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- Music Department
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John Pepusch was born in 1667 in Berlin, Germany. He is known for Emma (1996), Belle (2013) and The Beggar's Opera (1983). He died on 20 July 1752 in London, England, UK.- Frederick the Great was born on 24 January 1712 in Berlin, Germany. He died on 17 August 1786 in Potsdam, Germany.
- Soundtrack
Friedrich der Große was born on 24 January 1712 in Berlin, Prussia, Holy Roman Empire [now Germany]. He died on 17 August 1786 in Schloss Sanssouci, Potsdam, Prussia [now Brandenburg, Germany].- Ludwig Joachim von Arnim was raised as an orphan by his grandmother in Berlin. His father was not only very busy as a diplomat, but also as director of the Berlin Opera and managing his estate in the Uckermark and did not find time to raise his son. Arnim studied law and natural sciences in Halle from 1798 to 1799. From 1800 he devoted himself to mathematical studies at the University of Georgia-Augusta in Göttingen. There he first met early romantics like Ludwig Tieck. After meeting Johann Wolfgang von Goethe and Clemens Brentano, he became primarily interested in literature. A close, lifelong friendship and later romantic working relationship developed between Clemens Brentano and Arnim. From 1801 to 1804 he went on several educational trips through Europe with his brother - including France, Switzerland and England.
Before and during his travels, he collected oral folk songs. Then, in 1804, he began to compile the three-volume song collection "Des Knaben Wunderhorn" (1806 - 1808) with Clemens Brentano in Heidelberg. The first volume was published in 1805. Arnim didn't stop at collecting, but changed the texts, adapted them or rewritten them. In Heidelberg, Arnim and Brentano met the poets Joseph Karl Benedikt Freiherr von Eichendorff, Johann Joseph von Görres, Justinus Kerner, Ludwig Tieck and Philipp Otto Runge, with whom they formed the core of the Heidelberg Romantics. For political reasons, this circle turned to the Middle Ages in order to create national unity through this art era; the aesthetic aspect of art was of less interest. After the Peace of Tilsit in 1807, Arnim moved to Kassel and, together with Clemens Brentano, completed the second and third parts of the "Wunderhorn" with over 600 songs.
Goethe received the work with enthusiasm, which was also a great success and had a lasting effect on Romantic song poetry. The suggestions that came from this were reflected in ballads by Eduard Mörike, Heinrich Heine, Ludwig Uhland and Theodor Storm. In 1809 Arnim returned to Berlin and tried in vain to get a job in the Prussian civil service. The relationship with Clemens Brentano became even closer when Arnim married his sister Bettine Brentano. The two had already met in 1802. She became a writer herself after the death of Achim von Arnim. From 1808 to 1812, Armin joined the Berlin "Christian-German Table Society" of the patriots Heinrich Kleist, Adam Müller, Adalbert Chamisso, Ernst Moritz Arndt, Friedrich Baron da la Motte Fouqué and others who campaigned for the liberation of Prussia.
In 1813, Arnim took part in the War of Freedom as captain of a Landsturm battalion. In 1814 the von Arnim couple moved to the Wieperdorf estate, but also spent part of their time in Berlin. Armin linked his literary work to a political renewal that he saw as achievable with the help of art. The revival of traditional poetry played an important role. In the short story collection "The Winter Garden" (1809), traditional texts are edited and adapted. A year later, the novel "Poverty, Wealth, Guilt and Penance of Countess Dolores" (1810) was written, which represented a typically early romantic theme with its supernatural content and influenced other works of this era. His "Magazine for Hermits," which he published in collaboration with Brentano, also reflects this sign of renewal. In it he published numerous works by other romantics such as the brothers Jacob Grimm and Wilhelm Grimm. In book form, the journal is entitled "Solace-Loneliness".
His fantastic narrative works, such as the novella "Isabella of Egypt", which also integrate surreal, critical and historical elements, are becoming more widely known and are an important contribution to the early romantic era. His two major novels, "Countess Dolores" as a marriage novel and the fragmentary "Crown Guard" (1817) as a historical work, are period pieces that address contemporary society and address its shortcomings. With the latter work, Arnim significantly pushed forward the renewal of the historical novel in Germany. In 1818 his novella "The Mad Invalid at Fort Ratonneau" was published. Achim von Arnim's dramas are adaptations of traditional works such as the title "The Equals" or the play "Halle and Jerusalem", which goes back to Andreas Gryphius' tragedy "Cardenio and Celinde". After the freedom fights, Achim von Arnim withdrew to his estates in Wiepersdorf near Berlin and devoted himself to managing them.
Achim von Arnim died on January 21, 1831 in Wiepersdorf, Jüter district. - Composer
- Music Department
- Writer
Albert Lortzing was born on 23 October 1801 in Berlin, Prussia, Holy Roman Empire [now Germany]. He was a composer and writer, known for Zar und Zimmermann (1956), Zar und Zimmermann (1970) and Zar und Zimmermann: Singschule (1908). He was married to Rosina Regina Ahles. He died on 21 January 1851 in Berlin, Prussia [now Germany].- Ludwig Tieck was born on 31 May 1773 in Berlin, Prussia, Holy Roman Empire [now Germany]. He was a writer, known for Des Lebens Überfluss (1950), Leonor (1975) and Spannende Geschichten (1978). He died on 28 April 1853 in Berlin, Prussia [now Germany].
- Alexander von Humboldt spent the first years of his life in Tegel Palace in Berlin, the von Humboldt family estate. Together with his brother Wilhelm, he was taught by a private teacher during his childhood. Between 1787 and 1792, Alexander von Humboldt studied first at the universities of Frankfurt/Oder and Göttingen, later at the Hamburg Commercial Academy and at the Mining Academy in Freiberg. During this time Humboldt went on several study trips. From 1792 to 1796 he worked as an assessor in the Prussian mining service, he traveled extensively and was sent on diplomatic missions. He was particularly interested in scientific research into geography and the distribution of plants. In 1796 he left the Prussian service. After completing his studies, von Humboldt undertook several trips to conduct scientific research. In 1797 he met Johann Wolfgang von Goethe and Friedrich von Schiller.
During a stay in Paris, Humboldt met the doctor and botanist Aime Bonpland, who would later become his companion on several trips. From 1799 to 1804, Humboldt and Bonpland traveled to the Spanish provinces of South America: Venezuela, Cuba, Colombia, Ecuador, Peru, Mexico and back to Europe via the USA. In 75 days they covered 2,000 km on the Orinoco, explored the Amazon and proved that there is a connection between the Orinoco and the Amazon. In Ecuador, Alexander von Humboldt almost climbed to the summit of the Chimborazo volcano, which is 5,800 meters above sea level. Von Humboldt held a mountaineering altitude record for some time. During his trip he cataloged over 60,000 plants. He also investigated various scientific aspects: he recorded population statistics, examined political and social conditions, and was interested in geology, zoology, meteorology and linguistic research.
Alexander von Humboldt hardly missed any research area during his travels; his thirst for knowledge seemed inexhaustible. Von Humboldt continued to conduct scientific field research in the areas of physics, chemistry, geology, mineralogy, volcanology (overcoming Neptunism), botany (he founded plant geography), zoology, climatology (isotherms), oceanography and astronomy, but also on questions of economic geography, ethnology and demography. After his return, von Humboldt began working on his work "Voyage aux regions equinoxales du Nouveau Continent" in 1805 (until 1834). In 1805, von Humboldt received his doctorate from the University of Frankfurt/Oder, and a short time later he moved to Paris, where he lived mainly until 1827. Back in Berlin, he gave lectures on physical descriptions of the earth at the university there and also gave 16 public lectures at the Singakademie.
Now a respected scientist and scholar, von Humboldt began a nine-month journey to Russia and Siberia in 1829. After this trip he returned to Berlin, where he worked as a scientist until his death. He always wanted to make his scientific findings understandable to the people. "With knowledge comes thought, and with thought comes seriousness and strength." Today, over 1,000 plants, animals, mountains, rivers and products bear von Humboldt's name. - Adolf Glasbrenner was born on 27 March 1810 in Berlin, Prussia [now Germany]. He was a writer, known for Altberliner Possenabend: Die Menagerie (1961), Altberliner Possenabend: Der Heiratsantrag (1961) and 'Ne scheene jejend is det hier (1981). He was married to Adele Peroni. He died on 25 September 1876 in Berlin, Germany.
- Karl Gutzkow was born on 17 March 1811 in Berlin, Germany. He was a writer, known for Zopf und Schwert - Eine tolle Prinzessin (1926), Uriel Acosta (1920) and Die preußische Heirat (1974). He was married to Bertha Meidinger and Amalie Klönne. He died on 16 December 1878 in Sachsenhausen, Frankfurt am Main, Hesse, Germany.
- Gisela von Arnim was born on 30 August 1827 in Berlin, Germany. She was a writer, known for Gritta of the Rats' Castle (1985). She was married to Herman Grimm. She died on 4 April 1889 in Florence, Tuscany, Italy.
- Ernst Wilhelm Ritter von Brücke (6 July 1819 - 7 January 1892) was a German physician and physiologist. He is credited with contributions made in many facets of physiology. He graduated in medicine at the University of Berlin in 1842, and during the following year, he became a research assistant to Johannes Peter Müller. In 1845 he founded the Physikalische Gesellschaft (Physical Society) in Berlin, together with Emil Du Bois-Reymond, Hermann von Helmholtz and others, in the house of physicist Heinrich Gustav Magnus. Later on, this became known as the Deutsche Physikalische Gesellschaft (German Society of Physics). In 1846, Brücke was elected teacher of anatomy in the Akademie der Bildenden Künste, in Berlin. Following that, in 1848 he was appointed as professor of physiology at the University of Königsberg, replacing Karl Friedrich Burdach (1776-1847). In 1849 he acquired similar duties at the University of Vienna. In 1873, Emperor Franz Joseph I honored Brücke with a noble title-von Brücke-but he rarely used it.
- Paul Heyse was born on 13 March 1830 in Berlin, Germany. He was a writer, known for Your Favorite Story (1953) and Zwei Liebesgeschichten (1980). He was married to Anna Schubart and Margaret Kugler. He died on 2 April 1914 in Munich, Germany.
- After completing school, Rathenau completed practical training in his uncle's machine factory in Lower Silesia from 1855 to 1859. He then studied at the Polytechnic in Hanover and at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Zurich. He began his professional life in 1862 at the "August Borsig Locomotive Factory". He then worked for various companies in England. In 1865, together with a school friend, he acquired a machine factory in Berlin to build portable steam engines. In 1866 he married Mathilde Nachmann, daughter of a wealthy Frankfurt banker. The marriage resulted in two sons.
In 1873 the company was converted into a stock corporation that left Rathenau. With new capital he now tried to set up a telephone network in Berlin. However, the plans failed due to the Reichspost's claim to a monopoly. The attempt to promote the expansion of electric street lighting together with Werner von Siemens also failed. At the International Electricity Exhibition in Paris in 1881, he met the American scientist Thomas Alva Edison. In 1882, Emil Rathenau received licenses from Edison to commercially exploit his patents in Germany.
In 1983, the "German Edison Society" was founded under the leadership of Oskar von Miller and Rathenau. In 1887 the American Edison Company broke away from the company, which from then on operated as "AEG Allgemeine Electricity Company". In 1890 Oskar von Miller left the company and Rathenau became general director. Siemens and Deutsche Bank then invested in the company, which became an internationally active group in the following years. AEG produced power plants, railways and electrical machines and devices in various areas. The major cooperation agreement with Siemens ended in 1894, but continued to exist through the expansion of the "Telefunken Gesellschaft für Telegraphie", founded in 1903.
When the crisis in the electrical industry arose at the turn of the century, AEG emerged unscathed through a targeted merger and investment policy. In 1903 his son Walther Rathenau became a member of the AEG board of directors. From 1912 onwards, Emil Rathenau withdrew from active business due to illness, and his son followed him in the position of general director. - Dorrit Weixler was born on 27 March 1892 in Berlin, Germany. She was an actress, known for Das rosa Pantöffelchen (1913), Die das Glück narrt (1913) and Todesrauschen (1914). She died on 30 November 1916 in Berlin, Germany.
- Oskar Blumenthal was born on 13 March 1852 in Berlin, Germany. He was a writer, known for Im Weissen Rössl (1952), The White Horse Inn (1960) and Is Matrimony a Failure? (1922). He was married to Marie Franke. He died on 24 April 1917 in Berlin, Germany.
- Georg Simmel (1 March 1858 - 28 September 1918) was a German sociologist, philosopher, and critic.
Simmel was one of the first generation of German sociologists: his neo-Kantian approach laid the foundations for sociological antipositivism, asking 'What is society?' in a direct allusion to Kant's question 'What is nature?', presenting pioneering analyses of social individuality and fragmentation. For Simmel, culture referred to "the cultivation of individuals through the agency of external forms which have been objectified in the course of history". Simmel discussed social and cultural phenomena in terms of "forms" and "contents" with a transient relationship; form becoming content, and vice versa, dependent on the context. In this sense he was a forerunner to structuralist styles of reasoning in the social sciences. With his work on the metropolis, Simmel was a precursor of urban sociology, symbolic interactionism and social network analysis.
An acquaintance of Max Weber, Simmel wrote on the topic of personal character in a manner reminiscent of the sociological 'ideal type'. He broadly rejected academic standards, however, philosophically covering topics such as emotion and romantic love. Both Simmel and Weber's nonpositivist theory would inform the eclectic critical theory of the Frankfurt School.
Simmel's most famous works today are The Problems of the Philosophy of History (1892), The Philosophy of Money (1907), The Metropolis and Mental Life (1903), Soziologie (1908, inc. The Stranger, The Social Boundary, The Sociology of the Senses, The Sociology of Space, and On The Spatial Projections of Social Forms), and Fundamental Questions of Sociology (1917). He also wrote extensively on the philosophy of Schopenhauer and Nietzsche, as well on art, most notably his book Rembrandt: An Essay in the Philosophy of Art (1916). - Kurt Eisner was born on 14 May 1867 in Berlin, Germany. He was married to Elise Belli and Elisabeth Hendrich. He died on 21 February 1919 in Munich, Germany.
- Gustav Schönwald was born on 28 June 1868 in Berlin, Germany. Gustav was a director, known for Die Nacht der Entscheidung (1917), Die Schaffnerin der Linie 6 (1915) and Seine eigene Frau (1915). Gustav died on 25 August 1919 in Lankwitz, Berlin, Germany.
- Actor
- Producer
Harry Walden was born on 22 October 1875 in Berlin, Germany. He was an actor and producer, known for Der Umweg zur Ehe (1919), Zwei Welten (1919) and Der Mandarin (1918). He was married to Frieda Wagen-Hohenthal. He died on 4 June 1921 in Berlin, Germany.- Felix Philippi was born on 5 August 1851 in Berlin, Germany. Felix was a writer, known for Die Sieger (1918), Das Alte Lied (1915) and Die Ehrenreichs (1919). Felix died on 23 November 1921 in Berlin, Germany.
- He grew up in upper middle-class circumstances in Berlin, where he passed his high school diploma in 1884. In 1886 he began studying philosophy, physics and chemistry there, which he continued at the University of Strasbourg in the then annexed Alsace and completed his doctorate in electrical engineering in 1889. All Walther Rathenau's attempts to refuse to succeed his father in the "Allgemeine Electricity Company" (AEG), which had since been formed, initially failed. After Walther Rathenau had overseen the development of the electrochemical works in Bitterfeld and Rheinfelden, a branch of AEG, from 1893 to 1898, he joined the executive committees of AEG at the turn of the century. In 1912 he became a member of its supervisory board and in 1915 chairman of the supervisory board. At the same time, Walther Rathenau never gave up his political and philosophical inclinations. In addition to his entrepreneurial activity in the AEG, he distinguished himself through his first publications as a supporter of the bourgeois-liberal opposition to Wilhelminism.
In 1915, when his father Felix Deutsch died, he took over the management of AEG, while Walther Rathenau made do with special powers and the formal title of president. In the course of the First World War, Walther Rathenau's political ambitions became more concrete, as he organized the distribution and provision of raw materials for armaments production in the Prussian War Ministry. After the war defeat and the November Revolution of 1918, Rathenau tried to form a bourgeois collective party. As a member of the German Democratic Party (DDP), he initially took an active role as an economic expert in shaping the first German democracy. In May 1921 he joined the government as Reconstruction Minister. In the same year he became involved for the first time as a foreign policy representative of the Weimar Republic towards France and Great Britain. In January 1922 he was able to achieve a reduction in German reparations payments at the Allied Conference in Cannes. On January 31, 1922, Walther Rathenau was appointed Foreign Minister.
While he was unable to achieve success on the reparations issue at the subsequent World Economic Conference in Genoa, in April he succeeded in concluding the German-Soviet Treaty of Rapallo, which strengthened Germany's freedom of action in foreign policy. As his reputation grew abroad, he represented the interests of the young German republic against the victorious powers of 1918. The right-wing radical opponents of the Weimar Republic saw themselves provoked into an assassination attempt by the Foreign Minister's foreign policy policy and his Jewish origins.
Walther Rathenau fell victim to this on June 24, 1922 on the street in Berlin-Grunewald. The perpetrators were 2 officers from the right-wing extremist organization Consul. In his writings, Rathenau warned against mechanization and materialistic thinking. He represented the idea of a society beyond capitalism and socialism that would liberate the working class from "hereditary servitude". - Guido Herzfeld was born on 14 August 1851 in Berlin, Germany. He was an actor, known for Irrende Seelen (1921), Crown of Thorns (1923) and Theophrastus Paracelsus (1916). He died on 16 November 1923 in Berlin, Germany.
- Alfred Schmasow was born on 4 January 1863 in Berlin, Germany. He was an actor and writer, known for Das Loch in der Pfanne (1917), Terpsichore. Die Macht des Tanzes (1921) and Das Gastmahl des Satans (1920). He died on 16 May 1924 in Berlin, Germany.
- Actor
- Director
- Writer
Erwin Baron was born in 1878 in Berlin, Germany. He was an actor and director, known for Die Geliebte Tote (1919), Die Wittenberger Nachtigall (1913) and Lorbeerbaum und Bettelstab (1913). He died on 30 May 1924 in Berlin, Germany.- Producer
- Writer
Jules Greenbaum was born on 15 January 1867 in Berlin, Germany. He was a producer and writer, known for Der Andere (1913), Ramara (1916) and Schloss Phantom (1916). He died on 1 November 1924 in Berlin, Germany.- Ernst Georgy was born on 24 May 1873 in Berlin, Germany. She was a writer, known for Die Berliner Range. 1. Streich: Lotte als Schulschreck (1919) and Lotte kuppelt (1920). She died on 12 December 1924 in Berlin, Germany.
- Max Laurence was born on 7 August 1852 in Berlin, Germany. He was an actor, known for The Eyes of the Mummy (1918), Nur um 1000 Dollar (1918) and Der große Coup (1919). He died on 26 May 1926 in Berlin, Germany.
- Lothar Mehnert was born on 21 February 1875 in Berlin, Germany. He was an actor, known for Allein im Urwald (1922), The Haunted Castle (1921) and Der galante König - August der Starke (1920). He died on 30 November 1926.
- Actor
- Writer
- Producer
Emil Sondermann was born on 16 October 1852 in Berlin, Germany. He was an actor and writer, known for Sondi hat Pech (1915), Sondis Glück im Unglück (1915) and Sondis Kleine (1916). He died on 29 August 1927 in Berlin, Germany.- Director
- Producer
- Actor
Bruno Rahn was born on 24 November 1887 in Berlin, Germany. He was a director and producer, known for Hölle der Liebe - Erlebnisse aus einem Tanzpalast (1926), Gern hab' ich die Frauen geküßt (1926) and Das verlorene Paradies (1917). He died on 15 September 1927 in Berlin, Germany.- Valli Valli was born Marguerite Alice Knust on February 11, 1889 (some sources say 1882) in Berlin, Germany. She came from a prominent British family and was educated in Paris, France and London, England. At 12 she made her theater debut in a London production of "Gentle Ivy." Next she went to Berlin to star in the musical comedy "Morocco Bound." Her performances won rave reviews and she quickly became a popular star in Europe. She said "I don't care at all for laughter. My ambition is to develop the power to make people cry." The lovely actress went to New York City in 1905 to star on Broadway in "Veronique." Valli also starred in the Broadway shows "Kittey Grey" and "The Dollar Princess," then toured the United States with her vaudeville act.
In 1915 she made her film debut in the drama "The High Road." She was signed by B.A. Rolfe Photoplays and appeared in the films "The Woman Pays" and "Her Debt of Honor." Unfortunately, her film career failed and her contract was dropped. She married Louis Dreyfuss, the head of a musical-publishing house, in October 1917. She returned to Broadway in 1919 to star in "Miss Millions." The following year she moved back to England, where she continued to be a popular performer. Her two sisters, Ida Valli and Lulu Valli, also became actresses. During the summer of 1927 she became ill with consumption (tuberculosis). On November 4, 1927 she died at her Hampstead home at age 38. Her husband, who had been out of town, rushed home to be with her, but arrived a few minutes after she died. She was buried at Hampstead Cemetery in Hampstead, England. - Franz Ludwig was born on 8 April 1876 in Berlin, Germany. He was an actor, known for Bismarck 1862-1898 (1927), Bismarck (1914) and Bismarck, 1. Teil (1925). He died on 16 November 1927 in Bad Neuenahr, Germany.
- Emma Carus a beautiful and highly well-known contralto singing star who was in the cast of the original Ziegfeld Follies, frequently sang in vaudeville and Broadway theatre's in many musical dramas, appearing in 'Rally Round the Flag' at the Union Square Theatre in 1897. She appeared in only one film as herself in a short with some of the most popular celebraties of the day such as George M. Cohan, James J. Corbett, Marie Dressler, Eddie Foy and Annie Oakley and many more made by the Vitagraph Film Company in 1910. In 1911, Carus is said to have been largely responsible for helping introduce and popularize Irving Berlin's first major hit song 'Alexander's Ragtime Band' in Chicago, it especially became identified with her. Carus returned for a fourth year on the interstate Vaudeville circuit in 1914, this time she was accompanied by a dance partner, Carl Randall, she had a new stock of songs that included 'an Irish Suffragette'. Also notable for songwriting herself which includes 'Would You Be Satisfied Sally...' and also 'In the War of Hearts and Eyes'.
- Erwin Kopp was born on 3 July 1877 in Berlin, Germany. He was an actor, known for The Wildcat (1921), Tischlein deck dich, Eselein streck dich, Knüppel aus dem Sack (1921) and Die Radio Heirat (1924). He died on 24 April 1928.
- Composer
- Music Department
- Soundtrack
Ferdinand Hummel was born on 6 September 1855 in Berlin, Germany. He was a composer, known for Die Herrin der Welt 5. Teil - Ophir, die Stadt der Vergangenheit (1920), Schwert und Herd (1916) and Die Herrin der Welt 1. Teil - Die Freundin des gelben Mannes (1919). He died on 24 April 1928 in Berlin, Germany.- Actor
- Director
- Cinematographer
Albert Paul was born on 2 February 1856 in Berlin, Germany. He was an actor and director, known for Die Kaukasierin (1917), Homunculus (1916) and Ganz ohne Krause (1918). He died on 5 August 1928 in Dresden, Germany.- Erich Kaiser-Titz was born on 7 October 1875 in Berlin. He was an actor, known for Ramara (1916), Der Erbe von 'Het Steen' (1917) and Ein scharfer Schuss (1917). He died on 22 November 1928 in Berlin, Germany.
- Paula Eberty was born on 8 September 1869 in Berlin, Germany. She was an actress, known for Sünde am Weibe (1927), Der Hahn im Korb (1925) and Der Kelch der Keuschheit (1920). She died on 5 February 1929.
- Paul Ker was born on 3 February 1875 in Berlin, Germany. He was an actor, known for Love and the Law (1919). He was married to Annie Fair (concert singer). He died on 31 March 1929 in New York City, New York, USA.
- Albert Bruning was born on 7 October 1859 in Berlin, Germany. He was an actor, known for Sherlock Holmes (1922). He was married to Louisa "Lulu" Klein and Mary. He died on 10 April 1929 in New York, New York, USA.
- Prince Henry of Prussia was born on 14 August 1862 in Berlin, Germany. He was married to Princess Irene of Prussia. He died on 20 April 1929 in Hemmelmark, Schleswig-Holstein, Germany.
- Meta Seinemeyer was born on 5 September 1895 in Berlin, Germany. She was an actress, known for Der Freischütz (1918). She was married to Frieder Weißmann. She died on 19 August 1929 in Dresden, Germany.
- Gustav Stresemann was born on 10 May 1878 in Berlin, Germany. He was married to Käte Kleefeld. He died on 3 October 1929 in Berlin, Germany.
- William Bechtel was born on 12 June 1867 in Berlin, Germany. He was an actor, known for The Three Musketeers: Part 1 (1911), The Lurking Peril (1919) and It Is Never Too Late to Mend (1913). He was married to Mrs. William Bechtel. He died on 27 October 1930 in Hollywood, California, USA.
- Director
- Art Director
- Writer
Manfred Noa was born on 22 March 1893 in Berlin, Germany. He was a director and art director, known for Helen of Troy (1924), Berlin W. (1920) and Der heilige Hass, 1. Teil (1921). He died on 5 December 1930 in Berlin, Germany.- Actor
- Soundtrack
Hans Wassmann was born on 1 January 1873 in Berlin, Germany. He was an actor, known for Louise de Lavallière (1922), Der Liebeskäfig (1925) and Vater geht auf Reisen (1932). He died on 5 April 1932 in Berlin, Germany.- Hans Mühlhofer was born on 18 February 1878 in Berlin, Germany. He was an actor, known for Der Ruf der Liebe (1916), Das Skelett (1916) and Die Tochter des Rajah (1918). He died on 22 July 1932 in Berlin, Germany.
- Writer
- Composer
- Soundtrack
Marcellus Schiffer was born on 20 June 1892 in Berlin, Germany. He was a writer and composer, known for Magic in the Moonlight (2014), Kissing Jessica Stein (2001) and Das Lied einer Nacht (1932). He was married to Margo Lion. He died on 24 August 1932 in Berlin, Germany.- Werner Hollmann was born on 30 August 1882 in Berlin, Germany. He was an actor, known for Tropennächte (1931), Ich bei Tag und du bei Nacht (1932) and Mania. Die Geschichte einer Zigarettenarbeiterin (1918). He died on 3 March 1933 in Berlin, Germany.
- Paul Biensfeldt was born on 4 March 1869 in Berlin, Germany. He was an actor, known for Das schwarze Los (1913), Arme Violetta (1920) and Der Flug um den Erdball, 1. Teil - Paris bis Ceylon (1925). He died on 2 April 1933 in Berlin, Germany.