Gertrud Hinz

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Gertrud Hinz (born July 8, 1912 in Berlin ; † September 1, 1996 in Pullach ) was a German film editor .

Live and act

In the early 1930s, Gertrud Hinz trained as an editing trainee at the production company Afifa and was then taken on by UFA as a commercial clerk. On August 8, 1933, she became an assistant editor; In 1936 she was given sole responsibility for editing a feature film for the first time . From the beginning she was involved as an editor in top productions ( The Man Who Was Sherlock Holmes , Tango Notturno , The Song of the Desert ) of the Third Reich. In the final phase of the Second World War, Gertrud Hinz went to Bad Ischl ; she was not allowed to leave the American-occupied zone for over a year.

Eventually she settled in Munich-Grünwald and a little later resumed her work as an editor at Bavaria . Her work in the 1950s corresponds qualitatively to the artistic average that was usual in the cinema of the Adenauer era. Since the early 1960s, she concentrated on working on television (e.g. the series Kommissar Freytag and Der Vater und seine Sohn) . In the course of the 1970s she withdrew, now ailing, into private life.

Gertrud Hinz, who had taught the famous film editor Jutta Hering since the late phase of World War II , was briefly married to the special effects technician and cameraman Theo Nischwitz (1913–1994).

Filmography

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Life data and all information according to the film archive Kay Less