Ann-Kathrin Kramer
A familiar face to German television audiences, Ann-Kathrin Kramer is a versatile actress who is equally suited to comedies and crime shows. After attending drama school in Munich, Kramer soon began winning parts on the small screen, appearing in the 1993 made-for-TV medical movie "Alarm auf Station 2" and an installment of the procedural drama "SOKO 5113." After a recurring role on the medical show "Hallo, Onkel Doc!," Kramer starred in the short-lived crime series "Die Partner" and later made a rare foray into feature films with the 1998 romantic comedy "Das merkwürdige Verhalten geschlechtsreifer Großstädter zur Paarungszeit," co-starring Christoph Waltz. In 2001, she reunited with Waltz for the TV movie "Der Tanz mit dem Teufel - Die Entführung des Richard Oetker," a crime tale that won numerous national awards. Kramer also found success playing a nun who gets wrapped up in a murder investigation in the comedic 2006 made-for-TV film "Die Nonne und der Kommissar," and she reprised the role of Sister Camilla in the sequel, "Die Nonne und der Kommissar - Todesengel." In 2010, she starred in "Ich trag dich bis ans Ende der Welt," portraying a housewife who is fed up with her family's ungrateful ways and joins her father on a pilgrimage to Spain, once again showing her considerable acting range.