Alice Ludwig

Alice Ludwig (or Alice Ludwig-Rasch) (15 January 1910 – 2 November 1973) was a German film editor who worked on many films and television series between 1932 and 1973. After first entering the film industry during the Weimar Republic, she worked continuously during the Nazi era. Following the Second World War she edited Marriage in the Shadows (1947), an anti-Nazi work of the rubble film period.[1] Much of her later film work was in popular melodramas such as Gabriela (1950). From the 1960s onwards she switched to working in television, her final employment being the editing over fifty episodes of the crime series Hamburg Transit.

Alice Ludwig
Born15 January 1910
Died2 November 1973 (1973-11-03) (aged 63)
Other namesAlice Ludwig-Rasch
Alice Ludwig Rasch
Alice Rasch
OccupationEditor
Years active1932–1973

Selected filmography

gollark: Specifically "the service provider has access to my messages, unencrypted", rather than "what if all consumer computing hardware has backdoors I can't fix".
gollark: Not really, you can defend fine against the actually-realistic-and-problematic-for-you issues.
gollark: It's not ideal.
gollark: And AMD has the platform security processor.
gollark: I mean, all recent Intel CPUs have the Intel Management Engine, i.e. a mini-CPU with full access to everything running unfathomable code.

References

  1. Shandley p.216

Bibliography

  • Shandley, Robert. Rubble Films: German Cinema in the Shadow of the Third Reich. Temple University Press, 2010


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