Gustav Scholz: Difference between revisions

Content deleted Content added
Citation bot (talk | contribs)
Alter: template type. Add: magazine. Removed parameters. Some additions/deletions were parameter name changes. | Use this bot. Report bugs. | Suggested by Grimes2 | Category:German male television actors | #UCB_Category 580/764
Clean up
Line 1:
{{short description|German boxer (1930–2000)}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=May 2014}}
{{Infobox boxer
Line 8:
|realname = Gustav Wilhelm Hermann Scholz
|nickname = Bubi Scholz
|weight =
|height =
|reach =
|nationality = [[Germany|German]]
|birth_date = {{Birth date|1930|04|12|df=yes}}
Line 21 ⟶ 18:
|losses = 2
|draws = 6
|no contests =
|KO = 46<ref name=archive/>
|medaltemplates =
|show-medals =
 
}}
'''Gustav Wilhelm Hermann''' "'''Bubi'''" '''Scholz''' (12 April 1930 – 21 August 2000)<ref name=deutsche-biographie.de>{{cite web|title=Scholz, Gustav ("Bubi")|last=Marschalek|first=Oliver|url=http://www.deutsche-biographie.de/sfz115725.html|work=[[Neue Deutsche Biographie]]|volume=23|year=2007|pages=460–461|accessdate=30 April 2014}}</ref> was a [[Germans|German]] boxer. He was popularly called '''Bubi'''.<ref name=cnnsi/> In the 1950s and early 1960s he won the German National Boxing Championship and European Boxing Championship several times. After his retirement in 1964, he acted in six films and several TV series. Scholz married twice, and was imprisoned for three years on charges of murdering his first wife. He developed [[dementia]] and was diagnosed with [[Alzheimer's disease]] in his later life. He attempted suicide twice and died at the age of 70 due to [[cardiac arrest]].
 
==Early life==
Line 45 ⟶ 38:
His success in boxing brought him a short-lived career in the entertainment industry. He appeared in 1960 as Boxer Breitenbach in the television production ''The Champion Boxer''. That same year, he played the role of Ralf Moebius in Paul Martin's musical comedy ''Marina''. In the ''Music Film Hit Parade 1961'' by Franz Marischka, he was known as Ralf Hegener. In 1959 and 1962 he collaborated with the Werner Müller orchestra and the vocal group The 3 Travellers at [[Telefunken]] and Metronomes, and released three music singles.<ref name=music/>
 
==1965-19841965–1984==
Following his career as a professional boxer, Scholz opened the advertising agency Zühlke and Scholz in Berlin, trying to build on his popularity as an athlete. In 1971, he was seen in a supporting role as a police officer in Thomas Engel's teleplay ''Lucky''. In 1977, he made a guest appearance as a boxing coach in the 20th episode of the TV comedy series ''Odds and Ends''. In 1980, he published his autobiography, ''The Way Out of Nowhere'',<ref name=archive/> but received negative publicity in those years due to his drinking habits.<ref name=von/>
 
==1984-20001984–2000==
[[File:Bubi scholz grave.jpg|220px|thumb| Scholz's original grave in the Woodland Cemetery, [[Zehlendorf (Berlin)|Zehlendorf]].]]
On the evening of 22 July 1984, Scholz shot his 49-year-old wife Helga,<ref name=archive/><ref name=von/> whom he had married in 1955, in their Berlin villa. He was arrested the following day. Helga was buried two weeks later in the presence of approximately 1,000 people.<ref>{{cite web|last=Nestler|first=Stefan|title=23.7.1984: Bubi Scholz verhaftet|trans-title=23 July 1984: Bubi Scholz Arrested|language=German|url=http://www.kalenderblatt.de/index.php?what=thmanu&manu_id=591&tag=23&monat=7&weekd=&weekdnum=&year=2012&dayisset=1&lang=de|work=Kalenderblatt|accessdate=2 May 2014}}</ref> Scholz claimed the shooting was an accident and that the "shot had been loosened during the cleaning of the gun".<ref name=von/> On 1 February 1985, the court sentenced him to custodial arrest for three years on the charge of manslaughter and violation of the Arms Act of Germany.<ref name=tagesspiegel/> The case was the subject of an episode of the documentary series "The Major Criminal Cases" in 2012. Scholz was released in August 1987.<ref name=von/>
 
In October 1993, Scholz married Sabine Arndt.<ref name=archive/><ref name=von/> During 1997-981997–98, he suffered several strokes, and developed [[dementia]].<ref name=tagesspiegel/> He tried to commit suicide twice. He had also been diagnosed with Alzheimer's disease.<ref name=von/> He died of [[cardiac arrest]] on 21 August 2000<ref name=tagesspiegel/> at a nursing home in Hoppegarten.<ref name=archive/><ref name=von/> He was buried in the Woodland Cemetery in [[Zehlendorf (Berlin)|Zehlendorf]], Berlin. His widow Sabine married actor Klaus Jürgen Wussow in 2004. In August 2008, at the request of Sabine, Scholz's body was reburied at the Berlin Heerstraße Cemetery.
 
==''The Bubi Scholz Story''==
In 1997--98, director [[Roland Suso Richter]] filmed ''{{Ill|The Bubi Scholz Story|de|Die Bubi-Scholz-Story}}'' for television from a screenplay by [[Uwe Timm]], with [[Benno Fürmann]] in the role of young Scholz and [[Götz George]] playing the adult Scholz.<ref name=von/> Scholz himself could not attend the premiere of the film in May 1998 due to his poor health. This was Fürmann's breakthrough starring<ref name="ReimerReimer2010">{{cite book|last1=Reimer|first1=Robert Charles|last2=Reimer|first2=Carol J.|title=The A to Z of German Cinema|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=nqCa1YYd9ncC&pg=PA120|year=2010|publisher=Rowman & Littlefield|isbn=978-0-8108-7611-8|page=120}}</ref> and he received the German TV Award as Best Actor in a telefilm, for the role of Scholz.<ref>{{cite web|title=Speed Racer|url=http://emol.org/film/archives/speedracer/cast.html|publisher=emol.org|accessdate=14 May 2014}}</ref>
 
==Autobiography==