Sun, Wine and Hard Nuts

Sun, Wine and Hard Nuts (German: Sonne, Wein und harte Nüsse) is a West German crime television series broadcast on ARD.[1]

Sun, Wine and Hard Nuts
GenreCrime drama
Directed byHermann Leitner
Dieter Lemmel
StarringErik Ode
Hilde Volk
Composer(s)Rolf Kühn
Country of originWest Germany
Original language(s)German
No. of series2
No. of episodes21
Production
Producer(s)Kurt Sippel
Running time25 minutes
Production company(s)Westdeutsches Werbefernsehen
Release
Original networkARD
Original release21 October 1977 
11 November 1981

A retired German police inspector goes to live on the French Riviera with his sister, but soon becomes involved helping the local police solve crimes. The show was a follow up to Erik Ode's role in the long-running Munich-set detective show Der Kommissar. The role of his sister was played by his real-life wife Hilde Volk. The series was shot on location in Provence.

Other actors who appeared in the series include Jane Tilden, Barbara Valentin, Karin Hardt, Marianne Wischmann, Carl-Heinz Schroth, Howard Vernon, Brigitte Horney, Wolfgang Kieling, Wolfgang Preiss, Lukas Ammann, Andrea Rau, Silvia Reize, Rudolf Schündler, Reinhard Kolldehoff, Heli Finkenzeller, Ivan Desny and Iris Berben. Reinhard Glemnitz who had been a cast member of Der Kommissar also featured in the series, with several in-jokes referring to his earlier role.

Main cast

  • Erik Ode as Eric Ott
  • Hilde Volk as Ilse Ott
  • Hans-Joachim Frick as Jean Giraud
  • Marianne Borgo as Claudine
  • Jean-Pierre Zola as Jeannot
gollark: If you aren't selecting for incredibly terrible people somehow, false allegations of whatever do not seem like a high probability enough outcome to be worth avoiding literally half of everyone ever.
gollark: I see.
gollark: ???
gollark: If the issue is bizarre school policy on food, did you consider running an illicit food smuggling ring?
gollark: Try consuming additional food.

References

  1. Bock & Bergfelder p.347

Bibliography

  • Hans-Michael Bock and Tim Bergfelder. The Concise Cinegraph: An Encyclopedia of German Cinema. Berghahn Books, 2009.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.