Jedermannstrasse 11

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Television broadcast
Original title Jedermannstrasse 11
Country of production Germany
original language German
Year (s) 1962-1963, 1965
length 25 minutes
Episodes 26 in 2 seasons
genre Family series
Director Ralph Lothar
script Iwa Vanya
German-language
first broadcast
November 9, 1962
occupation

Jedermannstraße 11 is a 26-part family series that was broadcast in two seasons starting in 1962 in the regional programs of ARD . It was produced by Chamier-Film Berlin on behalf of Berliner Werbefunk GmbH.

content

The former seaman Hermann "Hermännchen" Jeschke lives with his wife Tinchen in a tenement house in the fictional Berliner Jedermannstrasse 11. There he has the post of caretaker, but not only has to take care of the maintenance of the house, but also the worries and Accept the needs of the house residents, for which he always has an open ear and appropriate advice ready. He regularly begins this with the sentence: "How did our admiral always say? Boys, he said ..."

Others

The first season consisted of eight episodes and ran from November 1962 to March 1963. The second season with 18 episodes was shown from January to September 1965. The series was broadcast at different intervals, mostly weekly or fortnightly. It was based on the British series Coronation Street , which has been running since 1960, and in terms of content was again a forerunner of Lindenstrasse, which was produced from 1985 to 2020 .

Many well-known, primarily Berlin actors were seen in episode roles, such as Erich Fiedler , Klaus Dahlen , Inge Landgut , Gisela Fackeldey , Walter Gross , Karl John , Gudrun Genest and Ulli Lommel . Egon Vogel was the postman, he also took on this role from 1970 in the series Drüben bei Lehmanns .

The building at Leonhardtstrasse 7 in the Berlin district of Charlottenburg served as the filming location for the four-story apartment building . Other locations included Tempelhof Airport , Breitscheidplatz , Zoo Station and Lietzensee .

The series was released on DVD as part of the "The Most Beautiful TV Classics" series.

literature

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. a b Knut Hickethier: The Cozy Perseverance Community , Zeithistorische Forschungen, Issue 2/2014 , accessed on January 9, 2017
  2. a b Michael Reufsteck / Stefan Niggemeier: Das Fernsehlexikon, Goldmann Verlag, Berlin, 2005, ISBN 978-3-442-30124-9
  3. a b Jedermannstrasse 11 at fernsehserien.de, accessed on January 9, 2017
  4. Jedermannstrasse 11 at wunschliste.de, accessed on January 9, 2017