
Greta Schroeder
**Greta Schröder (1891-1967)** was a German actress, best known for her intense performances in silent cinema and her association with German Expressionism.
Her most iconic role was that of Ellen Hutter in F.W. Murnau's Expressionist masterpiece *Nosferatu, Eine Symphonie des Grauens* (1922). In this film, Schröder embodied vulnerability and purity threatened by supernatural evil, becoming a symbolic face of primordial horror cinema.
Although *Nosferatu* remains her most celebrated film, Schröder had a prolific career, acting in numerous other silent and sound films, including Fritz Lang's *Die Nibelungen* (1924), albeit in minor roles. Her acting style was distinguished by a restrained yet expressive performance, suited to the psychological dramas and gothic atmospheres of the era. She continued to work until the 1950s, leaving a significant mark on the history of German cinema.