Almost 30 percent of Germans are still not vaccinated against Corona.
Actress Natalia Wörner no longer wants to shoot with unvaccinated colleagues.
Berlin - Corona has Germany under control again.
There are new record incidences almost every day, the death rate is rising and the hospitals are at their limit.
Even so, around 30 percent of citizens are not vaccinated.
The unvaccinated seems to exist in every industry, as the example of Joshua Kimmich recently showed *.
Even in film and television there are still hesitants and refusers.
Actress Natalia Wörner is making a film about Corona
Actress Natalia Wörner, known from several crime scenes and "Rosamunde Pilcher" film adaptations, is currently shooting the film "The world is still", which deals with the corona pandemic.
In the
She plays the main role as an intensive care doctor who fights the virus until she infects herself.
At first, the actress didn't take the pandemic herself that seriously.
When skiing in early 2020, she made fun of mask wearers.
"A short time later, the moment came when I realized that something was coming up that we couldn't deal with at first," she told the
picture
.
She is following the current vaccination discussion closely, because that is also a topic in the film: “I assume that the film will provide quite a lot of discussion material, because unfortunately there are still too many people who do not get vaccinated . "
Wörner railed against unvaccinated colleagues - "Wouldn't shoot with them"
She herself cannot understand why one does not vaccinate: “I am against compulsory vaccination.
However, I have no sympathy for people who do not want to be vaccinated.
On the one hand, they are demanding their maximum freedom back, but they show no willingness to do anything to help protect the community.
During the shooting, Wörner, according to the
picture,
like everyone involved
,
does a quick test every day and a PCR test every two days.
That is not enough for the actress, who is in a relationship with Foreign Minister Heiko Maas.
She asked all employees and also her colleagues if they were vaccinated.
“To be honest, if I had to make a film with someone who doesn't want to be vaccinated, I wouldn't do that.
I don't see why I should put myself and my loved ones at risk because someone decides to refuse to be vaccinated.
I just wouldn't feel comfortable doing it. ”
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