Difference between revisions of "Annelisa Weiland"

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WEILAND, Annelisa (19**-) Actress on stage, film and television
 
  
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'''Annelisa Weiland''' (b. Sea Point, Cape Town, 15/02/1949) is a stage, film and television actress.
  
== Biography ==
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Annelisa Dora Deborah Weiland is the daughter of Ewald Paul Weiland and his wife Stienie Hoogenhout Goosen.  Her father came from Bielefeld in Germany at the age of 22 to help install textile machinery, but after initially returning to Germany, he soon came back to South Africa to settle.  Annelisa grew up in Durbanville and in 1966 she matriculated from the Durbanville Hoërskool, where she was head girl and attended drama classes by Babs Laker.  She went to the University of Cape Town to study drama, where Janice Honeyman, Paul Slabolepszy, Bill Flynn and Grethe Fox were contemporaries and Robert Mohr was her lecturer.  In 1969 was cast by Mavis Taylor in the role of the daughter in Strindberg’s The Father.  She played in Dieter Reible’s version of Titus Andronicus in 1970 and was Ophelia in Robert Mohr’s production of Hamlet, both for CAPAB.
  
 
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In 1973 she started acting for PACT and the following year she became a permanent member of its Afrikaans company TRUK until early 1977, when she went freelance. A versatile performer, she featured in everything from Shakespeare to risqué extravaganzas and from 1976 onwards also turned to television, acting in many plays and numerous series. Many of them were directed by her friend Stephan Bouwer and by Ken Leach, with whom she had a seven-year relationshipIn 2002 she made her first appearance in Danie Odendaal’s long-running soap opera 7de Laan as Hilda de Kock, a role with which she was identified for 17 years. In the series she was later ostensibly married to Septimus “Oubaas” van Zyl (Pierre van Pletzen), but when Oubaas was written out of the series the excuse was he had discovered that their marriage was not legal. In addition she did occasional radio work and was the voice of Heidi in the Afrikaans version of the Japanese animated television series.
She studied Drama at the University of Cape Town.
 
 
 
 
 
==Contribution to SA theatre, film, media and/or performance==
 
 
 
She was a member of [[TRUK]]’s permanent company from 1974 up to the beginning of 1977 when she started to freelance.
 
 
 
 
 
== Stage roles ==
 
 
 
 
 
Performed in ''[[Hamlet]]'' (CAPAB 1973), ''[[Toiings]]'', ''[[Plaston: DNS-Kind]]'', ''[[Hay Fever]]'', ''[[Tartuffe]]'', ''[[The Rape of the Belt]]''.
 
 
 
She starred in [[William Shakespeare]]’s ''[[Troilus and Cressida]]'', directed by [[John Hussey]], together with [[Eckard Rabe]], [[James White]] and [[Siegfried Mynhardt]] for [[PACT]] in 1974.  
 
 
 
She starred in [[Ken Leach]]’s production of ''[[The Story of an African Farm]]'', adapted by [[André Brink]] from [[Olive Schreiner]]’s novel at the [[Alexander Theatre]] for [[PACT]] in 1975.
 
 
 
She starred in [[Ken Leach]]’s production of [[Feydeau]]’s ''[[A Flea in her Ear]]'' together with [[Dorothy-Ann Gould]], [[Diane Wilson]], [[Richard Haines]], [[Paul Slabolepszy]], [[Michael Richard]], [[Frantz Dobrowsky]] and [[Lesley Nott]] for [[PACT]] at the [[Alexander Theatre]] in 1976.
 
 
 
She starred in [[Ken Leach]]’s production of the musical ''[[Fangs]]'' with [[Paul Slabolepszy]], [[Michael Richard]], [[Lesley Nott]] and [[Bill Flynn]] for [[PACT]] in 1977.  
 
 
 
She starred in [[Janice Honeyman]]’s production, ''[[Forbidden Fruits]]'', together with [[Jeremy Crutchley]], [[Mike Huff]], [[Danny Keogh]], [[Amanda Strydom]] and [[Vanessa Cooke]] at [[Upstairs at the Market]] in 1983/84 **
 
 
 
Other stage roles include ''[[Skelmpie Kom Vanaand]]'' (CAPAB 1984), ''[[En Die Son Skyn in Suid-Afrika]]''''[[Mirakel]]'' (1992), ''[[Inkleurboek vir Twee]]'' (1999), ''[[On the Lake]]'' (2001), ''[[True Confusions]]'', ''[[Sophia Mentz Beredder Haar Boedel]]'' (2007).
 
 
 
 
 
== Film and TV ==
 
 
 
In the 1990’s she became nationally famous for her TV role as “Hilda” in the iconic Afrikaans soap Sewende Laan.
 
 
 
== Radio ==
 
 
 
Her first role was in ''[[Mis]]'' by [[Reza de Wet]] on [[Radioteater]] (#47).
 
 
 
== Awards, etc ==
 
[[DALRO]] Award 1993 for her role in ''[[Mirakel]]'' (best supporting actress on the Afrikaans stage).
 
  
  

Revision as of 17:36, 8 April 2020

Annelisa Weiland (b. Sea Point, Cape Town, 15/02/1949) is a stage, film and television actress.

Annelisa Dora Deborah Weiland is the daughter of Ewald Paul Weiland and his wife Stienie Hoogenhout Goosen. Her father came from Bielefeld in Germany at the age of 22 to help install textile machinery, but after initially returning to Germany, he soon came back to South Africa to settle. Annelisa grew up in Durbanville and in 1966 she matriculated from the Durbanville Hoërskool, where she was head girl and attended drama classes by Babs Laker. She went to the University of Cape Town to study drama, where Janice Honeyman, Paul Slabolepszy, Bill Flynn and Grethe Fox were contemporaries and Robert Mohr was her lecturer. In 1969 was cast by Mavis Taylor in the role of the daughter in Strindberg’s The Father. She played in Dieter Reible’s version of Titus Andronicus in 1970 and was Ophelia in Robert Mohr’s production of Hamlet, both for CAPAB.

In 1973 she started acting for PACT and the following year she became a permanent member of its Afrikaans company TRUK until early 1977, when she went freelance. A versatile performer, she featured in everything from Shakespeare to risqué extravaganzas and from 1976 onwards also turned to television, acting in many plays and numerous series. Many of them were directed by her friend Stephan Bouwer and by Ken Leach, with whom she had a seven-year relationship. In 2002 she made her first appearance in Danie Odendaal’s long-running soap opera 7de Laan as Hilda de Kock, a role with which she was identified for 17 years. In the series she was later ostensibly married to Septimus “Oubaas” van Zyl (Pierre van Pletzen), but when Oubaas was written out of the series the excuse was he had discovered that their marriage was not legal. In addition she did occasional radio work and was the voice of Heidi in the Afrikaans version of the Japanese animated television series.


Sources

SACD 1974.

Skelmpie Kom Vanaand, 1984, programme notes.

Tucker, 1997.


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