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'''Volker Spengler''' (* [[16. Februar]] [[1939]] in [[Bremen]], gestorben am 8. Februar 2020) war ein [[Deutschland|deutscher]] [[Schauspieler]] am [[Theater]] und im [[Film]].
{{EngvarB|date=October 2013}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=October 2013}}
{{for|the American football player|Joseph Plunkett (American football)}}
{{Infobox military person
| name = Joseph Plunkett<br />''Seosamh Pluincéid''
| image = Joseph Mary Plunkett.jpg
| image_size =
| caption =
| nickname =
| birth_date = {{Birth date|1887|11|21|df=yes}}
| birth_place = [[Dublin]], Ireland
| death_date = {{Death date and age|1916|5|4|1887|11|21|df=yes}}
| death_place = [[Kilmainham Gaol]], Dublin, Ireland
| placeofburial = [[Arbour Hill Prison]], Dublin
| allegiance = [[Irish Volunteers]]<br />[[Irish Republican Brotherhood]]
| branch =
| serviceyears = 1913–1916
| rank = [[Commandant-general|Commandant General]]
| unit = Dublin Brigade, Irish Volunteers
| commands = General Post Office, Dublin
| battles = [[Easter Rising]]
| awards =
| spouse = Grace Gifford
| relations =
| laterwork =
}}
'''Joseph Mary Plunkett''' ([[Irish language|Irish]]: ''Seosamh Máire Pluincéid'', 21 November 1887 – 4 May 1916) was an Irish nationalist, poet, journalist, and a leader of the 1916 [[Easter Rising]].


== Leben ==
==Background==
Plunkett was born at 26 Upper Fitzwilliam Street in one of [[Dublin]]'s most affluent districts.<ref>{{Cite book | last = O'Neill | first = Marie | title = Grace Gifford Plunkett and Irish freedom: tragic bride of 1916 | publisher = Irish Academic Press | year = 2000 | location = Dublin | page = 18 | url = https://books.google.com/books?id=nYMiAQAAIAAJ&q=%2226,+Upper+Fitzwilliam+Street%22&dq=%2226,+Upper+Fitzwilliam+Street%22&hl=en&ei=ylfSTK3nBYj6sAOcyIGSAg&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=6&ved=0CDUQ6AEwBTgy | isbn = 978-0-7165-2666-7}}</ref> Both his parents came from wealthy backgrounds,<ref>{{Cite web | title = Review Of 'All in the Blood' | work = A&A Farmar Book Publishers | url = http://www.aafarmar.ie/reviews.asp?titleID=123 | accessdate = 4 November 2010}}</ref> and his father, [[George Noble Plunkett]], had been made a [[papal count]].<ref>{{Cite web | title = <nowiki>[Count Plunkett]</nowiki> George Noble Plunkett | work = Ricorso | url = http://www.ricorso.net/rx/az-data/authors/p/Plunkett_GN/life.htm | accessdate = 5 November 2010}}</ref>
Volker Spengler war seit dem 14. Lebensjahr [[Seemann]]. Mit 18 Jahren begann er eine [[Kaufmann]]slehre. Von 1959 bis 1961 studierte Spengler an der Schauspielschule in Salzburg und am [[Max-Reinhardt-Seminar|Reinhardt-Seminar]] in [[Wien]].


Plunkett contracted [[tuberculosis]] (TB) at a young age and spent part of his youth in the warmer climates of the [[Mediterranean Sea|Mediterranean]] and [[North Africa]]. He spent time in [[Algiers]] where he studied [[Arabic literature]] and [[Arabic language|language]] and composed poetry in Arabic.<ref name="ailing">{{cite news|title=Joseph Mary Plunkett: Ailing writer who shaped the rebellion|url=http://www.independent.ie/irish-news/1916/thinkers-talkers-doers/joseph-mary-plunkett-ailing-writer-who-shaped-the-rebellion-34143663.html|accessdate=27 September 2016|work=[[Irish Independent]]|date=October 29, 2015}}</ref> He was educated at the [[Catholic University School]] (CUS) and by the [[Jesuits]] at [[Belvedere College]] in Dublin and later at [[Stonyhurst College]], in [[Lancashire]], England where he acquired some military knowledge from the [[Officers' Training Corps]]. Throughout his life, Joseph Plunkett took an active interest in Irish heritage and the [[Irish language]], and also studied [[Esperanto]]. Plunkett was one of the founders of the Irish Esperanto League.<ref>[http://esperanto.ie/english/PDF_files/short_history3.pdf "A Short History of the Esperanto Movement in Ireland"] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070720103044/http://esperanto.ie/english/PDF_files/short_history3.pdf |date=20 July 2007 }}</ref> He joined the [[Gaelic League]] and began studying with [[Thomas MacDonagh]], with whom he formed a lifelong friendship. The two were both poets with an interest in theatre, and both were early members of the [[Irish Volunteers]], joining their provisional committee. Plunkett's interest in Irish nationalism spread throughout his family, notably to his younger brothers George and John, as well as his father, who allowed his property in [[Kimmage]], south [[Dublin]], to be used as a training camp for young men who wished to escape conscription in Britain during the [[First World War]].
Nach einem längeren Aufenthalt in den [[Vereinigte Staaten|USA]] war er am Theater in [[Stuttgart]] zusammen mit [[Heinz Erhardt]], in [[Hamburg]] mit [[Ida Ehre]] und in [[Frankfurt am Main|Frankfurt]] mit [[Fritz Rémond junior|Fritz Rémond]] tätig. Ab 1967 war Spengler am [[Schillertheater (Berlin)|Schillertheater]] in [[Berlin]] engagiert – dort spielte er 1968 unter der Regie von Fritz Kortner die Rolle des "Caliban" in Shakespeares "Sturm"; daneben war er in München und Köln tätig. Am Schauspiel Frankfurt/Main wirkte er unter anderem bei den Einar-Schleef-Inszenierungen "Vor Sonnenaufgang" von Gerhart Hauptmann (1987) und in der Uraufführung von Schleefs eigenem Stück "Die Schauspieler" (nach Maxim Gorkis "Nachtasyl, 1988) mit. Mit Peter Palitzsch arbeitete er ebenfalls in Frankfurt zusammen: In "Leben Eduard des Zweiten von England" von Christopher Marlowe (1988) und als "Estragon" in Becketts "Warten auf Godot" (1991). Die Zusammenarbeit mit Palitzsch setzte sich am Berliner Ensemble (Shakespeares "Perikles"und Brechts "Baal", beide 1993, Tankred Dorsts "[[Fernando Krapp hat mir diesen Brief geschrieben]]" und Edward Bonds "Ollys Gefängnis", beide 1994, "Hamm" in Becketts "Endspiel", 1995) und am Düsseldorfer Schauspielhaus (als Gustaf Gründgens in Frank M. Raddatz' "Alles Theater – gewidmet Gustaf Gründgens" sowie Becketts "Das letzte Band", beide 1999) fort. In Düsseldorf spielte Volker Spengler auch die Titelrolle in Brechts "Leben des Galilei", Regie: Klaus Emmerich, im Jahre 2000. In der letzten Inszenierung von Heiner Müller, Brechts "Der aufhaltsame Aufstieg des Arturo Ui", 1995 am Berliner Ensemble, spielt Spengler die Rolle des "Giri".


==IRB involvement==
Zwischen 1975 und 1981 wirkt Spengler in Filmen des Regisseurs [[Rainer Werner Fassbinder]] mit; zunächst in Nebenrollen, später gelingt ihm der Durchbruch als Charakterdarsteller. So spielt er in Filmen wie ''[[Mutter Küsters’ Fahrt zum Himmel]]'' (1975), ''[[Satansbraten (Film)|Satansbraten]]'', ''[[Chinesisches Roulette]]'' (beide 1976), ''[[Bolwieser]]'' (1977), ''[[Die Ehe der Maria Braun]]'' (1978), ''[[Die dritte Generation]]'' (1979), ''[[Berlin Alexanderplatz (Fernsehverfilmung)|Berlin Alexanderplatz]]'' (1980) und ''[[Die Sehnsucht der Veronika Voss]]'' (1982). Seine prägnanteste Rolle bei Fassbinder ist die des Transsexuellen Elvira Weißhaupt in "[[In einem Jahr mit 13 Monden]]" (1978). Neben seiner Tätigkeit am Theater arbeitet Volker Spengler in den 1980er-Jahren weiterhin in Film und Fernsehen.


Sometime in 1915 Joseph Plunkett joined the [[Irish Republican Brotherhood]] and soon after was sent to Germany to meet with [[Roger Casement]], who was negotiating with the German government on behalf of Ireland. Casement's role as emissary was self-appointed, and, as he was not a member of the IRB, that organisation's leadership wished to have one of their own contact Germany to negotiate German aid for an uprising the following year. He was seeking (but not limiting himself to) a shipment of arms. Casement, on the other hand, spent most of his energies recruiting Irish [[prisoners of war]] in Germany to form a brigade to fight instead for Ireland. Some nationalists in Ireland saw this as a fruitless endeavour, and preferred to seek weapons. Plunkett successfully got a promise of a German arms shipment to coincide with the rising.
Seit 1993 ist Spengler als Schauspieler beim [[Berliner Ensemble]] verpflichtet, spielt jedoch auch häufig bei [[René Pollesch]] an der [[Volksbühne Berlin]].


==Easter Rising==
Im Film ''[[Der Unhold]]'' (1996) von [[Volker Schlöndorff]] spielte er neben [[John Malkovich]] und [[Gottfried John]].
Plunkett was one of the original members of the IRB Military Committee that was responsible for planning the [[Easter Rising]], and it was largely his plan that was followed. Shortly before the rising was to begin, Plunkett was hospitalised following a turn for the worse in his health. He had an operation on his neck glands days before Easter and had to struggle out of bed to take part in what was to follow. Still bandaged, he took his place in the [[General Post Office (Dublin)|General Post Office]] with several other of the rising's leaders such as [[Patrick Pearse]] and [[Tom Clarke (Irish republican)|Tom Clarke]], though his health prevented him from being terribly active. His energetic ''[[aide de camp]]'' was [[Michael Collins (Irish leader)|Michael Collins]].


==Marriage and execution==
== Filmografie (Auswahl) ==
Following the surrender Plunkett was held in [[Kilmainham Gaol]], and faced a [[court martial]]. Seven hours before his [[execution by firing squad]] at the age of 28, he was married in the prison chapel to his sweetheart [[Grace Gifford]], a Protestant convert to Catholicism, whose sister, Muriel, had years before also converted and married his best friend [[Thomas MacDonagh]], who was also executed for his role in the [[Easter Rising]]. Grace never married again.
* 1968: [[Vier Stunden von Elbe 1]]
* 1973: [[Tatort (Fernsehreihe)|Tatort]] – [[Tatort: Kressin und die zwei Damen aus Jade|Kressin und die zwei Damen aus Jade]] (TV–Reihe)
* 1975: [[Mutter Küsters’ Fahrt zum Himmel]]
* 1976: Hinzelmeier (TV)
* 1976: [[Satansbraten (Film)|Satansbraten]]
* 1976: [[Chinesisches Roulette]]
* 1976: [[Bolwieser]]
* 1977: Adolf und Marlene
* 1978: [[Despair – Eine Reise ins Licht]]
* 1978: [[In einem Jahr mit 13 Monden]]
* 1979: [[Die Ehe der Maria Braun]]
* 1979: [[Die dritte Generation]]
* 1979: Bildnis einer Trinkerin. Aller jamais retour
* 1980: [[Berlin Alexanderplatz (Fernsehverfilmung)|Berlin Alexanderplatz]]
* 1981: [[Heute spielen wir den Boß – Wo geht’s denn hier zum Film?]]
* 1981: Obszön – Der Fall Peter Herzl
* 1982: [[Die Sehnsucht der Veronika Voss]]
* 1982: Marmor, Stein und Eisen bricht
* 1983: Vom anderen Stern (TV)
* 1986: Der dicke Rebell
* 1987: [[Peng! Du bist tot!]]
* 1989: 100 Jahre Adolf Hitler – Die letzte Stunde im Führerbunker
* 1989: Kopffeuer
* 1991: [[Das deutsche Kettensägenmassaker]]
* 1996: Der aufhaltsame Aufstieg des Arturo Ui (TV)
* 1996: [[Der Unhold]]
* 1997: Die 120 Tage von Bottrop
* 2000: Fandango
* 2003: Dirty Sky
* 2004: [[Kammerflimmern (Film)|Kammerflimmern]]


== Weblinks ==
==Aftermath==
His brothers [[George Oliver Plunkett]] and Jack Plunkett joined him in the [[Easter Rising]] and later became important [[Irish Republican Army|IRA]] men. His father's cousin, [[Horace Plunkett]], was a [[Protestant]] and [[Unionism in Ireland|unionist]] who sought to reconcile unionists and nationalists. Horace Plunkett's home was burned down by the [[Anti-Treaty IRA]] during the [[Irish Civil War|Civil War]].


The main railway station in [[Waterford City]] is named after him as was Joseph Plunkett Tower in [[Ballymun]] which has since been demolished.
* [http://www.deutsches-filmhaus.de/bio_er/r-t_spieler/spengler_volker_bio.htm Biografie beim Deutschen Filmhaus]
Plunkett barracks in the [[Curragh Camp]], County Kildare is also named after him.
* [http://www.filmportal.de/df/20/Uebersicht,,,,,,,,7A247205E6834D22ACD56B0BEFB0E368,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,.html Biografie auf filmportal.de]
* {{IMDb|nm0818204}}
*[https://www.welt.de/kultur/theater/article3211582/Das-heilige-Monster-Volker-Spengler-wird-70.html Zeitungsartikel zum 70. Geburtstag]


==References==
{{Normdaten|TYP=p|GND=1017884978|LCCN=nr/97/34711|VIAF=37128081}}
{{Reflist}}


==Further reading==
{{SORTIERUNG:Spengler, Volker}}
* Augusteijn, Joost (ed.), ''The Irish Revolution 1913-1923'' (Basingstoke 2002)
[[Kategorie:Filmschauspieler]]
* Boyce, George D., ''Nationalism in Ireland'' (London 1982)
[[Kategorie:Person (Bremen)]]
* Kee, Robert, ''The Green Flag: A History of Irish Nationalism'' (London 1972)
[[Kategorie:Deutscher]]
* Kelly, Matthew, ''The Fenian Ideal and Irish Nationalism 1882-1916'' (Woodbridge 2006)
[[Kategorie:Geboren 1939]]
* Mansergh, Nicholas, ''The Unresolved Question: The Anglo-Irish Settlement and its Undoing'' (New Haven and London 1991)
[[Kategorie:Mann]]
* Martin, F.X. (ed.), ''Leaders and Men of the Easter Rising: Dublin 1916'' (London 1967)
* Novick, Ben, ''Concerning Revolution: Irish Nationalist Propaganda during the First World War'' (Dublin 2001)
* O Brolchain, Honor, ''Joseph Plunkett'' (Dublin 2012)
* Plunkett Dillon, Geraldine (edited Honor O Brolchain): All in the Blood (A. & A. Farmar)
* Townshend, Charles, ''Easter 1916: The Irish Rebellion'' (London 2005)


==External links==
{{Personendaten
*{{Internet Archive author|sname=Joseph Mary Plunkett|sopt=t}}
|NAME=Spengler, Volker
*{{Librivox author|id=3209}}
|ALTERNATIVNAMEN=
*{{Find a Grave|4268}}
|KURZBESCHREIBUNG=deutscher Schauspieler
*[http://unitedireland.tripod.com/id41.html Grace – By Seán and Frank O' Meara]
|GEBURTSDATUM=16. Februar 1939
*[http://poetry.elcore.net/CatholicPoets/Plunkett/index.html The Poems of Joseph Mary Plunkett (1916)]
|GEBURTSORT=[[Bremen]]
{{Easter Rising|state=expanded}}
|STERBEDATUM=
{{Irish poetry}}
|STERBEORT=
{{Authority control}}
}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Plunkett, Joseph Mary}}
[[Category:1887 births]]
[[Category:1916 deaths]]
[[Category:20th-century poets]]
[[Category:Executed participants in the Easter Rising]]
[[Category:Executed writers]]
[[Category:Irish Catholic poets]]
[[Category:Irish Esperantists]]
[[Category:Irish nationalists]]
[[Category:Irish poets]]
[[Category:Irish republicans]]
[[Category:Members of the Irish Republican Brotherhood]]
[[Category:People educated at Belvedere College]]
[[Category:People educated at Stonyhurst College]]
[[Category:People from County Dublin]]
[[Category:Signatories of the Proclamation of the Irish Republic]]

Version vom 23. März 2018, 19:14 Uhr

Vorlage:Refimprove Vorlage:EngvarB Vorlage:Use dmy dates Vorlage:For Vorlage:Infobox military person Joseph Mary Plunkett (Irish: Seosamh Máire Pluincéid, 21 November 1887 – 4 May 1916) was an Irish nationalist, poet, journalist, and a leader of the 1916 Easter Rising.

Background

Plunkett was born at 26 Upper Fitzwilliam Street in one of Dublin's most affluent districts.[1] Both his parents came from wealthy backgrounds,[2] and his father, George Noble Plunkett, had been made a papal count.[3]

Plunkett contracted tuberculosis (TB) at a young age and spent part of his youth in the warmer climates of the Mediterranean and North Africa. He spent time in Algiers where he studied Arabic literature and language and composed poetry in Arabic.[4] He was educated at the Catholic University School (CUS) and by the Jesuits at Belvedere College in Dublin and later at Stonyhurst College, in Lancashire, England where he acquired some military knowledge from the Officers' Training Corps. Throughout his life, Joseph Plunkett took an active interest in Irish heritage and the Irish language, and also studied Esperanto. Plunkett was one of the founders of the Irish Esperanto League.[5] He joined the Gaelic League and began studying with Thomas MacDonagh, with whom he formed a lifelong friendship. The two were both poets with an interest in theatre, and both were early members of the Irish Volunteers, joining their provisional committee. Plunkett's interest in Irish nationalism spread throughout his family, notably to his younger brothers George and John, as well as his father, who allowed his property in Kimmage, south Dublin, to be used as a training camp for young men who wished to escape conscription in Britain during the First World War.

IRB involvement

Sometime in 1915 Joseph Plunkett joined the Irish Republican Brotherhood and soon after was sent to Germany to meet with Roger Casement, who was negotiating with the German government on behalf of Ireland. Casement's role as emissary was self-appointed, and, as he was not a member of the IRB, that organisation's leadership wished to have one of their own contact Germany to negotiate German aid for an uprising the following year. He was seeking (but not limiting himself to) a shipment of arms. Casement, on the other hand, spent most of his energies recruiting Irish prisoners of war in Germany to form a brigade to fight instead for Ireland. Some nationalists in Ireland saw this as a fruitless endeavour, and preferred to seek weapons. Plunkett successfully got a promise of a German arms shipment to coincide with the rising.

Easter Rising

Plunkett was one of the original members of the IRB Military Committee that was responsible for planning the Easter Rising, and it was largely his plan that was followed. Shortly before the rising was to begin, Plunkett was hospitalised following a turn for the worse in his health. He had an operation on his neck glands days before Easter and had to struggle out of bed to take part in what was to follow. Still bandaged, he took his place in the General Post Office with several other of the rising's leaders such as Patrick Pearse and Tom Clarke, though his health prevented him from being terribly active. His energetic aide de camp was Michael Collins.

Marriage and execution

Following the surrender Plunkett was held in Kilmainham Gaol, and faced a court martial. Seven hours before his execution by firing squad at the age of 28, he was married in the prison chapel to his sweetheart Grace Gifford, a Protestant convert to Catholicism, whose sister, Muriel, had years before also converted and married his best friend Thomas MacDonagh, who was also executed for his role in the Easter Rising. Grace never married again.

Aftermath

His brothers George Oliver Plunkett and Jack Plunkett joined him in the Easter Rising and later became important IRA men. His father's cousin, Horace Plunkett, was a Protestant and unionist who sought to reconcile unionists and nationalists. Horace Plunkett's home was burned down by the Anti-Treaty IRA during the Civil War.

The main railway station in Waterford City is named after him as was Joseph Plunkett Tower in Ballymun which has since been demolished. Plunkett barracks in the Curragh Camp, County Kildare is also named after him.

References

Vorlage:Reflist

Further reading

  • Augusteijn, Joost (ed.), The Irish Revolution 1913-1923 (Basingstoke 2002)
  • Boyce, George D., Nationalism in Ireland (London 1982)
  • Kee, Robert, The Green Flag: A History of Irish Nationalism (London 1972)
  • Kelly, Matthew, The Fenian Ideal and Irish Nationalism 1882-1916 (Woodbridge 2006)
  • Mansergh, Nicholas, The Unresolved Question: The Anglo-Irish Settlement and its Undoing (New Haven and London 1991)
  • Martin, F.X. (ed.), Leaders and Men of the Easter Rising: Dublin 1916 (London 1967)
  • Novick, Ben, Concerning Revolution: Irish Nationalist Propaganda during the First World War (Dublin 2001)
  • O Brolchain, Honor, Joseph Plunkett (Dublin 2012)
  • Plunkett Dillon, Geraldine (edited Honor O Brolchain): All in the Blood (A. & A. Farmar)
  • Townshend, Charles, Easter 1916: The Irish Rebellion (London 2005)

Vorlage:Easter Rising Vorlage:Irish poetry

  1. Marie O'Neill: Grace Gifford Plunkett and Irish freedom: tragic bride of 1916. Irish Academic Press, Dublin 2000, ISBN 978-0-7165-2666-7, S. 18 (google.com).
  2. Review Of 'All in the Blood'. In: A&A Farmar Book Publishers. Abgerufen am 4. November 2010.
  3. [Count Plunkett] George Noble Plunkett. In: Ricorso. Abgerufen am 5. November 2010.
  4. Joseph Mary Plunkett: Ailing writer who shaped the rebellion In: Irish Independent, October 29, 2015. Abgerufen im 27 September 2016 
  5. "A Short History of the Esperanto Movement in Ireland" web.archive.org Fehler bei Vorlage * Parametername unbekannt (Vorlage:Webarchiv): "date"Vorlage:Webarchiv/Wartung/Parameter Fehler bei Vorlage:Webarchiv: Genau einer der Parameter 'wayback', 'webciteID', 'archive-today', 'archive-is' oder 'archiv-url' muss angegeben werden.Vorlage:Webarchiv/Wartung/Linktext_fehltVorlage:Webarchiv/Wartung/URL Fehler bei Vorlage:Webarchiv: enWP-Wert im Parameter 'url'.