Désirée Nick at “Dahoam is Dahoam”: “I am like another planet”

Désirée Nick at “Dahoam is Dahoam”: “I am like another planet”

Désirée Nick at “Dahoam is Dahoam”
“I am like another planet”






Désirée Nick makes Lansing unsafe. “It was very lucky for me,” she enthuses about her guest role at “Dahoam is Dahoam”.

So far, Désirée Nick (68) has made a name for itself, especially in reality TV. She was crowned as a jungle queen and, with her pointed tongue, caused a stir, for example at “Celebrities under Palms” and “Celebrity Big Brother”. Now she is mixing up the fictional Bavarian village of Lansing. From June 2, the TV icon for six episodes can be seen in the BR series “Dahoam is Dahoam” (Monday to Thursday, 7:30 p.m.). As a retired couple therapist Dr. Barbara Hülsmann visits her serial daughter Vera (Sybille Waury, 55) and is particularly closely examining Brunnerwirt Gregor (Holger Matthias Wilhelm, 48). Because the local host could soon become her son -in -law.

In an interview with Spot on News, Nick raves about her guest role: “I think it was particularly great that as a Désirée Nick I was planted in this family -friendly format in a rural environment.” She had wanted such a role for a long time. If it were up to her, it does not have to stay in a guest appearance in Lansing.

You are a real TV professional. How did you experience the shooting of “Dahoam is Dahoam”?

Désirée Nick: It was very lucky for me. And you can see again that if you want for a little 30 years, it may still be true – you just should never give up. I could have occupied me for such series 30 years ago. That’s why I find it sensational that production had this – you almost have to say, long overdue – idea. I think it is particularly great that as a Désirée Nick I was planted in this family -friendly format in a rural environment. For me, this is the greatest joy because it is unusual and brave and of course very exciting.

So are you a kind of contrast figure at “Dahoam is Dahoam”?

Nick: This is the joke that a woman from another world breaks in there. It would have been easy to let me embody a cheeky Berlin brat. But the authors didn’t make it that easy. I play an academic from Hanover, who as a couple therapist hits this world and therefore I am a counterpoint. There is no other way in this series like me. I am like another planet. The role is fantastic and I was told on the set of all sides: “We cannot imagine who could have lived up with this figure.”

Which residents of Lansing have a lot of therapy requirements?

Nick: My serial daughter, the Vera, who is with the Brunnerwirt. That is the main stroke of history. Every mother is interested in who the daughter marries. And my daughter Vera is no longer completely baptized, so she is no longer a spring chick and I would like to be a grandma. That’s why I take a close look at the social gradient. After all, the future son -in -law is the host of a village restaurant and my daughter is an academic as a pharmacist. These are worlds that collide. This is the perfect template to develop comedy from it and also drama.

You don’t play a psychologist for the first time. Until the beginning of April, they also had a similar role at the theater in Hamburg in the play “Games wins” …

Nick: Amazingly, yes. Life is so crazy. I’m not looking for all of this. I can only play roles that are offered to me. And I got this play for Hamburg a year ago, where I play a very similar figure. She is a woman professor of psychology. I also don’t know why you come up with it. I could just as well play a crazy countess.

Do you personally have a special connection to psychology?

Nick: I also studied psychology as part of my theology studies. The great thing is that psychology has its own terminology. My “DID” role, the Barbara Hülsmann, analyzes her daughter’s relationship with the Brunnerwirt and uses many professional foreign words. So I speak completely differently than my play partner. You have to bring that smoothly and effortlessly over your lips.

Your role is a guest role. Could you still imagine a reunion in Lansing?

Nick: I would be very happy about that, but I don’t decide that. But it would be conceivable with this role. Because if a daughter wants to get married, the mother can also get a little afterwards. But at first I am extremely excited to see how our scenes arrive at the audience.

That means you could also imagine a longer commitment to “Dahoam is Dahoam”?

Nick: In any case, that would be great. But I still don’t want to anticipate too much because now I want to experience how the spectators perceive me as a figure. Because one shouldn’t forget: People saw me on TV in completely different projects. What got stuck with people are the pictures of the jungle camp, “Celebrity Big Brother”, “Celebrities under palms”. And now I come back in a completely different role. It is a great contrast to what I have ever seen on TV, and I am very grateful for that.

Theater in Hamburg, the series in Bavaria – what do you think of the many changes of location?

Nick: I’ve been in Hamburg for three months now. Before that I was in Munich for almost half a year in Munich. As a freelance actress, you are always a juggler. I worked all over Germany and was on tour all my life.

Spotonnews

Source: Stern

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