Background
Clarin was born Hans-Joachim Schmid in Wilhelmshaven, and grew up in Frankfurt am Main.
Clarin was born Hans-Joachim Schmid in Wilhelmshaven, and grew up in Frankfurt am Main.
After graduation he studied acting in Munich from 1948 to 1950.
He became a well-known voice actor of characters in children audio plays, particularly the kobold Pumuckl (including its television and cinematic film adaptations), the German voice of René Goscinny and Albert Uderzo"s diminutive Gaulish hero Asterix (in circa 30 German audioplay adaptations of the Asterix comic books, produced and published 1986-1992 under the Europa label), and the ghost Hui Buh. He made his début appearance in 1950 in Franz Grillparzer"s play Weh dem, der lügt ("Woe to him who lies"). From 1952 until 1967 he was employed by the Bavarian State Theatre in Munich, where appeared in plays like A Midsummer Night"s Dream, Leonce and Lena, Woyzeck and The Blue Angel, and gained a reputation as a character actor who excelled in both comic and dramatic roles, as well as musicals and opera.
He made his first appearance on film in 1952, playing the title role in Zwerg Nase, based on a fairy tale by Wilhelm Hauff.
He went on to appear in over 100 television and feature films, including The Haunted Castle (1960), The Indian Scarf (1963) and Pippi Longstocking (1969). On television, he gained popularity through roles in the series Weißblaue Geschichten (1985), Fest im Sattel (1988), Rivalen der Rennbahn (1989), Peter und Paul (1992), Titus, der Satansbraten (1997), as well as making appearances in the long running crime series Ein Fall für zwei, Der Alte and Tatort.
Between 1995 and 2000 he appeared in five productions by the Chiemgauer Volkstheater. Clarin was also a voice artist, dubbing the voice for "Kookie" Kookson in the United States series 77 Sunset Strip, and playing the title role in the children"s audio series Hui Buh and Pumuckl.
On 28 August 2005 Clarin died aged 75, in his adopted hometown of Aschau im Chiemgau, of heart failure.