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[[Image:Sesamstrasse-LiloPulver.jpg|thumb|300px|Liselotte "Lilo" Pulver with Tiffy and Samson.]]
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[[Image:Lilopulver.jpg|frame]]
 
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[[Image:Sesamstrasse-German-Characters-Intro-(1978).jpg|thumb|300px|The first German characters being introduced to audiences in [[Sesamstrasse (magazine)|''Sesamstrasse'' magazine]] (1978).]]
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'''Liselotte Pulver''' (b. October 11, 1929), often credited as Lilo Pulver, is a [[Switzerland|Swiss]] actress who played [[Lilo]] on ''[[Sesamstrasse]]'' from [[1978]] until [[1983]].
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'''Liselotte "Lilo" Pulver''' (b. October 11, 1929) is a [[Switzerland|Swiss]] actress who played [[Lilo]] on ''[[Sesamstrasse]]'' from 1978 until 1983, making Lilo one of the first two human characters on the show.
   
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Pulver began her career, after leaving trade school, as a model, and then studied acting. She made her film debut in 1949, in the American comedy ''Swiss Tour'' (starring Cornel Wilde). The buxom Pulver want on to become a frequent presence in German and French films, including ''The Confessions of Felix Krull'' and ''The Adventures of Arsene Lupin''. She also co-starred in two 60s American comedies, Billy Wilder's frenetic satire ''One, Two, Three'' (as gum-chewing secretary Fraulein Ingeborg) and the [[Bob Hope]] comedy ''Global Affair'' (as Sonya, netting a Golden Globe nomination). She remained prolific in European films, before and after ''Sesamstrasse'', prior to her retirement in [[1996]]. She has published several volumes of autobiography about her sometimes tragic private life.
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Pulver began her career, after leaving trade school, as a model, and then studied acting. She made her film debut in 1949, in the American comedy ''Swiss Tour'' (starring Cornel Wilde). The buxom Pulver want on to become a frequent presence in German and French films, including ''The Confessions of Felix Krull'' and ''The Adventures of Arsene Lupin''.
   
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She also co-starred in two 1960s American comedies, Billy Wilder's frenetic satire ''One, Two, Three'' (as gum-chewing secretary FrΓ€ulein Ingeborg) and the [[Bob Hope]] comedy ''Global Affair'' (as Sonya, netting a Golden Globe nomination).
==External Links==
 
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She remained prolific in European films, before and after ''Sesamstrasse'', prior to her retirement in 1996. She has published several volumes of autobiography about her sometimes tragic private life.
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<gallery widths=300 spacing=small>
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Image:Sesamstrasse-Lilo,Uwe,Horst,Ute-(1983).jpg|Pulver (left) with fellow actors [[Uwe Friedrichsen]],<br>[[Horst Janson]] and [[Ute Willing]] in 1983.
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</gallery>
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==External links==
 
*[http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0003813/ IMDb]
 
*[http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0003813/ IMDb]
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[[Category:International Sesame Street Actors|Pulver, Lilo]]
 
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__NOWYSIWYG__
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Pulver, Lilo}}
 
[[Category:International Sesame Street Actors]]
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[[Category:Sesamstrasse Actors]]
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[[Category:International Celebrities]]

Latest revision as of 21:21, 22 September 2018

Sesamstrasse-LiloPulver

Liselotte "Lilo" Pulver with Tiffy and Samson.

Sesamstrasse-German-Characters-Intro-(1978)

The first German characters being introduced to audiences in Sesamstrasse magazine (1978).

Liselotte "Lilo" Pulver (b. October 11, 1929) is a Swiss actress who played Lilo on Sesamstrasse from 1978 until 1983, making Lilo one of the first two human characters on the show.

Pulver began her career, after leaving trade school, as a model, and then studied acting. She made her film debut in 1949, in the American comedy Swiss Tour (starring Cornel Wilde). The buxom Pulver want on to become a frequent presence in German and French films, including The Confessions of Felix Krull and The Adventures of Arsene Lupin.

She also co-starred in two 1960s American comedies, Billy Wilder's frenetic satire One, Two, Three (as gum-chewing secretary FrΓ€ulein Ingeborg) and the Bob Hope comedy Global Affair (as Sonya, netting a Golden Globe nomination).

She remained prolific in European films, before and after Sesamstrasse, prior to her retirement in 1996. She has published several volumes of autobiography about her sometimes tragic private life.

External links