(c) Ana Portnoy
Stefanie Kremser, born in Germany in December 1967, grew up in a German-Bolivian family in São Paulo, Brazil. At the age of twenty she moved to Munich and studied documentary film at the University of Television and Film (HFF). Her early documentaries were invited to several international film festivals and broadcasted on television. She was a fellow writer at Literarisches Colloquium Berlin, Ledig House NY and Casa Baldi/Villa Massimo in Olevano Romano. She lives as a screenwriter and novelist between Barcelona and Frankfurt and is married to the Catalan writer Jordi Puntí.
Novels:
Die toten Gassen von Barcelona, crime novel, Kiepenheuer und Witsch verlag 2011. Published in Spanish by Edhasa and in Catalan by Empúries in 2012.
Postkarte aus Copacabana, novel, Piper Verlag 2000. Published in catalan by Club Editor in 2007.
Films:
Unsterblich schön, screenplay for a Tatort, BR 2010 (Tatort means "scene of crime" - a German police series from public television ARD. Each episode consists of an individual 90-minute feature film). Directed by Filippos Tsitos
Escríbeme: Postales a Copacabana (Write me: Postcards to Copacabana), screenplay for a movie with theatrical release in Germany, Bolivia and USA (AFI Silver cinemas). Won Progie award "the Langlois" in 2012. Co-production BR & Avista Film Munich & Pegaso Producciones La Paz 2009. Directed by Thomas Kronthaler.
Kleine Herzen, screenplay for a Tatort, BR 2007. Nominated for the Adolf Grimme Award. Bavarian Newcomer Award and German film New faces Award for main actress Janina Stopper in 2008. Directed by Filippos Tsitos
Sechs zum Essen, screenplay for a Tatort, BR 2004. Directed by Filippos Tsitos
Wolf im Schafspelz, screenplay for a Tatort, BR 2002. Directed by Filippos Tsitos
Ode a São Paulo, documentary film, Co-production HFF & BR 1993
San Paolo e la Tarantola, documentary film co-directed with Edoardo Winspeare, HFF 1991. Nominated for best film at the Internationales Dokumentarfilmfest München 1992
Hin und Her, documentary film co-directed with Margit Ruile, HFF 1990
Zip, short film, HFF 1989
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