The Hundred in the Westentaschl

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The Hundred in Westentaschl is a Bavarian comedy by Max Neal and Max Ferner . It dates from 1930.

action

It is the early 1920s , shortly after the First World War . Tailor Sebastian Gaißreiter is currently changing a suit inherited from his war comrade Paul Fallbacher. Then the large farmer Xaver Gössenberger comes and demands the repayment of the 100 Mark debt. He has already written to Metzger and Kramer. Gössenberger condescendingly grants a day of reprieve.

In the evening Anderl, the son of the large farmer, brings a suit for cleaning and ironing over. During the ironing process, the tailor finds a hundred in his vest pocket. He takes this for himself. After a night of partying, he remembers his honesty and puts the hundred back in Paul's pocket. He gives it to his friend so that he can pay off his debts. Meanwhile the children of the tailor and the large farmer are forging marriage plans.

On the basis of a bottle of healing water from the neighboring health resort, the Gössenberger thinks that the Schneider's fountain is healing water. He had the water examined and then bought the tailor's house for 10,000 marks. When the fraud is discovered, the purchase is canceled. The marriage of the children is fixed. Then the worker comes who does the test drillings and says that the water from the well pipe is ordinary water, but three meters away in the ground is really a healing spring.

Film adaptations

Chiemgauer Volkstheater First broadcast: November 25, 2012

The recording took place on August 15 and 16 in the Gut Nederling Theater.

Individual evidence

  1. pieces catalog - Wilhelm Köhler Theater Verlag, Munich. Retrieved December 29, 2018 .
  2. Bayerischer Rundfunk: Chiemgauer Volkstheater: The Hundred in the Westentaschl . August 2, 2012 ( br.de [accessed December 29, 2018]).
  3. Chiemgauer Volkstheater - Der Hunderter im Westentaschl, theater recording, 2012. Accessed on December 29, 2018 .
  4. Bayerischer Rundfunk: Schwank: The Hundreds in Westentaschl . November 25, 2012 ( br.de [accessed December 29, 2018]).