Peter Stein
Directing
Biography
Peter Stein was born on October 1, 1937 in Berlin, Germany. Studied literature and art history in Frankfurt and Munich. Debuted as stage director at the Munich Kammerspiele with Edward Bond's "Saved" (1967). He is known for his work on Klassen Feind (1983), Big and Little (1980) and Peer Gynt (1971). He is married to Maddalena Crippa.
Known For

No description available.
Square

A group of people from the wealthy middle class in engage in quasi intellectual quarrels and discussions trying to find some meaning in their comfortable and indolent life. Adaptation of the play by Maxim Gorky.
Summer Guests

Berlin-Kreuzberg in the early 1980s. The film is essentially a one-set piece, taking place in a beat-up, graffiti-decorated schoolroom where six teen-age delinquents argue and fight as they await the latest in what has been a series of terrified teachers.
Class Enemy
No description available.
Drei Schwestern
Follows a woman, Lotte, who travels through Germany and seeks human connections, but is unsuccessful as every person she encounters is locked into his own world. Based on the play by Botho Strauß.
Big and Little

A staging of Molière's play "Tartuffe" by Peter Stein.
Le Tartuffe
No description available.
Prinz Friedrich von Homburg
No description available.
Trilogie des Wiedersehens
An inexplicable showdown between two men and the downfall of a family that has moved from the prairies to the jungle of the big city.
Im Dickicht der Städte

On April 2nd, 1787, Wolfgang von Goethe arrived in Palermo during a journey that lasted forty days, which he then described in Italian Journey. Peter Stein, a stage and opera director, retraces the footsteps of the German poet, in the company of a film crew. In Sicily, Goethe sought and found classicism, and so does Stein, as he travels to the origins of European culture. After his impressive production of Faust, the high point of Stein's reflections on Goethe, this new journey helps the director compare late-18th-century Sicily to today's, showing unexpected differences and surprising similarities.