His Late Excellency (1927 film)
His Late Excellency (German: Die selige Exzellenz) is a 1927 German silent film directed by Adolf E. Licho and Wilhelm Thiele and starring Willy Fritsch, Olga Tschechowa, and Ernst Gronau.[1]
His Late Excellency | |
---|---|
Directed by | |
Written by |
|
Starring |
|
Cinematography | Werner Brandes |
Production company | UFA |
Distributed by | Parufamet |
Release date |
|
Running time | 100 minutes |
Country | Germany |
Language |
|
The film's sets were designed by the art director Erich Czerwonski and Günther Hentschel.
Cast
- Willy Fritsch as Fürst Ernst Albrecht
- Olga Tschechowa as Baronin von Windegg
- Ernst Gronau as Alte Exzellenz
- Max Gülstorff as Max Buxbaum
- Lydia Potechina as Mathilde Buxbaum
- Truus Van Aalten as Elsa Bucbaum, die Tochter
- Hans Junkermann as Baron von Gillingen
- Max Hansen as Sekretär Conrad Weber
- Julius Falkenstein as Apotheker Paschke
- Fritz Kampers
- Adolf E. Licho
- Albert Paulig
gollark: These are very phasic, I must say. Glad I used apionic induction to use this information!
gollark: The CSS is obviously the kind I write (trivially), it inconsistently uses fairly advanced new JS like template strings and destructuring and Uint8Arrays, it uses overly general operations like zip and cartesian product and map and insertDiagonalFrom, it also uses the exotic labelling feature, I doubt many people here know about WebWorkers or the ridiculous hack I came up with a while ago to do them without an actual external file, it does IO in such an ugly accursed way, and the AI is insane.
gollark: But it would have been funny, at least.
gollark: I decided not to because I knew it was you anyway and giving other people more information would be bad.
gollark: Wow, I really should have actually run the bruteforce thing.
References
- Bock & Bergfelder, p. 134.
Bibliography
- Bock, Hans-Michael; Bergfelder, Tim, eds. (2009). The Concise Cinegraph: Encyclopaedia of German Cinema. New York: Berghahn Books. ISBN 978-1-57181-655-9.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.