Karl Friedrich Cerf
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Karl Friedrich Cerf (February 27, 1771, Unterreissheim-on-the-Main, Germany—November 6, 1845, Berlin) was a German theatrical manager.
Cerf was born a Jew but embraced Christianity when very young. He had to support his father's family when only seventeen years old. After having been engaged for many years in the horse trade at Dessau, he rose to the post of chief military agent, and in this capacity took part in the campaign of 1813-15, under Count Peter Wittgenstein, general of the Russian army. The courage and fidelity displayed by Cerf won for him the favor of Emperor Alexander I, who conferred on him a gold medal.
Cerf then settled at Berlin, and in 1822 obtained from Friedrich Wilhelm III a perpetual grant for the erection of the Königsstädtisches Theater. The theater opened on August 4, 1824 in Alexanderstraße. It was devoted to French comedy and Italian opera. Cerf managed it until his death.
His son Rudolf Cerf was also a Berlin theater owner and manager, inheriting the theater concession from his father. On October 12, 1852 he opened the Neues Königstädtisches Theater. In 1855 he also opened the Königstädtisches Vaudeville-Theater.[1]
[edit] References
[edit] Bibliography
- Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie, iv. 89
- J. F. A. de Le Roi, Geschichte der Evangelischen Juden-Mission, p. 249
[edit] External links
- The Königsstädtisches Theater at the German Wikipedia
- The Neues Königstädtisches Theater with a photo
This article incorporates text from the 1901–1906 Jewish Encyclopedia article "Cerf, Karl Friedrich" by Isidore Singer and Isaac Broydé, a publication now in the public domain.