
Age: 65
male
Born in Heidelberg; a curious and shy boy; found the key for his world through passion for music, dance and theater; Richard studied music and drama in Germany, acting and direction in France and method acting with Susan Strasberg and Francesca de Sapio in Italy. He first went on stage in 1981 at the local theater Hildesheim, then, from 1983 in France on independent stages, at national theaters and in the streets. In 1989 he moved to Italy and met Susan Strasberg: His cinema debut was in 1990 starring in "Il Piacere delle Carni" by Barbara Barni. In 1993, he moved to Paris and got the leading role in the film version of Brechts/Eislers" The Lindbergh's Flight". Since then he has worked on film, television, theater and dance productions all over Europe, in Canada, South Africa, USA, Macedonia, Morocco which brought him happiness and a lot of richly diversified creative and thrilling experiences Richard lives in Berlin and Paris since 2007. He speaks 5 languages fluently, travels a lot and loves to be challenged. - IMDb Mini Biography By: r sammel

Apes takeing over the world until the end of the world in the past Centuries after humanity’s downfall, Earth is no longer a planet of men — it is a world ruled by apes. Across shattered continents and reclaimed jungles, tribes of intelligent apes have risen from Caesar’s ashes, building their own empires, guided by fragments of his philosophy — and haunted by their growing thirst for dominance. But deep in orbit, a remnant of humanity still drifts among the stars. Colonel John Bullock (Tom Hardy), a hardened pilot of the U.S. Space Force, awakens from decades of cryogenic stasis aboard a damaged orbital station. Cut off from Earth since the nuclear collapse, his return mission sends him plummeting into an unfamiliar world — one where the ruins of civilization lie buried under the roots of a new order After centuries of struggle between man and ape, peace was no longer possible. What began as scattered conflicts turned into a full-scale war for survival. Humanity’s cities fell one by one — New York, London, Beijing — all overtaken not by armies of soldiers, but by intelligent apes rising from the forests, mountains, and ruins of the old world. The apes had learned, adapted, and evolved faster than humans ever expected. Under the guidance of their new warlords — the successors of Caesar’s fractured line — they no longer sought coexistence. They sought dominion.






