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Biography

Her on-screen acting career only lasted from 1971 to 1973, but West Germany star Sonja Spitzweg made every year count. The sweet siren seemed to mostly play school-girls, though mature and sexually aware. She first appeared in the role of Carla in Schüler-Report (1971), or Student-Report, a film containing seven vignettes exploring how modern women have taken charge of their sexual needs. Next up was the movie Sex Life in a Convent (!972), where the starlet played Schülerin, or Pupil, in another vignette-based film, this one about the problems girls face in a unisex convent school. Schoolgirl Report 3: What Parents Find Unthinkable(1972), alternatively titled Schoolgirls Growing Up, followed, and Sonja played the uncredited role of Edith in the third film of a series of mockumentaries focusing on school girls and their sexual experiences; the series culminated in 1980 with a total of 13 films, although this was the only one Sonja would appear in. It’s also the film Mr. Skin shares, showing off all the girly parts Sonja has to offer. That same year, she played the role of Traudi in The Innocent Abroad (1972), tagline: “They knew the pleasures but not the dangers,” referring to the innocents who are bamboozled into professional glamour (the poster features a naked blonde with paper money covering her female attributes). Sonja’s last film playing a character part was in Teenager-Report - Die ganz jungen Mädchen (1973), a different take on the Schoolgirl series. Five years after this last flick, Sonja appeared as herself in a weird little mockumentary, The Evolution of Snuff (1978), about a porn star who commits suicide during the filming of a documentary about the adult film business. It also includes archive footage from Roman Polanski, and the “snuff film” is actually a deleted scene from Wes Craven’s The Last House on the Left from 1972. A very short, but very interesting career, for sure.