Leading German actor, trained at the Max-Reinhardt-Academy in Berlin between 1955 and 1957. Wolff was mentored by the Austrian actress
Hilde Körber who suggested him for a role in
Veit Harlan's (then) controversial motion picture
Bewildered Youth (1957). Thereafter, Wollf acted primarily in mainstream, commercial entertainments, often as dashing, romantic heroes or as men of conscience. An example of the former is
Duel in the Forest (1958), with Wolff as a young aristocrat who throws in his lot with a group of patriotic brigands (led by 'Schinderhannes', as played by
Curd Jürgens) during Napoleon's occupation of the Rhineland. This straight-forward escapist adventure yarn was based on a play by
Carl Zuckmayer and directed by the accomplished
Helmut Käutner.
More complex screen personae include Wolff's wartime marine deserter in
Court Martial (1959), who, along with two comrades, is sentenced to death by a tribunal after leaving his sinking ship prematurely. Next, in
Verbrechen nach Schulschluß (1959), he is the ordinary student coaxed by a teacher to commit what amounts to be a criminal act. Betrayed by the teacher and ostracized by his authoritarian father, he is then pushed towards a life of crime, but ultimately redeemed in a happy ending (his co-star in this production was
Corny Collins who became Wolff's second wife in 1959). Yet again, as a man with scruples, Wolff in
The Day It Rained (1959) portrays a member of a vicious criminal gang who 'wants out', and, in the end, is presented with no choice but to blow the whistle on his ex-cronies. Further roles in prestige pictures saw Wolff alongside former Ufa star
Zarah Leander in
The Blue Moth (1959) (as a murder suspect) and with
Gert Fröbe in the classic melodrama
Via Mala (1961).
By the late 60s, Wolff worked increasingly on the small screen, playing distinguished gents in series and TV movies. Latterly at his most popular, he headlined as Forest Ranger Martin Rombach in the long-running ZDF family show
Forsthaus Falkenau (1989). First on stage from 1958 at the Berlin Hebbel Theater, Wolff has since acted in serious classical plays with the Deutsches Theater in Munich and in comedy, musicals and revues with the Komödie im Bayerischen Hof. As his theatrical output diminished, Wolff has become more and more prolific as a voice-over actor, providing the German language synchronizing for stars like
Rutger Hauer,
David Hemmings,
Franco Nero,
Alain Delon,
Robert Redford,
Dirk Bogarde and
Tom Courtenay.
Christian Wollf's third wife is the journalist Marina Handloser. They have a son, Patrick Wolff, who is also an actor.