The sweet girl (film)
Movie | |
---|---|
Original title | The sweet girl |
Country of production | Germany |
original language | German |
Publishing year | 1926 |
Rod | |
Director | Manfred Noa |
script |
Leo Stein , Joseph Than , Ludwig von Wohl |
production | Noa film |
music |
Hans May , after H. Reinhardt |
camera | Otto Kanturek |
occupation | |
|
Das süße Mädel , in Austria Das süße Wienermädel , is a film by the director Manfred Noa from 1926. It is based on the operetta of the same name, Das süße Mädel by Heinrich Reinhardt . Their librettist Leo Stein was also responsible for the script.
background
Otto Kanturek took care of the photography . The film buildings were built by Hermann Warm and Gustav A. Knauer . The script based on the libretto by Leo Stein was written by Joseph Than and Ludwig von Wohl together with the librettist.
Swedish actor Nils Ashter played the prince's son.
The film was a production by Noa-Film GmbH. Berlin, Manfred Noa's own company, founded in 1926, and was submitted to the Reich film censorship on September 17, 1926 . The first performance in Berlin was on October 8, 1926. In Austria the film was called Das süße Wienermädel . Süd-Film AG took over the distribution for Germany
The film was released in Sweden on September 20, 1930 under the title Kabaretprinsessan .
An explanation of the film title: “ The title, Süßes Mädel, was a fin de siecle Viennese term for a certain type of sweet, lower class girl who associated with the upper classes without much hope of marriage. ”
A program booklet for the film has been preserved in the Federal Archives (archival reference: BArch, FILMSG 1/16363).
Trivia
The director Manfred Noa has a cameo as a dancer in this film .
In Bytom (Beuthen) in Upper Silesia , the well-known singer Martha Cassier presented 'melodious inserts' for the performance of Das süße Mädel live in the cinema.
Web links
- The sweet girl in the Internet Movie Database (English)
- The sweet girl at filmportal.de
Illustrations
- "Ross" postcard no. 1516/1 with Imogen Robertson / Mary Nolan as "Sweet Girl"
- "Ross" postcard No. 3607/1 with Mary Parker, recte Magdalene Prohaska
Individual evidence
- ↑ cf. nilsasther
- ↑ cf. Swedish-film-database
- ↑ at nilsasther
- ↑ cf. The sweet girl (DT) (Director: Manfred Noa) in the German Digital Library
- ↑ cf. Claus Tieber, Anna Katharina Windisch (Eds.): The Sounds of Silent Films: New Perspectives on History, Theory and Practice. Palgrave Studies in Audio-Visual Culture. Palgrave Macmillan Publishing House, 2014, ISBN 978-1-137-41071-9 , footnote 45.