đ AI Undress Anybody đŚ
Check out Isa Andersen, real name Isa Jank, a German actress known for playinâ Clarissa von Anstetten on “Verbotene Liebe” (Forbidden Love).
She kicked off her career in Hollywood back in the â80s, actinâ alongside James Belushi in “Real Men” and poppinâ up in “Nightangel”, “Cheers”, and “Airwolf”.

By â92, Isa switched things up, droppinâ her U.S. gigs to head back to Germany for a role in the legal drama “Liebling Kreuzberg”.
In â94, she jumped into “Verbotene Liebe” as Clarissa von Anstetten, stickinâ around for nearly three years before gettinâ written out in a wild kidnappinâ plot that lasted six months. She came back, stayed two more years, but things got messy with the showâs producers by late â99. After a quick two-month break, she returned in February 2000, but the trust was gone, and she peaced out for good in summer 2001 after a big showdown with her rival Tanja von Anstetten, played by Miriam Lahnstein. Clarissaâs plane crash exit left folks wonderinâ if she was really gone, and even when Lahnstein returned in 2004, the show kept it vague.


In October 2005, Isa hit the screen again as the shady Annabelle Gravenberg in the ZDF telenovela “Wege zum GlĂźck”. The role felt a lot like Clarissa, and fans kept askinâ about her old gig. She rocked that part for three years until Annabelleâs on-screen death in November 2008, right before the show wrapped.


Since “Wege zum GlĂźck” and “Verbotene Liebe” were both cooked up by Grundy UFA, the internet was buzzinâ with talk that Isa Jank might slide back into her old role as Clarissa. “Verbotene Liebe” was strugglinâ with weak storylines at the time and couldâve used a character like Clarissa to shake things up, but Isa shut down any talk of a comeback. No clue if she even sat down with the showâs producers. Still, over two years later, in early 2011, Das Erste dropped the news that Isa Jank was returninâ as Clarissa. She popped back up in June 2011 for a six-month special shot on the Spanish island of Mallorca before rejoininâ the crew in Cologne.








