Dietrich Seydlitz

Sängerdarsteller

Aktuelle Partien an der Staatsoperette Dresden:
Erster Ganove in „Kiss me, Kate“ (Porter), Alphonse in „Pariser Leben“ (Offenbach), Sergei Mentschikoff in  „Der Graf von Luxemburg“ (Franz Lehàr), Ambrose Kemper in „Hello, Dolly!“ (Jerry Herman), Mandelbaum, Agent / 2. Bravo in „Prinz Methusalem“ (Johann Strauss), Dr. Steiner in „Pardon My English“ (George Gershwin), Lord Boxington in  „My Fair Lady“ (Lerner/Loewe)

Dietrich Seydlitz wurde in Dresden geboren. Er studierte bei K. Mitzscherling Gesang  an der Musikhochschule „Carl-Maria-von-Weber“ in Dresden. Während seines Studiums führten ihn erste Gastengagements z.B. an das Barocke Heckentheater im Großen Garten Dresden, an das Chorstudio der sächsischen Staatsoper Dresden sowie an das Schlosstheater Arnstadt. 1996 absolvierte er einen Regie-Sängerkurs in Cottbus und erhielt daraufhin ein Engagementam Mitteldeutschen Landestheater in Wittenberg. Seit 2001 ist er freiberuflicher Schauspieler und Sänger. Ein längerfristiges Gastengagements führte ihn an die Landesbühnen Sachsen/Felsenbühne Rathen. Seit der Spielzeit 2009/10 ist Dietrich Seydlitz festes Ensemblemitglied an der Staatsoperette Dresden.

Bedeutende Partien:

Gesangspartien: u.a. Evangelist im „Weihnachtsoratorium“ (Johann Sebastian Bach), Pedrillo „Die Entführung aus dem Serail“ (Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart), Cajus in „Die lustigen Weiber von Windsor“ (Otto Nicolai), Joseph in „Wiener Blut“ (Johann Strauss), Pappacoda in „Eine Nacht in Venedig“ (Johann Strauss), Sigismund Sülzheimer in „Im Weißen Rössl“ (Ralph Benatzky), Steppke in „Frau Luna“ (Paul Lincke), General in „Simplicius Simplicissimus“ (Karl Amadeus Hartmann), Vogelscheuche in „Der Zauberer von Oz“ (Harold Arlen), 2. Fremder in „Der Vetter aus Dingsda“ (Eduard Künneke), Barnaby Tucker „Hello Dolly“ (Jerry Herman)

Schauspielrollen: u.a. Mogli in „Das Dschungelbuch“ (Markus Weber), Hakenfingerjakob in „Die Dreigroschenoper“ (Bertold Brecht), Teufel in „Die Geschichte vom Soldaten“ (Igor Strawinsky), König Peter in „Leonce und Lena“ (Georg Büchner), Maximilian von Moor in „Die Räuber“ (Friedrich von Schiller), Präsident von Walther in „Kabale und Liebe“ (Friedrich von Schiller), Samiel in „Der Freischütz“ (Carl Maria von Weber)

Next Shows

Please pay attention concerning the alternate cast. Further information: +49 (0) 351 207 99 99

17.05.12 19:30
PRINCE METHUSALEM Johann Strauss Festival Dresden
Prince MethusalemOperetta in three acts by Johann Strauss Actually “Prince Methusalem” was supposed to be an operetta for Paris. Inspired by the... more
18.05.12 19:30
THE GYPSY BARON Johann Strauss Festival Dresden
The rousing success of ”The Gypsy Baron“ was thanks not least of all to the quality of its music. Strauss’s operetta was soon performed on countless stages, and to this very day is a mainstay of musical theater. more
20.05.12 15:00
PARDON MY ENGLISH Johann Strauss Festival Dresden
George Gershwin’s Dresden Musical A musical set in Dresden? And this, written by one of the most successful musical composers of all time? Hard to believe,... more
01.06.12 19:30
THE COUNT OF LUXEMBOURG
Operetta in three acts by Franz Lehár It is well known that, in the early twentieth century,marriage to a singer did not befit a nobleman’s station, no... more
07.06.12 19:30
KISS ME, KATE
Fred Graham, director and leading man in Shakespeare’s “The Taming of the Shrew,” is rehearsing with his ex-wife Lilli Vanessi and his new flame Ann. Lilli... more
08.06.12 19:30
KISS ME, KATE
Fred Graham, director and leading man in Shakespeare’s “The Taming of the Shrew,” is rehearsing with his ex-wife Lilli Vanessi and his new flame Ann. Lilli... more
09.06.12 19:30
MY FAIR LADY
Music: Frederick LoeweLyrics & Book: Alan Jay Lerner Perhaps the most popular musical of the 1950s, My Fair Lady came into being only after Hungarian film producer Gabriel Pascal devoted the last two years of his life to finding writers who would adapt George Bernard Shaw’s 1914 play Pygmalion into a musical. Rejected by the likes of Rodgers and Hammerstein and Noël Coward, Pascal finally turned to the younger but very talented duo of Frederick Loewe and Alan Jay Lerner.The story revolves around Eliza Doolittle, a coarse little peddler of flowers in Covent Garden who agrees to take speech lessons from phonetician Henry Higgins in order to fulfil her dream of working in a flower shop. Eliza succeeds so well, however, that she outgrows her social station and - in a development added by librettist Lerner - even manages to get Higgins to fall in love with her. more
< >
Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa Su
30 1 2 3 4 5 6
7 8 9 10 11 12 13
14 15 16 17 18 19 20
21 22 23 24 25 26 27
28 29 30 31 1 2 3

Thanks to