Hermann Fritzsching

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Hermann Fritzsching (* 1900 ; † August 13, 1954 in Berlin-Charlottenburg ) was a sound engineer for German film.

Live and act

Fritzsching trained as a graduate engineer and began his professional career in the Siemens laboratory . On September 1, 1929, he switched to the film industry.

His first job was the sound technical support of the early sound film (shooting time: October to December 1929) The immortal rascal by Gustav Ucicky . He was to work with Ucicky frequently in the years to come, including on his German-national productions The Flute Concert of Sans-souci , Morgenrot and Refugees . Fritzsching also oversaw UFA comedy classics such as Die Drei von der Gasstelle , several productions by Reinhold Schünzel and the two cash- rich Hans Albers - Heinz Rühmann cooperations Bombs on Monte Carlo and The Man Who Was Sherlock Holmes . Since 1938 Fritzsching had not been personally active in film production for almost a decade and a half.

His post-war career did not begin until the early 1950s, and Fritzsching died unexpectedly in 1954. Two of his last works, A Life for Do and The Witch , had brought him back together with Ucicky.

Movies

literature

  • Johann Caspar Glenzdorf: Glenzdorf's international film lexicon. Biographical manual for the entire film industry. Volume 1: A-Heck. Prominent-Filmverlag, Bad Münder 1960, DNB 451560736 , p. 453.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. according to filmportal.de. Glenzdorf calls August 20th
  2. ^ Film archive Kay Less