Trauer um “Dahoam is Dahoam”-Star: Heinrich Stadler im Alter von 63 Jahren verstorben

München -Schauspieler Heinrich Stadler (†63) ist am 3. Dezember plötzlich gestorben. Die schreckliche Nachricht überbrachte die Produktion von “Dahoam is Dahoam” am Donnerstag aufFacebook.

Heinrich Stadler (†63) ist unerwartet verstorben.

Heinrich Stadler (†63) ist unerwartet verstorben.  ©IMAGO / Manfred SiebingerDort würdigte man ihn auf der offiziellen Seite der BR-Serie mit den Worten: “Am 03.12.25 ist unser lieber und langjähriger Kollege Heinrich Stadler verstorben, der als ‘Stadler’ in der Brauerei Kirchleitner fast zum Inventar gehörte und den alltäglichen Betrieb zwischen Kesseln und Büro mit seinem Spiel zum Leben erweckte. Unsere Gedanken und Wünsche sind bei seinen Lieben.”

Trauer: Heinrich Stadler ist tot | Dahoam is Dahoam | BR Fernsehen |  Fernsehen | BR.de

Insgesamt 136 Folgen lang stand Stadler für “Dahoam is Dahoam” vor der Kamera. Seit 2008 verkörperte er die Rolle von “Lagerleiter Stadler” und spielte sich mit Leidenschaft in die Herzen der Zuschauer.

Trauer um "Dahoam is Dahoam"-Schauspieler: Heinrich Stadler (63) verstorben  - Braumeister in der BR-Serie und auch im echten Leben – TV Wunschliste

Seine Figur wurde als Urgestein der Brauerei geschätzt, das seine Arbeit stets mit großer Verantwortung erfüllte und auf das sich die Familie Kirchleitner jederzeit voll verlassen konnte.Neben der Kult-Serie war Stadler in “Utta Danella” (2010) und “Daheim in den Bergen” (2024) zu sehen. Zusätzlich war der 63-Jährige auch im echten Leben Braumeister und betrieb eine Vinothek, wo er etwa 17 Jahre lang Weine verkaufte.Über die genaue Todesursache ist bisher nichts bekannt.

Related Posts

ANGEL LOCSIN and LUIS MANZANO: The Bitter Words and the Pain of the Past—Who Has Truly Moved On?

The public’s love for movie stars is undeniable, especially when it comes to love. In Filipino culture, love teams and real-life couples are not just admired; they are loved, prayed for,…

“The Night the Opry Touched Heaven: Dolly, Reba, Keith, Carrie, and George Strait Carried Toby Keith on Wings of Song.” Nashville that night was no longer Nashville – the entire Grand Ole Opry transformed into a holy heaven, where souls met in song. Dolly Parton trembled as she whispered the name of an angel, Reba McEntire cried softly with each note, Keith Urban played the guitar as if pouring out his heart for the music, Carrie Underwood broke down, letting her tears fall into her singing, and George Strait sang the final song like a farewell flame that never died. More than 3,000 people sat motionless, only tears silently falling – because everyone knew they were not just listening to a performance, but witnessing a miracle: Toby Keith was sung home, with the love of legends.

The Night the Opry Touched Heaven: A Farewell to Toby Keith A Sanctuary of Song On that unforgettable night, the Grand Ole Opry was no longer just…

“AFTER 59 YEARS OF SILENCE… SHE FINALLY SAID HIS NAME WITH A BROKEN SMILE.” Temple Medley spoke softly, like each word carried an old bruise. She didn’t talk about the superstar, the sold-out shows, or the voice people still play today. She talked about Harold — the boy she married before fame started pulling him further away. “It wasn’t betrayal,” she said. “It was distance. The music took him one piece at a time.” She never remarried. Never tried to replace what she lost. Friends say her wedding photo is still beside her bed, a quiet reminder of a love the world never truly saw.

Temple Medley Breaks Her Silence After 50 Years: The Untold Love Story Behind Conway Twitty’s First Marriage After more than half a century of quiet privacy, Temple…

“A VOICE FROM HEAVEN — TOBY KEITH SINGS “SING ME BACK HOME” ONE LAST TIME Toby Keith, gone since 2024, walks straight out of eternity with this never-heard 2023 acoustic take of Merle Haggard’s “Sing Me Back Home.” That big, cracked baritone pleads like a man standing at the gates, asking the song to carry him across —like heaven just handed him one last guitar and said, “let ’em hear you coming.” And the rest of it… hurts in the quiet way only truth can. He doesn’t chase the old strength. He just sings like a man who finally understands what Merle meant —a man owning every mile, every mistake, every mercy he hopes is waiting. By the time the first prison bell should’ve rung, the tears are already there. Because this doesn’t sound like a performance. It sounds like a soul finding its way home.

Introduction There are songs that simply entertain… and then there are songs that stop you where you stand, reaching somewhere deeper than you expect. “Sing Me Back Home” has…

EIGHTEEN MONTHS GONE… AND TONIGHT HIS VOICE FOUND ITS WAY HOME. No one believed it could happen. But when Krystal Keith opened her song with a trembling line, and Toby’s unreleased vocal brushed in beneath her, the entire room stopped breathing. It wasn’t spectacle. It wasn’t technology showing off. It was a father stepping back into his daughter’s world for one quiet moment neither of them ever got to finish. Their harmonies didn’t rise — they ached. The kind of ache only family can carry. Cowboy hats lifted. Hands shook. And grown men wiped tears they didn’t bother to hide. For a few steady seconds felt like reunion — the kind country music still believes in even when the world says it’s impossible.

Introduction As the world continues to honor and celebrate the life of Toby Keith, one truth grows clearer with time: his influence extended far beyond the borders of…

“WHEN CHRIS STAPLETON APPEARED BEHIND THE WHEELCHAIR, EVERYTHING CHANGED.” No one was ready for what happened next. The lights had barely faded when a wheelchair rolled out, and there sat Alan Jackson — thinner, shaking a little, but still carrying that spark he’s held for 50 years. The whole room froze. Some people cried before he even reached the stage. But the silence came from something else. Chris Stapleton was the one pushing him. Chris laid a gentle hand on Alan’s shoulder, whispered something only he could hear, and Alan gave this soft, trembling smile that broke the Opry open. Then the first chords of “Remember When” floated up… and suddenly it felt like we were watching a goodbye wrapped inside a song.

Livin’ on Love: Alan Jackson and His Wife Denise Celebrate 44 Years of Marriage No one in the audience that night could have anticipated the moment they…