Ihre Hoheit die Tänzerin (film)
Ihre Hoheit die Tänzerin | |
---|---|
Directed by | Richard Eichberg |
Starring |
Lee Parry Robert Scholz Bela Lugosi |
Release date |
|
Country | Weimar Republic |
Language | Silent |
Ihre Hoheit die Tänzerin (Her Highness the Dancer) is a 1922 German silent film directed by Richard Eichberg and featuring Bela Lugosi.
The original film was banned by the Film Review Office: it was not to be shown in the Weimar Republic. The makers appealed, but the Office considered the film "corruptive" and the appeal was rejected[1] A shortened version was again not approved. Finally on 16 January 1923 a version of the film, now renamed Der Leidensweg der Eva Grunwald (The Ordeal of Eva Grunwald) was approved, considered suitable for adults only. This approved version consisted of 5 acts and totalled 1887 meters of film, compared to the original's 6 acts, 1995m.[2]
Cast
- Lee Parry as Eva Grunwald
- Eduard Rothauser as Herrmann Grunwald, glockner of St Mary's
- Aruth Wartan as Gadvan
- Syme Delmar as Ruth Irving
- Rudolf Zolling as Organist of St Mary's
- Max Wogritsch as Wolfgang Tautlingen
- Walter Steinbeck as Lord Cecil Gloster
- Paul Ludwig as Coppers, Lord Cecil's secretary
- Robert Scholz
- Violetta Napierska
- Bela Lugosi
- Chief Tahachee as German Man (uncredited)
See also
Notes and references
- ↑ "Decision on 10 November 1922" (PDF). by the Berlin Film Review Office and "rejection of appeal on 14 November 1922" (PDF).
- ↑ "filmportal.de".
External links
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