Furtwänglerstraße 19
The single-family house at Furtwänglerstraße 19 in Berlin-Grunewald has been a listed building since 1993 .
history
The architect Fritz Taphorn built a home here from 1934 to 1935 . His plans were carried out by the brothers Walter Krüger and Johannes Krüger . This resulted in mixed architectural forms. The expressionist clinker building was embedded in a country house style by the brothers . The traufständige , from a steep gable roof finished clinker cube has a round bow window and carved wooden pillars in the entrance lobby.
In 1967 the property was acquired by Ulrich Schamoni from the proceeds of his film It . For cost reasons, the choice of filming locations later fell on his house, and he welcomed this choice with the words: “Well, great, then I don't even have to go outside to shoot.” He shot the following films there:
- 1970: We Two (Director / Screenplay / Actor)
- 1974: Chapeau Claque (Director / Screenplay / Actor)
- 1980: The Dream House (Director)
- 2012: Farewell to the frogs posthumous by the daughter of Ulrike Schamoni released
Schamoni died in this house on March 9, 1998.
See also
literature
- Rainer Haubrich , Hans Wolfgang Hoffmann, Philipp Meuser: Berlin, architecture guide. Berlin 2006, ISBN 3-935455-77-1 .
Web links
- Entry in the Berlin State Monument List
- Grunewald: Residence of the rich, beautiful and successful , berlin-magazin.info, excerpts from the book by Michaela Schubert and Wolfgang Bernschein: Berlin Reisen - a film , Wolbern Verlag, Berlin, Potsdam, ISBN 978-3980847278
Individual evidence
- ↑ Homage to Ulrich Schamoni: His widow presents her first film. In: Berliner Morgenpost. dated May 30, 2008.
Coordinates: 52 ° 28 ′ 57 " N , 13 ° 16 ′ 40.7" E