Solveig Dommartin | |
---|---|
Born | 16 May 1961 Constantine, Algeria |
Died | 11 January 2007 Paris, France | (aged 45)
Solveig Dommartin (French pronunciation: [sɔlvɛɡ dɔmaʁtɛ̃]; 16 May 1961 – 11 January 2007) was a French actress.
Her acting career began in the theatre with Compagnie Timothee Laine and with the Theater Labor Warschau.[1] She had her first experiences with film as an assistant of Jacques Rozier.
Her debut as a film actress was in Wings of Desire (1987), by Wim Wenders, with whom she was in a relationship. She learned circus acrobatics for the role in only eight weeks,[2] and performed without using a stunt double. She co-authored Until the End of the World (1991) with Wenders and travelled around the world with him in search of locations for the project.
Wim Wenders said about Until the End of the World: "Solveig Dommartin and I had written the story of our film together, and we thought that we only had the right to enter into such a sacred area like a person's dreams, if we would bring something into the work that was sacred to ourselves".
Dommartin had a daughter, Venus.[3] She died of a heart attack in Paris in 2007 at the age of 45.[2]