Scandal in Bad Ischl
Scandal in Bad Ischl (German: Skandal in Ischl) is a 1957 Austrian historical comedy film directed by Rolf Thiele and starring O.W. Fischer, Elisabeth Müller and Ivan Desny.[1] The film takes place in 1910 in the spa town of Bad Ischl.
Scandal in Bad Ischl | |
---|---|
Directed by | Rolf Thiele |
Produced by | Otto Dürer |
Written by | Hermann Bahr (novel) Eberhard Keindorff Johanna Sibelius |
Starring | O.W. Fischer Elisabeth Müller Ivan Desny |
Music by | Bruno Uher |
Cinematography | Klaus von Rautenfeld |
Edited by | Hilwa von Boro |
Production company | Vienna Film |
Distributed by | Schorcht Filmverleih |
Release date | 3 December 1957 |
Running time | 94 minutes |
Country | Austria |
Language | German |
The film's sets were designed by the art director Felix Smetana. It was shot in Agfacolor.
Cast
- O.W. Fischer as Dr. Franz Duhr
- Elisabeth Müller as Viola Duhr
- Ivan Desny as Graf Vanin
- Nina Sandt as Marquise de Laforge
- Doris Kirchner as Ida, Sprechstundenhilfe
- Harry Meyen as Dr. Balsam, Assistenzarzt
- Michael Ande as Prinz Franz
- Alma Seidler as Erzherzogin Marie Antonie
- Raoul Retzer as Podlasni
- Senta Wengraf as Gräfin Ens
- Egon von Jordan
- Elisabeth Stiepl
- Edith Elmay as Mizzi
- Guido Wieland as Medizinalrat Duhr
- Carola Rasch as Komtesse Nina
- Hugo Lindinger as Bürgermeister
- Christl Erber as Therese Holzapfel
- Fritz Holzer as Redakteur Wieslinger
- Lutz Landers as Baron Bruno von Waldeck
- Helmut Lex as Leutnant Willi von Waldeck
- Rudolf Forster as Fürst Emanuel
- Susanne Engelhart as Julia, seine Frau
- Lorli Fischer as Rosi
- Willi Meissl-Berling as Dr. Hoffmann
- Karl Schellenberg as Dr. Swoboda
gollark: You should probably have used rsync.
gollark: You will need more disks and/or partitionary apiocubes.
gollark: I consider anomalous means used to transmit data into osmarks.net or otherwise servers "network links".
gollark: Then I would merely retroactively erase your network links.
gollark: Anyone who abuses this will be and has been erased from reality.
References
- Dassanowsky p.172
Bibliography
- Robert Dassanowsky. Austrian Cinema. McFarland & Co, 2005.
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