She was the daughter of the actor-manager
Carl Andreas Paulsen (1620–1679) and the actress Catharina Lydia (d. 1675). In 1671, she married the actor-manager
Johannes Velten (1640–1692). Her husband took over her father's theatre company in 1678. In the mid 17th century, women started to appear onstage in Germany, and in September 1655, "female players" are noted to have been performed in
Frankfurt for the first time. Under
Magister Velthen and his father-in-law, the first actresses were employed in Germany. Velthens wife Catharina Elisabeth Velten (1646–1712) acted with her mother and sister on stage in first in her father's and then in her husband's theater. The theater of her father was a family company, and both Catharina Elisabeth, her sister and her mother acted in it alongside her father and later her husband and brother-in-law. She debuted on the stage as a child, and acted in her father's and then in her husband's theater company. After the death of her husband in 1692, she took over the theater herself as manager and director. Her company was famous in Germany and the Nordic countries. She is described as an educated woman, and are known to have participated in a debate with the theatre-hostile deacon
Johann Joseph Winckler of Magdeburg, when she refused his Biblical arguments in Latin and Greek. ==See also==