Marie Luise Droop
Marie Luise Droop | |
---|---|
Born |
Marie Martha Luise Fritsch January 15, 1890 Stettin |
Died |
August 22, 1959 (aged 69) Lahr |
Other names |
Marie Louise Droop Ludwig Fritsch |
Occupation | writer, director, producer |
Marie Luise Droop (15 January 1890 – 22 August 1959) was a German writer, director and producer.[1]
Biography
Marie Martha Luise Fritsch was born 15 January 1890 in Stettin. Her father was Karl Georg Fritsch, manager of a cement factory, her mother Emmeline Albertine Elisabeth Conradine Most, from a wealthy family of chocolate manufacturers. As a child she admired Karl May and founded a Karl May fanclub. In 1903 she sent May a letter and became his close friend until his death in 1912.[2]
She married Dr. Adolf Droop, a teacher who had written about May's work. Marie Luise Droop worked as an editor for Ullstein Verlag. During World War I, when her husband served in the army, she moved to Denmark where she worked for Nordisk Film. She returned to Germany after the war.[1][3]
1920 She co-founded Ustad Film with the aim to produce Karl May adaptations. Ustad Film produced Die Teufelsanbeter, Auf den Trümmern des Paradieses and Die Todeskarawane until it went bankrupt. All three films are considered lost.[4][5]
Marie Luise Droop wrote almost 50 screenplays for silent movies (three were adaptations of May's work) and, speaking nine languages, worked as a translator.[3]
Marie Luise Droop died 22 August 1959 in Lahr.
Filmography
(incomplete)
Year | Original title | English title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1918 | Der siebente Kuß | writer | ||
1919 | Das Lächeln der kleinen Beate | writer | ||
1919 | Maharadjahens yndlingshustru II | The Maharaja's Favourite Wife II | writer | Nordisk Film |
1920 | Die Teufelsanbeter | The Devil Worshippers | writer | Ustad Film |
1920 | Auf den Trümmern des Paradieses | On the Brink of Paradise | writer, producer | Ustad Film |
1920 | Die Todeskarawane | Caravan of Death | writer, producer | Ustad Film |
1920 | Das Fest der schwarzen Tulpe | director, writer | ||
1921 | Die Lieblingsfrau des Maharadscha - 3. Teil | writer | ||
1921 | Ehrenschuld | A Debt of Honour | writer | |
1922 | Divankatzen | writer | ||
1922 | Die Liebeslaube | writer | ||
1923 | Das rollende Schicksal | writer | ||
1924 | Der Mann um Mitternacht | writer | ||
1924 | Um eines Weibes Ehre | writer | ||
1925 | Die suchende Seele | writer | ||
1925 | Aschermittwoch | writer | ||
1925 | Das alte Ballhaus - 2. Teil | writer | ||
1925 | Das alte Ballhaus - 1. Teil | writer | ||
1925 | Die eiserne Braut | writer | ||
1925 | Volk in Not | writer | ||
1926 | Die Wiskottens | writer | ||
1926 | In Treue stark | writer | ||
1926 | Kampf der Geschlechter | writer | ||
1927 | Die Tochter des Kunstreiters | writer | ||
1927 | Deutsche Frauen - Deutsche Treue | writer | ||
1927 | Stolzenfels am Rhein | writer | ||
1927 | Steh' ich in finstrer Mitternacht | writer | ||
1927 | Das Mädchen aus Frisco | writer | ||
1929 | Was ist los mit Nanette? | writer | ||
1929 | Der Sittenrichter | writer | ||
1929 | Morgenröte | writer | credited as Ludwig Fritsch | |
1929 | Crucified Girl | writer | ||
1930 | Sturm auf drei Herzen | writer | credited as Ludwig Fritsch | |
1933 | Drei blaue Jungs, ein blondes Mädel | Three Bluejackets and a Blonde | writer | |
1934 | Die Reiter von Deutsch-Ostafrika | The Riders of German East Africa | writer | |
1936 | Die Drei um Christine | The Three After Christine | writer |
Notes and references
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 "Merhameh. Eine deutsche Karriere - Die Filmautorin Marie Luise Droop".
- ↑ Klapdor, Heike; Jacobsen, Wolfgang (26 March 1997). "Merhameh. Karl Mays schöne Spionin" (Podcast). SFB.
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 "Die Kinder Karl May's".
- ↑ "karl-may-filme-stummfilme".
- ↑ "Die Karl May Verfilmungen".
External links
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