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Peter Sodann
(born June 1, 1936 in Meissen, Saxony) is a German actor, director and politician. He was the Left Party's nominee for the 2009 presidential election, but was not considered a serious candidate by the German media.
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PETER SODANN TICKETS
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Early life
Sodann was born on
June 1,
1936 in
Meissen to a
working-class family. After training to be a
toolmaker, he moved to
Leipzig in order to study law. In 1959 he transferred to the
Theaterhochschule Leipzig
(Leipzig University of Theater), where he led a
cabaret group. The group's performance was deemed subversive by the
East German authorities and closed in 1961. Sodann was arrested by the
Stasi and spent nine months in prison and was on probation for four years.
[1] [2]
Acting career
In 1964 Sodann made his first performance with the
Berliner Ensemble. In the following years, he acted and produced plays in
Erfurt,
Chemnitz and
Magdeburg. In 1980, he moved to
Halle and for years worked as a director there.
He began acting in television shows during the late 1970s. In 1991 he first appeared in his most famous screen role, Police Commissioner Bruno Ehrlicher, in the long-running crime series
Tatort
. He remained with the series until November 2007. Since 2007 he has starred in a traveling act "Ost-West-Vis-à-Vis" with
CDU politician and former Labor Minister
Norbert Blüm.
[3]
Political activities
Sodann has been a vocal supporter of the
Party of Democratic Socialism (PDS), which in 2007 became the
Left Party. In July 2005 he announced his interest in running as a candidate of the PDS in Saxony for the
2005 federal election.
[4] However, he later withdrew himself from considering, citing restrictions on media employment for Bundestag politicians.
On
October 13,
2008, the Left Party's Bundestag delegation nominated Sodann as their candidate for the
2009 presidential election.
[5] As an actor-turned-politician, the German media has compared him (usually as a criticism) to
Ronald Reagan and
Arnold Schwarzenegger.
[6] [7] [8] Since the German president is elected by the
Bundesversammlung, in which the vast majority of seats would be held by the
Christian Democrats and
Social Democrats, Sodann stood little chance of winning. Indeed he finished third in the election, in which the incumbent Horst Köhler was re-elected.
Personal life
Sodann is currently married to his second wife, Cornelia. He is the father of four children through his first marriage: Tina, Susanne, Franz and Karl.