- Source: Carlernst Ortwein
Carlernst Ortwein, pseudonym Conny Odd, (21 December 1916 – 22 December 1986) was a German classical pianist and composer.
Life
Ortwein was born in 1916 in Leipzig as the son of the music teacher Karl Ortwein. From 1927 he was a member of the Thomanerchor. After he passed the Abitur at the Thomasschule zu Leipzig followed studies at the Kirchenmusikalischen Institut of the Hochschule für Musik und Theater Leipzig: organ with Karl Straube, piano with Carl Adolf Martienssen and Robert Teichmüller as well as musical composition with Kurt Thomas, Günter Raphael and Johann Nepomuk David.
For helping his "half-Jew" teacher Günter Raphael, after his dismissal from the university, Ortwein also had to leave. He continued his private studies. From 1937 he began a pianistic activity at German radio stations. During this time he also wrote his first compositions. From 1939 to 1945 he was called up for military service. After further activities as a pianist, he was head of the serious music department at the Leipzig radio station from 1947 to 1949. As there was a lack of entertainment compositions at the station, he began to compose in this field and took the pseudonym Conny Odd.
From 1950 to 1953 he was a freelance artist. From 1953 to 1961 he was a lecturer at the Music Pedagogical Institute of the Karl-Marx-University Leipzig. In 1962 he received a lectureship for composition and instrumentation at the University of Music and Theatre Leipzig, where he became a professor in 1976.
Among his students were Volker Bräutigam, Michael Heubach, Walter Thomas Heyn, Karl Ottomar Treibmann, Volkmar Leimert and Rainer Lischka.
Ortwein wrote over 100 radio play scores, about 50 film scores, numerous chansons, choral songs and orchestral works. Of his light music, his "Vergnügliche Reisebekanntschaften eines Pianisten" from 1951 became best known. As Conny Odd, he was the most successful operetta composer of the GDR next to Gerd Natschinski, with some works having a musical theatre character.
In the DEFA film Geliebte weiße Maus from 1964, for which he wrote the music, he also appeared as pianist of the dance orchestra.
Ortwein died in Leipzig at the age of 70.
Prizes
Kunstpreis der DDR (1964)
Kunstpreis der Stadt Leipzig (1968)
Kunstpreis des FDGB in collective with the stages of the city of Gera (1971)
Kunstpreis des Deutscher Turn- und Sportbund (1977)
Instrumental music
with year and place of the premiere
Zum Glück hat sie Pech, 1955, Volkstheater Rostock
Alarm in Point l'Évêque, 1958, Städtische Bühnen Erfurt, bearbeitet Gangster lieben keine Blumen, 1974, Metropoltheater Berlin
Hände hoch, Mister Copper!, 1962, Staatsoperette Dresden
Irene und die Kapitäne, 1967, Staatsoperette Dresden
Karambolage, 1969, Bühnen der Stadt Gera
Man liest kein fremdes Tagebuch, 1974, Metropol-Theater (Berlin-Mitte)
Filmography
1954: Der Teufel und der Drescher
1957: Die Zauberschere
1960: Alarm im Kasperletheater
1961: Das Stacheltier – Die Mutprobe
1961: Da helfen keine Pillen
1961: Das Rabauken-Kabarett
1963: Der Teufelstaler
1963: Miau'
1964: Wie Pumphut zu seinem Namen kam
1964: Aprikosenbäumchen
1964: Geliebte weiße Maus
1965: Der fliegende Großvater
1966: Steinzeitlegende
1966: Der gestiefelte Kater
1968: Die sieben Raben
1970: Der Teufel aus der Flasche
1979: Stern und Blume
1983: Erlebte Träume
Radio plays music
1952: Howard Fast: 30 Silberlinge – Regie: Günther Rücker (Berliner Rundfunk)
1953: Konstantin Trenjow: Ljubow Jarowaja – Regie: Günter Rücker (Berliner Rundfunk)
1958: Henrik Ibsen: Stützen der Gesellschaft – Regie: Erich-Alexander Winds (Rundfunk der DDR)
1964: Heinz von Cramer: Die Ohrfeige – Regie: Hans Knötzsch (Rundfunk der DDR)
Literature
Otto Schneidereit: Operette A – Z, Henschelverlag Kunst und Gesellschaft Berlin 1981, pp. 247–260
External links
Conny Odd at IMDb
Die Vergnüglichen Reisebekanntschaften eines Pianisten by Conny Odd, performed by Siegfried Stöckigt on youtube
Literature by and about Carlernst Ortwein in the German National Library catalogue
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Carlernst Ortwein
- Volkmar Leimert
- Karl Ottomar Treibmann
- Kunstpreis der Stadt Leipzig
- Walter Thomas Heyn