Hans Jacoby
Hans Jacoby | |
---|---|
Born |
23 October 1904 Breslau, Silesia German Empire |
Died |
31 October 1963 Zurich, Switzerland |
Occupation |
Screenwriter Art director |
Years active | 1921-1963 |
Hans Jacoby (1904–1963) was a German screenwriter and art director. Jacoby worked designing film sets during the Weimar Era, and from the late 1920s began contributing scripts as well. Jacoby was of Jewish background[1] and was forced to go into exile when the Nazi Party took power in 1933. Jacoby settled in the United States for many years, working on the screenplays of a number of Hollywood productions. He returned to Germany in the mid-1950s, and worked in the West German film industry until his death.
Selected filmography
Art director
- Dämon Zirkus (1923)
- The Other (1924)
- The Woman Who Did (1925)
- Vienna - Berlin (1926)
- Svengali (1927)
- Queen Louise (1927)
- Heimweh (1927)
- The Schorrsiegel Affair (1928)
- Fräulein Chauffeur (1928)
- Misled Youth (1929)
- The Right of the Unborn (1929)
- Fight of the Tertia (1929)
- The Woman in the Advocate's Gown (1929)
- Gold on the Street (1930)
Screenwriter
- The Land of Smiles (1930)
- There Goes Susie (1934)
- I Was an Adventuress (1938)
- Gibraltar (1938)
- Princess Tarakanova (1938)
- Without Tomorrow (1940)
- Night in December (1940)
- I Was an Adventuress (1940)
- Between Us Girls (1942)
- The Amazing Mrs. Holliday (1943)
- Phantom of the Opera (1943)
- Tars and Spars (1946)
- Champagne for Caesar (1950)
- Tarzan and the Slave Girl (1950)
- Sirocco (1951)
- Reunion in Reno (1951)
- Tarzan's Savage Fury (1952)
- Taxi (1953)
- Carnival Story (1954)
- Stranger from Venus (1954)
- Vater sein dagegen sehr (1957)
- The Mad Bomberg (1957)
- Eva (1958)
- It Happened in Broad Daylight (1958)
- The Man Who Walked Through the Wall (1959)
- Menschen im Hotel (1959)
- The Black Sheep (1960)
- The Good Soldier Schweik (1960)
- The Liar (1961)
References
- ↑ Prawer p.212
Bibliography
- Prawer, S.S. Between Two Worlds: The Jewish Presence in German and Austrian Film, 1910–1933. Berghahn Books, 2005.