Robert and Bertram (play)
Robert and Bertram (German: Robert und Bertram) is a comedy play by the German writer Gustav Räder, which was first staged in 1856.[1] It depicts the adventures of two wandering vagrants. It premiered in Dresden on 6 February 1856.[2] It served as the basis for a variety of different stage versions, loosely modelled on it. It was later turned into an 1888 opera Robert and Bertram.
Adaptations
The play has been adapted into a number of films:
- Robert and Bertram (1915 film), a silent German film adaptation directed by Max Mack
- Robert and Bertram (1928 film), a silent German film adaptation directed by Rudolf Walther-Fein
- Robert and Bertram (1938 film), a Polish film adaptation directed by Mieczysław Krawicz
- Robert and Bertram (1939 film), a German film adaptation directed by Hans H. Zerlett
- Robert and Bertram (1961 film), a German film adaptation directed by Hans Deppe
gollark: People have shops and those have brand names and such, but those aren't companies; mostly profit just goes right to the owner and investment is done by loans negotiated between individuals.
gollark: In my opinion, the main reason for that is that companies don't exactly exist here.
gollark: No stock exchange ever actually *happened*, and a centralized one would be easier to do than this.
gollark: I'm not sure how many people would actually bother to develop complex exchange code and such.
gollark: Oh, I see, sure then.
References
- O'Brien p. 32
- O'Brien p. 58
Bibliography
- O'Brien, Mary-Elizabeth (2006) [2004]. Nazi Cinema as Enchantment: The Politics of Entertainment in the Third Reich. Rochester, NY: Boydell & Brewer. ISBN 978-1-57113-334-2.
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