Mary Dresselhuys



Johanna Marie (Mary) Dresselhuysstraat ( Tiel , January 221907 - Amsterdam , May 192004 ) was a Dutchactress, who has over one hundred roles played by stage , in films and on television in a long career.

Dresselhuys was born as the daughter of a tobacco magnate. In their own words in her neighborhood one interested in theater and if it were up to her parents she did not not get the chance to grow into the comedienne who she has become. Her first role she played in high school in Tiel. During holidays in The Hague, with her ​​grandmother, she went far to the theater. In 1926 she took entrance exam for the Amsterdam Theatre School where she graduated in 1929. She was among other lessons from Albert Dalsum , Magda Janssens and Else Mauhs. Her first role, even as a show girl, she played in the Rotterdamsch Hofstad Stage of Cor van der Lugt Melsert on September 7, 1929. Since December she received full roll assigned.

Dresselhuys has been married three times.

Since 1992, one named after her prize awarded to actors with a special acting talent.
 * From 1929 to 1933 the actor Joan Remmelts ;
 * From 1934 to 1946, actor Cees Laseur, with whom she had two daughters: Blackbird and Petra Laseur .
 * From 1955 until his death in 1986 with aviator-author Adriaan Viruly ("Jon"). They got together soon nicknamed "Art and Vliegwerk", and made ​​in 1969 under the name of a program.



Content
[ hide ]  *1st Stage  ==Drama [ edit] == A detailed listing of its roles is to be found on the website of the Netherlands Theatre Institute (see external link) ==Movie [ edit] == ==Trivia [ edit] ==
 * 2 Film
 * 3 Trivia
 * 4 External link
 * Eline Vere ( 1992 ) - Mrs. Van Raat
 * Previously you could laugh ( 1983 ) - Mrs. at the station
 * Celine ( 1979 )
 * Pygmalion ( 1976 ) - Mrs. Higgins
 * Slippers ( 1975 ) - Sheila
 * Village on the River ( 1958 ) - Mrs. Van Taeke
 * The Kribbebijter ( 1935 ) - Mary
 * Tineke Schouten persifleerde Dresselhuysstraat frequently in artists parade, the fixed part of Schouten's show.
 * In the renovated De La Mar theater, which reopened on November 28, 2010 in Amsterdam, is a theater named after her.