Rudolf Bernhard or Rudolf Bernhard Conrath (26 March 1901 – 21 October 1962) was a
Swiss
Swiss most commonly refers to:
* the adjectival form of Switzerland
* Swiss people
Swiss may also refer to: Places
* Swiss, Missouri
* Swiss, North Carolina
* Swiss, West Virginia
* Swiss, Wisconsin
Other uses
* Swiss Café, an old café located ...
comedian, radio personality, and stage and film actor starring usually in Swiss German language cinema and television and stage productions. In 1941 Berhard founded the
Bernhard-Theater Zürich.
Life and work
Born in
Basel
Basel ( ; ), also known as Basle ( ), ; ; ; . is a city in northwestern Switzerland on the river Rhine (at the transition from the High Rhine, High to the Upper Rhine). Basel is Switzerland's List of cities in Switzerland, third-most-populo ...
,
Canton of Basel-Stadt in Switzerland as ''Rudolf Bernhard Conrath'', he attended Realschule and worked as optician in his father's business, then as a canvasser of ads. He gained first stage experience at ''Dramatischer Verein Basel'' with performances as a humorist on occasion of club events and family celebrations. On 26 March 1925 Bernhard premiered as a master of ceremonies and with Berlin songs on ''Küchlintheater Basel''. Further appearances included among many other roles ''Riccaut'' in Lessing's "Minna von Barnhelm" at the open-air theater Hertenstein in the summer of 1925, and as ''Malvolio'' in Shakespeare's ''
Twelfth Night
''Twelfth Night, or What You Will'' is a romantic comedy by William Shakespeare, believed to have been written around 1601–1602 as a Twelfth Night entertainment for the close of the Christmas season. The play centres on the twins Viola an ...
'', then on an operetta tour in the Alsace. After his military service, Bernhard joined the ''Variété Corso'' in Zürich where he first completed office and advertising works, then he starred increasingly on solo performances in revues and also on "Cabaret Mascotte", a side stage of the ''Variété Corso''. In 1929 Bernhard married Lisa Lienbach, a Swiss dancer and actress. Since the early 1930s Bernhard participated mainly in farces, including on tour together with Fredy Scheim.
He also became popular by numerous radio appearances and radio broadcasts of "Bunte Abende" from the Bernhard-Theater, as well as various roles in Swiss and German films.
Bernhard-Theater Zürich

The popular folk actor ''with the distinctive elongated face, large dark eyes, the high forehead and a mouth with remarkably big teeth'', founded in the ''Café Esplanade'' his own theater – the
Bernhard-Theater Zürich at the present
Sechseläutenplatz plaza in Zürich,
which opened on 19/20 December 1941. The ensemle performed farces and comedies in the
Swiss German
Swiss German (Standard German: , ,Because of the many different dialects, and because there is no #Conventions, defined orthography for any of them, many different spellings can be found. and others; ) is any of the Alemannic German, Alemannic ...
language. The ensemble comprised among others Ernst Bölsterli, Walburga Gmür, Bernard's wife Lisa Lienbach, Peter W. Staub and Willi Stettner; as guests appeared among many others
Heinrich Gretler, Emil Hegetschweiler,
Alfred Rasser,
Schaggi Streuli and Fredy Scheim. From the late 1940s, at the beginning of the season, the ensemble went yearly on tour in Switzerland, while the parent company held guest performances.
There, 7,000 performances were played until Bernhard's surpring death in 1962, mostly farces and dialect comedies, in which Bernhard almost always played a major role, often under the direction of Albert Pulmann, from 1951 by Egon Waldmann. Bernhard's common partners were, next to his wife Lisa Lienbach, especially Pulmann, Willi Stettner and Ernst Bölsterli. Bernhard spoke his roles in the otherwise highly German farces, with a few exceptions, always in Basel German dialect.
The ensemble later included popular Swiss actresses and actors, among them
Jörg Schneider Jörg Schneider may refer to:
* Jörg Schneider (actor) (1935–2015), Swiss actor
* Jörg Schneider (politician)
Jörg Schneider (born 14 May 1964) is a German politician for the Alternative for Germany (AfD) and since 2017 member of the Bunde ...
,
Paul Bühlmann,
Inigo Gallo,
Ursula Schäppi,
Ruedi Walter,
Margrit Rainer,
Ines Torelli, Erich Vock and others, as well as the popular "Bernhard-Littéraire",
and the "Bernhard-Apéro" that was re-established by
Hanna Scheuring.
Filmography (selected works)
Literature
* Walter Grieder: ''Gueten Oobe mitenand. 50 Jahre Bernhard-Theater''. Friedrich Reinhardt, Basel 1991, .
References
External links
*
Rudolf Bernhard on the website of the Swiss national television SRF
{{DEFAULTSORT:Bernhard, Rudolf
1901 births
1962 deaths
Swiss male stage actors
Swiss male film actors
20th-century Swiss male actors
Actors from Basel-Stadt
Male actors from Zurich
Kabarettists
Swiss male radio actors
Swiss male comedians
Swiss male musical theatre actors
Swiss male television actors
Swiss theatre directors
20th-century Swiss male singers
20th-century Swiss comedians
Swiss comedy musicians
German-language singers of Switzerland