts at the 2017 Adelaide Festival,[9] and played at the Brooklyn Academy of Music (BAM) in New York City in 2017.[5]
He played Hamlet again in the Schaubühne production that toured to New York in 2022,[5] in a short season at BAM.[10]
Screen
Eidinger appeared in several German TV series and films before coming to international notice.[1] He acted in his first feature film, Everyone Else in 2007.[7]
In 2014 he became known internationally for his role in Clouds of Sils Maria opposite Juliette Binoche and Kristen Stewart.[7] Since then he has acted in many international productions, including Tim Burton's Dumbo (2019); Claire Denis's sci-fi horror film High Life; and the 2020 Swiss drama film My Little Sister as a famous actor suffering from cancer, opposite Nina Hoss. He is also known for the hit German neo-noir series Babylon Berlin (2017–2022).[1] He worked with French filmmaker Olivier Assayas on Personal Shopper (2016), and the 2022 mini-series Irma Vep.[1]
In 2022, he featured in Noah Baumbach's White Noise.[1] In 2023 he starred in the Emmy-nominated American miniseries All the Light We Cannot See.[1]
He plays the lead role in the 2024 film Dying, directed by Matthias Glasner, which premiered at the 62nd Berlin International Film Festival in February and went on to screen at the Sydney Film Festival and then the Adelaide Film Festival in October.[1]
As of October 2024 he is working on an upcoming film by Noah Baumbach.[1]
Music
Eidinger has been a musician and DJ as long as he has been an actor. In 1998, he released a trip-hop EP, I'll Break Ya Legg.[11][5] In the early 2000s, when DJing at parties, he got a reputation for revealing his buttocks, in a gesture he said he got from the punk scene, which is "meant less as an affront and more as an expression of freedom, anarchy, and cockiness". However, after being photographed by a Bild reporter who published it on the front page of the newspaper, he stopped doing it. Around 2004, he started running what he called "autistic discos" in Berlin, playing eclectic pop.[11]
He has played sets as DJ many times at the Viennale, including in 24 October 2024, along with DJ Rumi from Baires and filmmaker Arash T. Riahi. His sets often last several hours, combining "eclectic pop, rap, 80s, breakbeat, industrial bass, and techno".[12]
Other activities
In February 2016, Eidinger was a member of the jury for the main competition section of the 66th Berlin International Film Festival, chaired by Meryl Streep.[13]
Eidinger was one of the first people to sign the Open Letter to the German Position on Russo-Ukrainian War in late April 2022, which demanded that Germany not support Ukraine with arms, in order to "prevent a third world war".[14][15]
He enjoys doing photography, also directs plays, including an adaptation of Peer Gynt co-created with German artist John Bock.[5]
Personal life
Eidinger is married to opera singer Ulrike Eidinger. The couple has a daughter and lives in Berlin's Charlottenburg district.[16][5]
Selected filmography
Film
- 2005: See You at Regis Debray
- 2009: Everyone Else
- 2011: Hell
- 2012: Goltzius and the Pelican Company
- 2012: Home for the Weekend
- 2014: Clouds of Sils Maria
- 2015: Dora or the Sexual Neuroses of Our Parents
- 2015: Sworn Virgin
- 2015: Family Party
- 2016: The Origin of Violence
- 2016: Personal Shopper
- 2016: The Bloom of Yesterday
- 2017: Matilda
- 2018: Never Look Away
- 2018: High Life
- 2018: Cut Off
- 2018: Mack the Knife: Brecht's Threepenny Film
- 2018: 25 km/h
- 2019: Proxima
- 2019: Dumbo
- 2019: All My Loving
- 2020: My Little Sister
- 2020: Persian Lessons
- 2022: About Joan
- 2022: White Noise
- 2024: Dying
- 2025: The Light (Opening film of Berlinale 2025).[17]
- 2025: Jay Kelly[18]
Television
- 2003: Berlin, Berlin (TV series, 1 episode)
- 2008: Großstadtrevier (TV series, 1 episode)
- 2010: Relations (TV film)
- 2010: Tatort: Hauch des Todes (TV series episode)
- 2012: Tatort: Borowski und der stille Gast (TV series episode)
- 2013: Foyle's War: Sunflower (TV series episode)
- 2013: Grenzgang (TV film)
- 2013: Polizeiruf 110: Der Tod macht Engel aus uns allen (TV series episode)
- 2013: Der Wagner-Clan. Eine Familiengeschichte (TV film)
- 2015: Tatort: Borowski und die Rückkehr des stillen Gastes (TV series episode)
- 2016: The Verdict (TV film)
- 2017: Shades of Guilt: Familie (TV series episode)
- 2017: SS-GB (miniseries)
- 2017: Sense8 (Netflix series, 4 episodes)
- 2017–present: Babylon Berlin (TV series)
- 2019: M – Eine Stadt sucht einen Mörder (miniseries)
- 2020: Gott von Ferdinand von Schirach (TV film)
- 2021: Ich und die Anderen (miniseries)
- 2021: Faking Hitler (miniseries)
- 2021: Tatort: Borowski und der gute Mensch (TV series episode)
- 2021: Tatort: Murot und das Prinzip Hoffnung (TV series episode)
- 2022: Irma Vep (miniseries)
- 2023: All the Light We Cannot See (Netflix limited miniseries)
Music videos
- 2014: Herbert Grönemeyer - Morgen
- 2017: Love Hotel Band - Diamant
- 2018: Drangsal - Eine Geschichte/Und Du?
- 2019: Deichkind - Richtig gutes Zeug
- 2019: Deichkind - Wer sagt denn das?
- 2019: Deichkind - Keine Party
- 2019: Deichkind - Dinge
References
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j Barlow, Helen (17 October 2024). "Film star Lars Eidinger on Dying, kangaroos and the secret of his acting success". InReview. Retrieved 30 October 2024.
- ^ Annett Heide (25 March 2013), Lassen Sie uns über Berlin reden, Lars Eidinger: "Gegend ist neureich und prollig geworden" Berliner Zeitung.
- ^ Philip Oltermann (23 March 2017), Lars Eidinger: 'The Nazis cramp us Germans up. But Brits have a Third Reich fascination' The Guardian.
- ^ Anna Kemper and Daniel Müller (7 February 2013), Deutsche Schauspieler: Eine Klasse für sich ZEITmagazin.
- ^ a b c d e f g Vincentelli, Elisabeth (19 October 2022). "Lars Eidinger Might Be the Greatest German Actor You've Never Heard Of". The New York Times. Retrieved 31 October 2024.
- ^ "Schaubühne Ensemble". Schaubühne. Retrieved 3 February 2018.
- ^ a b c Eidinger, Lars (3 August 2015). "Burning Questions for Lars Eidinger, One of the Truest Actors in the World". Pyragraph (Interview). Interviewed by Renz-Hotz, Ashlee. Retrieved 31 October 2024.
- ^ Gardner, Lyn (25 August 2016). "Richard III review – monstrous monarch rocks the mic in Ostermeier's thunderous show". The Guardian. Retrieved 31 October 2024.
- ^ McDonald, Patrick (2 March 2017). "Opening Adelaide Festival act, German actor and rapper Lars Eidinger, says Shakespeare would love his hunch-back monarch". Adelaide Now. Retrieved 31 October 2024.
- ^ "BAM Archive". BAM Archive. Retrieved 31 October 2024.
- ^ a b Schumacher, Florentin (8 January 2019). ""I won't prostitute myself for the audience"". Schirn Kunsthalle Frankfurt. Retrieved 31 October 2024.
- ^ "Lars Eidinger / Rumi Von Baires / Arash T. Riahi". Viennale. Retrieved 31 October 2024.
- ^ "International Jury". Berlinale. Archived from the original on 1 March 2017. Retrieved 2 February 2016.
- ^ deutschlandfunk.de. "Mitunterzeichner - Schauspieler Lars Eidinger verteidigt offenen Brief an Scholz". Die Nachrichten (in German). Retrieved 4 May 2022.
- ^ Philip Oltermann (6 May 2022), German thinkers’ war of words over Ukraine exposes generational divide The Guardian.
- ^ Annett Heide (25 March 2013), Lassen Sie uns über Berlin reden, Lars Eidinger: "Gegend ist neureich und prollig geworden" Berliner Zeitung.
- ^ Tykwer, Tom (5 December 2024). "The Light". Cineuropa. Retrieved 6 December 2024.
- ^ Kroll, Justin (14 March 2024). "Netflix Sets All-Star Ensemble To Round Out Cast Of Noah Baumbach's Next Film". Deadline Hollywood. Retrieved 14 March 2024.
External links
- Lars Eidinger at IMDb
- Lars Eidinger on Discogs