Zitat des Tages von Barbara Sukowa:
For 'Rosa Luxemburg,' I read everything by and about her, but the first time I was stuck in that corset, I got an understanding of her that I'd never had before.
In Germany, of course, the Holocaust will always be in our history and a big stain on our lives.
I always had acting work when I needed it. I think that is why, when I watch films or TV series in America, I find in small roles or in supporting roles really amazing faces, where I have the feeling these people have actually had a life outside of acting. I find it almost a pity that I've never done anything else.
I always feel like I'm an actress.
I never really caught on in America. I don't have an agent. It's too strange for me.
We really love to learn and explore things.
There was a time for German stars in the 1950s with Curt Jurgens, Hardy Kruger, O. W. Fischer, and Maria Schell. That was a totally different generation. It all ended in 1968 during the big students' movement in my country. It was an anti-authority movement that changed everything. All my country's hierarchies, morals and values were questioned.
I think it's important for politicians to have moral qualities.
I had read Plato and Kant, but I had forgotten it.
I love work where I can find out more about the world and its history.
I could imagine actually being a scientist or a detective, but not a detective who puts his hands into gory, bloody things. But more like someone who figures things out. I like to figure things out.
Normally, if you play a part, you have the words, and you invent the personality out of your experience, your knowledge - your life, in a way.
Women who are stronger than the society allows them to be often feel a need for something stronger than themselves, and to dissolve into it.