Dieter Hallervorden: Actors didn’t want to live anymore

Dieter Hallervorden
Actor did not want to live anymore

Dieter Hallervorden at a performance in Berlin.

© imago/Future Image

A stay in the clinic saved him: Dieter Hallervorden talks about a serious illness in Tim Prose’s updated biography.

Dieter Hallervorden (87) struggled with a life-threatening illness. In the updated biography by Tim Prose, “Hallervorden. Ein Komiker macht Ernst” (288 pages, EUR 12.00 [DE], Heyne), the actor speaks for the first time about his long-kept secret. “I didn’t feel well for a while, and that’s why I was admitted to a clinic, I just had too many suicidal thoughts at the time,” Tim Prose quotes him as saying in the new edition, which will be published on October 13th. “One day these suicidal thoughts dragged me down longer and deeper than I was used to anyway.”

This became acute a year ago. “His wife Christiane and his best friend were looking for a psychiatric clinic for him at the time. Hallervorden canceled all appointments for the next few weeks, packed his suitcase and went to the hospital for 21 days,” the book says. Hallervorden told Prose about a sleeping pill “which he had unfortunately taken far too often for 30 years. Right from the start, the package insert said that you should never take this drug for longer than six weeks”. At some point Hallervorden admitted to himself “that this drug no longer calmed him down, but made him ill”.

“I couldn’t live like this anymore”

“The warning signs became clearer and clearer. It couldn’t go on like this anymore. I couldn’t live like this anymore,” he said, according to Prose. In autumn 2021, Hallervorden revealed to his wife Christiane “what an abyss had opened up in him and how dark it was in his soul”. He then took the most important step alone: ​​”For the first time in his life, he handed in his pills at the clinic in Berlin-Charlottenburg. Of course, his cigarettes too.”

The doctors at the clinic were looking for a substitute that wouldn’t make you dependent, Prose continues to write in “Hallervorden. A comedian gets serious.” In addition, Hallervorden learned in the clinic, among other things, to meditate and “follow your breath”. The 87-year-old Tim Prose also revealed how he managed to do this: “By following Christiane’s breath, who always falls asleep very quickly when she lies next to me at night. That works very well. I put myself in her arms, snuggle up to her and take on her breathing rhythm – her deep, calm, steady draws.”

Hallervorden “runs through his life”

Today Dieter Hallervorden is “full of energy”, says Prose in an interview with spot on news. He has “just opened his third theatre, this time in Dessau, his home town. And he always wants more. He runs through his life”.

The book says about the time in the clinic: “The experts designed a new lifestyle for their patients.” For outsiders, a change was “rather not” to be seen afterwards, says the author. Hallervorden kept it a secret for a long time. “It’s not easy that a man who always makes everyone laugh confesses in our book that sometimes he didn’t want to live anymore.”

“He entrusted that to me,” says Prose, “because I’ve been accompanying him for five years now and also performing with him. I’m most interested in Hallervorden as a person – with his vulnerable and often aching soul. And so I asked him one night “How is he really doing now. This man is struggling with the depression of an artist who always gives his all. And that’s why he regularly falls into the dark after his time in the limelight. But a year ago it came to a head and became life-threatening. By Now that he’s talking about it in the new edition of the book ‘Ein Komiker macht Ernst’, he wants to encourage people to open up and talk about what’s bothering them instead of hiding it.”

There will also be joint appearances with Hallervorden on the updated biography: “In Berlin and twice in Dessau, all three performances are completely sold out. But on February 18th and 19th, 2023 we are still planning some in Dessau in his Mitteldeutsches Theater, for which it tickets are still available.”

The telephone counseling service also offers help with depression on the free number: 0800/111 0 111

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