Der Lottogewinner ("The lottery winner") is a comedy sketch by German humorist Loriot. It was first broadcast in 1976 in the TV show Loriot, starring Heinz Meier and Claus Dieter Clausnitzer.
Plot
editThe central character of the sketch is 66 years old retiree Erwin Lindemann (Heinz Meier) who has won 500,000 Deutsche Mark in the lottery. Sitting in a chair in his living room, he is interviewed by a TV team for the evening news. Lindemann, visibly nervous, is only asked to give this short statement:
—Loriot, Der Lottogewinner[1]
Because of various technical issues and adjustments made by the increasingly frustrated director, Lindemann is repeatedly interrupted and has to repeat his text several times, which makes him more confused after each shot. Finally, the cinematographer warns that film is running out, and the director is satisfied with Lindemann's last attempt, which is performed reasonably fluently, but has become completely jumbled:
—Loriot, Der Lottogewinner[1]
Broadcast and reception
editDer Lottogewinner was the last of 15 sketches in the first episode of the six-part TV series Loriot, first broadcast on 8 March 1976 on ARD.[2] It is considered one of the most famous sketches by Loriot and Heinz Meier's best-known role.[3][4]
Loriot originally intended the character of Erwin Lindemann to speak with a slight West Low German accent. Meier, who was from near Königsberg and perfectly spoke East Prussian (High Prussian) dialect, convinced Loriot of letting speak Lindemann in a slightly East Prussian idiom.[5]
According to Jörg Thomann in the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, with the character of the confused Erwin Lindemann, Loriot created "a moving portrayal of the modern individual who is pushed by their fellow human beings (in this case: a director) towards self-denial and, through all their ambitions (such as the gentlemen's boutique in Wuppertal), losing their bearing – until they forget their own name".[6] Loriot, who usually starred himself in his sketches, was referring to the popularity of the character when he said to Heinz Meier: "I have made two big mistakes: I didn't build a basement for my house, and I let you play Lindemann".[7]
Sources
edit- Loriot: Gesammelte Prosa. Alle Dramen, Geschichten, Festreden, Liebesbriefe, Kochrezepte, der legendäre Opernführer und etwa zehn Gedichte. Zürich: Diogenes Verlag, 2006. ISBN 978-3-25706-481-0
- Stefan Lukschy: Der Glückliche schlägt keine Hunde. Ein Loriot-Porträt. Berlin: Aufbau-Verlag, 2015. ISBN 978-3-7466-3106-6
References
edit- ^ a b Loriot. "Der Lottogewinner" (PDF) (in German). Klett. Retrieved 22 August 2019.
- ^ "Loriot: Episodenliste". Fernsehserien.de (in German). Retrieved 6 August 2019.
- ^ Rademacher, Daniel (17 February 2010). "Loriots berühmter Lotto-Millionär wird heute 80". Stuttgarter Nachrichten (in German). Retrieved 6 August 2019.
- ^ Reents, Edo (22 July 2013). "Ein Hauptgewinn der komischen Branche". Faz.net (in German). Retrieved 6 August 2019.
- ^ Lukschy, p. 54 f.
- ^ Thomann, Jörg (12 November 2003). "Das große Loriot-Lexikon". Faz.net (in German). Retrieved 7 August 2019.
Mit der Figur des verwirrten Erwin Lindemann gelingt Loriot ein ergreifendes Porträt des modernen Individuums, das sich von seinen Mitmenschen (hier: ein Regisseur) dazu drängen läßt, sich selbst zu verleugnen, und vor lauter Ambitionen (Herrenboutiqe in Wuppertal etc.) die Orientierung verliert – bis es seinen eigenen Namen vergißt.
- ^ Mayer-Wolk, Eva (1 September 2003). "TV-Darsteller: "Loriot war knallhart"". Der Spiegel (in German). Retrieved 7 August 2019.
Zwei große Fehler hab ich gemacht: Ich hab mein Haus nicht unterkellert, und ich habe Sie den Lindemann spielen lassen.
External links
edit- Script of the sketch, Ernst Klett Verlag (PDF, ca. 133 KB)