Education
A bank clerk"s son, Simon attended an acting school already in Gymnasium.
A bank clerk"s son, Simon attended an acting school already in Gymnasium.
At the age of 16, he was sent to a premilitary training camp of the Hitler Youth and then drafted to the Reich Labour Service. He volunteered to join the paratroopers in August 1943. He was captured by American troops near Normandy and shipped to a Prisoner Of War camp in Colorado, where he acted in the camp"s makeshift theater.
Breakthrough After returning home in 1947, Simon took private acting lessons with Karl Meixner in the Hebbel Theater.
He made his debut on stage in the Municipal Theater of Köthen at 1948, in a production of Dmitry Scheglov"s The Storm. Afterwards, Simon joined the cast of the Dresden Theater.
In late 1951, he left it in favour of the Leipzig Theater, where he remained for only a short period. Summit Simon was cast for one of the leading roles in the 1952 film The Condemned Village, and since then was active mainly in cinema.
At the same year, in spite of his inexperience, he was chosen to portray Ernst Thälmann in Kurt Maetzig"s two-part propaganda epic about the communist leader"s life.
The picture was watched by millions and entered the East German schools" curriculum. Simon appeared in some 30 pictures throughout the years. In 1956, he was awarded the Heinrich Greif Prize second class.
He joined the country"s Socialist Unity Party of Germany (SED / Sozialistische Einheitspartei Deutschlands) in 1954 and became a member of the DEFA Studio"s management.