Untimely death
September 1, 2011Rosel Zech, a well-known face on German television screens, in the theater and in German-language cinema, died of cancer of the bone in a Berlin hospital on Wednesday night. She was 69.
"She knew she was dying and she met death with her head held high," Juliane Lorenz, a friend and head of the Rainer Werner Fassbinder Foundation, told German press agency DPA.
Zech, who was born on July 7, 1943, in Berlin, rose to fame in the early 1980s by starring in two films by German director Rainer Werner Fassbinder.
The Fassbinder connection
In 1981, she starred alongside well-known German actors Armin Mueller-Stahl and Mario Adorf in "Lola," a critical portrait of 1950s Germany. The following year she played the lead role in Fassbinder's penultimate film "Veronika Voss," about the life of one of his favorite actresses.
Fassbinder died the same year.
Zech said she had "never felt so comfortable with any other director."
"Acting in his films was child's play, as he always had everything mapped out in his head from the start," she said.
Theater was her first love
Although playing Veronika Voss is considered her breakthrough role, she started her career treading the boards in German theaters, and it was German director Peter Zadek who kickstarted her career in 1976, with a role in Henrik Ibsen's "Hedda Gabler" in the western town of Bochum. Zech described the theater as the "supreme discipline" in acting.
She was also a popular face on German television, acting in the long-running detective series "Tatort" and "Der Alte," amongst others. Most recently, many Germans would have recognized her as the mother superior in the light detective series "Um Himmels Willen" ("For heaven's sake").
Zech was never married and had no children.
Author: Nicole Goebel (AFP, dpa)
Editor: Nancy Isenson