Walter Haag
Walter Haag (1898–1978) was a German art director. He worked on more than sixty films during his career including the 1940 historical melodrama The Heart of a Queen.[1]
Walter Haag | |
---|---|
Born | 14 February 1898 |
Died | 20 April 1978 |
Occupation | Art Director |
Years active | 1932 - 1968 (film) |
Selected filmography
- The Private Life of Louis XIV (1935)
- The Abduction of the Sabine Women (1936)
- The Heart of a Queen (1940)
- The Gasman (1941)
- Wedding in Barenhof (1942)
- The Great Love (1942)
- Between Heaven and Earth (1942)
- Back Then (1943)
- Keepers of the Night (1949)
- Amico (1949)
- My Niece Susanne (1950)
- A Day Will Come (1950)
- Doctor Praetorius (1950)
- Immortal Beloved (1951)
- The Day Before the Wedding (1952)
- Beloved Life (1953)
- The Blue Hour (1953)
- His Royal Highness (1953)
- She (1954)
- Night of Decision (1956)
- The Glass Tower (1957)
- King in Shadow (1957)
- A Woman Who Knows What She Wants (1958)
- Father, Mother and Nine Children (1958)
- Triplets on Board (1959)
- Of Course, the Motorists (1959)
- The Last Pedestrian (1960)
gollark: I've made my website (static-site-generated), a really slow search engine thing, dice roller, automatic music player thing which just runs from a directory of metadata-tagged music files, a Discord bot for something, Meme Economy Autotrader, a moderately popular browser extension for automating some specific task in an online game, various random "experiments" on my website, a virus for computers in a Minecraft computer mod (and many, many other things for that), and probably other random stuff.
gollark: I do programming myself, but I really only make random projects either for personal use, mild evil, or fun. They're basically all released as open source.
gollark: Also working but very slowly, buggily, inefficiently, badly or whatever else.
gollark: In general, I mean, there's such a thing as technical debt.
gollark: It does matter.
References
- Hull p.179-80
Bibliography
- Hull, David Stewart. Film in the Third Reich: A Study of the German Cinema, 1933-1945. University of California Press, 1969.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.