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André Eisermann

André Eisermann loves to tell stories. Whether in front of the camera, on the theatre stage, or as a narrator — drawing his audience into the world of his characters is his passion. Born into a family of show people, he has known since earliest childhood about the enchanting magic that lives inside every story. You just have to tell it right.

After training as an actor at Munich's Otto Falckenberg School, André performed at the Munich Kammerspiele and the Theater in der Josefstadt, among others, before his breakthrough as a film actor came with the title role in Peter Sehr's "Kaspar Hauser". He went on to embody Johannes Elias Alder in Joseph Vilsmaier's screen adaptation of "Brother of Sleep", a film that received a Golden Globe nomination, among other honours.

Since then, André Eisermann has appeared in countless theatre, film, and television productions. Together with Mario Adorf, he is one of the co-founders of the Nibelungen Festival in Worms, where he performed in various productions for fifteen years. At the Salzburg Festival, under the direction of Leander Haußmann, he took on the role of Puck in Shakespeare's "A Midsummer Night's Dream". He has worked with Ruth Berghaus, Christoph Schlingensief, Karin Beier, and the unforgettable theatre-maker George Tabori. André Eisermann is, in the very best sense, hungry to perform — full of enthusiasm for his craft and curious about all the stories still waiting to be told.

André Eisermann