Charlotte Schultz

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Charlotte Schultz (* 21st September 1899 in East Prussia ; † 11. February 1946 in Berlin ) was a German actress and playwright .

Life

Schultz was engaged by Victor Barnowsky at the Lessing Theater in Berlin in 1917 . Later in 1925 there was an appearance at the Munich Schauspielhaus in George Bernard Shaw's Back to Methuselah with Therese Giehse and Emil Hess . In the 1930s there was also an activity at the Volksbühne Berlin . During her time at the Volksbühne, she also wrote the play Please ring twice! .

Charlotte Schultz came into contact with the film business as early as 1918 and subsequently appeared in a number of silent films as an actress. Among them was the production of Steuermann Holk by Ludwig Wolff with Paul Wegener , Asta Nielsen and Theodor Loos in 1920 . In the 1930s she acted in a variety of sound films. Examples of these are the Blown Traces of Veit Harlan with Kristina Söderbaum , Frits van Dongen and Friedrich Kayßler from 1938, but also the National Socialist propaganda film Jud Süß and the 1943 film adaptation of the novel Der kleine Grenzverkehr by Erich Kästner . In the film, directed by Hans Deppe, alongside Charlotte Schultz, Willy Fritsch and Hertha Feiler played .

Filmography

Remarks

  1. Unfortunately, the exact place of birth cannot be determined in the available sources. Charlotte Schultz in the Internet Movie Database (English) lists a place “Praesgen” or “Praesgen”. This location could not be further verified in the research. In this respect, the indication “East Prussia” remains.

literature

  • Johann Caspar Glenzdorf: Glenzdorf's international film lexicon. Biographical manual for the entire film industry. Volume 3: Peit – Zz. Prominent-Filmverlag, Bad Münder 1961, DNB 451560752 , pp. 1565-1566.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. a b Frank Noack: Veit Harlan. "The Devil's Director" . Belville, Munich 2000, ISBN 3-923646-85-2 , p. 151
  2. Günther Rühle (Ed.): Alfred Kerr: "I say what is to be said". Theater reviews 1893-1919. S. Fischer, Frankfurt a. M. 1998, ISBN 3-10-049510-1 , p. 931
  3. Photo on gettyimages.de; Retrieved July 22, 2015
  4. The small border traffic on Murnau Foundation online; Retrieved July 22, 2015