Fulero's cabinet

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Kabinett Fulero was the first television game on German television with music and was broadcast in public television rooms on October 31, 1940 . The actors Herrmann Wagner , Herbert Gernot and the actress Angelika Feldmann made careers after the Second World War . Feldmann became the first female television announcer for North German Radio, Wagner is a well-known voice actor . Was written Cabinet Fulero of Doris Riehmer .

content

King Cyrillus leads a glamorous and romantic life in the Orient. He falls in love with the clever and calculating Tamara. Behind Tamara, however, stands the sinister Fulero, who reaches for the king's power and money. When Cyrillus loses his belongings due to intrigue, Tamara drops him. The former king starts to work and finds happiness with a Parisian flower girl. When she has a child from him, he shows true happiness.

music

The television music Fulero showed the composer “in the wake of Rachmaninov sound gestures and the Sweet harmonics of paralleled altered septnon chords.” Rio Gebhardt was since 1937 the first German music supervisor of the Bildfunk.

Reactions

The Hamburger Tageblatt wrote: “It's a unique feeling when you can be present at the most modern premiere of our time. You sit in front of the field of view of the television receiver - today a pleasure for a few, tomorrow in many German apartments. ”The Völkischer Beobachter of November 16, 1940 added:“ We can, marveling at the growing technology, see with satisfaction how it is The television station tries to create toys that lie between romance and reality and that are culturally and politically part of the present. "

After the Second World War

Contrary to the predictions of the Hamburger Tageblatt , the game was not repeated and disappeared unmentioned. The production was tendentiously directed against England.

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Wolfgang Thiel: Film music in the past and present . Henschelverlag Art and Society, 1981.
  2. Hamburger Tageblatt edition November 9, 1940
  3. Völkischer Beobachter edition November 6, 1940
  4. Article on Stimme.de , accessed on July 11, 2008