Erich Nadler

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Erich Nadler (born July 27, 1881 in Bahn , Greifenhagen district , † October 27, 1960 in Berlin-Wilmersdorf ) was a German actor on the stage and in film.

Live and act

Nadler started acting shortly after the turn of the century. His stage stations included Bromberg in West Prussia, Bochum, the English Theater Berlin, the Silesian Stage (Berlin / Breslau), the small Berlin summer stages Kleines Theater and Naturbühne, the Summer Theater Meißen and a guest performance director during the Second World War. The last season in the Third Reich (1943/44) took Erich Nadler to the Stadttheater Heilbronn. The artist from Pomerania began his post-war career in 1945 at the Stadttheater von Altenburg, where he stayed for four seasons until 1949. After that he only went on tour tours.

Erich Nadler came to the film quite late. There he was seen - from 1950 exclusively in DEFA productions - in a number of batch roles, for example as a police officer in the lively Albers - Rühmann comedy The Man Who Was Sherlock Holmes , as a game director in "Trocadero" at the side of Zarah Leander in Der Blaufuchs , as Father Heßling in Wolfgang Staudte's Der Untertan and most recently with a tiny role in the lavish co-production with France, Die Elenden .

Filmography

literature

  • Johann Caspar Glenzdorf: Glenzdorf's international film lexicon. Biographical manual for the entire film industry. Volume 2: Hed – Peis. Prominent-Filmverlag, Bad Münder 1961, DNB 451560744 , p. 1182 f.

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