Viennese Girls
Viennese Girls | |
---|---|
Directed by | Willi Forst |
Produced by | Willi Forst |
Written by |
Franz Gribitz Erich Meder Willi Forst |
Starring |
Willi Forst Anton Edthofer Judith Holzmeister Dora Komar |
Music by |
Karl Pauspertl Willy Schmidt-Gentner |
Cinematography |
Viktor Meihsl Jan Stallich Hannes Staudinger |
Edited by |
Hermann Leitner Josefine Ramerstorfer Hans Wolff |
Production company | |
Distributed by |
Sascha Film (Austria) Sovexport (E.Germany) |
Release dates | 19 August 1949 (E. Germany) |
Running time | 109 minutes |
Country | Austria (Part of Greater Germany) |
Language | German |
Viennese Girls (German:Wiener Mädeln) is a 1945 historical musical film directed by Willi Forst and starring Forst, Anton Edthofer and Judith Holzmeister. The film was made by Wien-Film, a Vienna-based company set up after Austria had been incorporated into Greater Germany following the 1938 Anschluss. It was the third film in Forst's "Viennese Trilogy" which also included Operetta (1940) and Vienna Blood (1942). The film was finished in 1945, during the closing days of the Second World War. This led to severe delays in its release, which eventually took place in 1949 in two separate versions. One was released by the Soviet-backed Sovexport in the Eastern Bloc and the other by Forst.[1]
Synopsis
The composer Carl Michael Ziehrer produces twenty two operettas during his career, although he is overshadowed by the more successful Strauss Family.
Cast
- Willi Forst as Carl Michael Ziehrer
- Anton Edthofer as Hofrat Munk
- Judith Holzmeister as Klara, seine Tochter
- Dora Komar as Mitzi
- Vera Schmid as Liesl
- Filde Föda as Gretl, seine Tochter
- Hans Moser as Engelbert
- Edmund Schellhammer as Johann Strauß
- Friedl Haerlin as Mrs. Strauß
- Leopold Hainisch as Karl Haslinger
- Lizzi Holzschuh as Mrs. Haslinger
- Hansi Stork as Fürstin Pauline Metternich
- Curd Jürgens as Graf Lechenberg
- Ferdinand Mayerhofer as Ziehrer sen.
- Fred Liewehr as John Cross
- Alfred Neugebauer as Exposition director
- André Mattoni as His secretary
- Hedwig Bleibtreu as Lisi
- Fritz Imhoff as Paradeiser
- Max Gülstorff as Theatre director
- Hilde Konetzni as Singer
- Erik Frey
- Pepi Glöckner-Kramer
- Harry Hardt
- Victor Janson
- Peter Norman as Singer
- Fritz Odemar
- Oscar Sabo
- Jakob Tiedtke
- Egon von Jordan
- Lina Woiwode
References
- ↑ Hake p.167-168
Bibliography
- Hake, Sabine. Popular Cinema of the Third Reich. University of Texas Press, 2001.