Her Highness Dances the Waltz (1935 film)
Her Highness Dances the Waltz | |
---|---|
Directed by | Max Neufeld |
Written by | Julius Brammer (operetta) Alfred Grünwald (operetta) Max Neufeld |
Produced by | Julius Außenberg |
Starring | Irén Ágay André Mattoni Hans Homma |
Cinematography | Willy Goldberger |
Edited by | Jan Kohout Antonín Zelenka |
Music by | Leo Ascher (operetta) |
Production company | |
Distributed by | Elektafilm Huschak & Company Bavaria-film |
Release date | 25 December 1935 |
Country | Czechoslovakia |
Language | German |
Budget | 3,000,000 Kčs (for both versisons) |
Her Highness Dances the Waltz (German: Hoheit tanzt Walzer) is a 1935 musical comedy film directed by Max Neufeld and starring Irén Ágay, André Mattoni and Hans Homma.[1] The operetta film is based on the 1912 operetta Hoheit tanzt Walzer by Leo Ascher (music) and Alfred Grünwald (libretto). It was made as an at the Barrandov Studios in Prague. It is one of the few Czech productions that was not made in Czech.[2] The film's sets were designed by the art director Artur Berger. A French version was released in 1936.
Cast[]
- Irén Ágay as Princess Marika
- André Mattoni as Prince Georg
- Hans Homma as Fürst Franz von Hohenau
- Anna Kallina as Agnes, Fürst Hohenau's wife
- as Liesl, Fürst Hohenaus' daughter
- Maria Balcerkiewiczówna as Countess Lubowska
- Teddy Bill
- as Hofer, music copyist
- Hans Jaray as Josef Langer, composer
- Eugen Neufeld
- Camilla Spira
See also[]
References[]
- ^ Von Dassanowsky p. 9
- ^ Michal Večeřa (2012). Elektafilm – největší výrobní koncern československého filmu v meziválečném období (PDF) (Mgr.) (in Czech). Masaryk University.
Bibliography[]
- Dassanowsky, Robert von. World Film Locations: Vienna. Intellect Books, 2012.
External links[]
Categories:
- German-language films
- 1935 films
- 1935 musical comedy films
- Czech musical comedy films
- Czech films
- Films directed by Max Neufeld
- Operetta films
- Films based on operettas
- Films shot at Barrandov Studios
- Czechoslovak black-and-white films
- Czechoslovak films
- Musical comedy film stubs