Commissioner Konrad
Commissioner Konrad | |||
---|---|---|---|
Channel | MR | ||
active | 1971-1977 | ||
place | Frankfurt am Main | ||
Assistants | constantly changing | ||
cases | 8 + 4 guest appearances | ||
predecessor | first HR investigator | ||
successor | Commissioner Bergmann | ||
Place of investigation Frankfurt am Main |
Commissioner Konrad was a figure of the ARD - crime series Tatort . Konrad was embodied by the German actor Klaus Höhne . Konrad was the first crime scene investigator for the Hessischer Rundfunk (HR) and worked in Frankfurt am Main. He starred in eight Tatort episodes that aired between 1971 and 1979.
In addition, Commissioner Konrad made guest appearances in four other Tatort episodes in 1971 and 1979 .
figure
Chief Inspector Konrad, whose first name is unknown, worked for the criminal police in Frankfurt am Main. He was supported by his team colleagues Robert Luck and Robert Wegner and Wegener. An Opel Rekord was available to him as a company car; privately he preferred his Alfa Romeo.
Inspector Konrad was married, his wife ran the household and received economic money from him. The couple was childless. The Konrads preferred to spend their vacation in Bavaria. Since Konrad was 40, he suffered from rheumatism. When he was granted a cure, he postponed it because he had a case to solve. He wasn't a person who was good at telling jokes. But Commissioner Konrad was interested in culture. He liked painting, spoke French and had a special hobby: magic. He also tricked so many colleagues in the police station.
Follow with Konrad as the main investigator
case | title | First broadcast | episode | script | Director | particularities |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Frankfurt gold | Apr 4, 1971 | 6th | Eberhard Fechner | Eberhard Fechner | When it was first broadcast on German television on April 4, 1971, the film achieved an audience rating of 55%. The case is based on a true story, a fraud case from the 1960s. |
2 | The ghost train case | March 12, 1972 | 16 | Hansjörg Martin , Hans Dieter Schwarze | Hans Dieter Black | When it was first broadcast on German television on March 12, 1972, the film achieved an audience rating of 59%. The ghost train case is one of the shortest crime scenes at 73 minutes and is one of the so-called poison cabinet episodes. These are episodes that are blocked by a sender's internal block and are not allowed to be broadcast until further notice. The production company Horst Film GmbH & Co. KG Berlin had to file for bankruptcy shortly after the first broadcast, and therefore the licensing rights are not entirely clear. Therefore the Hessischer Rundfunk has refrained from repetitions until clarification. |
3 | Password have a good trip | Dec 10, 1972 | 24 | Daniel Christoff | Georg Tressler | This is one of the very rare crime scene episodes in which a homicide is not determined. The only person dead here is the accident victim Sielmann, at the very end. |
4th | A surefire thing | Feb. 17, 1974 | 37 | Herbert Lichtenfeld | Thomas Fantl | This episode achieved a market share of 65% when it was first broadcast |
5 | The invoice will be submitted later | Jan. 19, 1975 | 47 | Herbert Lichtenfeld | Fritz Umgelter | This episode achieved a market share of 52% when it was first broadcast. Karl-Heinz von Hassel plays a minor role as a prison doctor ten years before his debut as Inspector Brinkmann. |
6th | Two tickets to Rio | Apr 11, 1976 | 62 | Herbert Lichtenfeld | Fritz Umgelter | |
7th | Lilac for Jaczek | Feb. 27, 1977 | 72 | Stefan Murr , Jürgen Scheschkewitz | Fritz Umgelter | |
8th | The king | Feb. 11, 1979 | 96 | Hans Kelch | Dietrich Haugk | This episode achieved a market share of 63% when it was first broadcast |
Follow with Konrad as a guest investigator
- Episode 18 Kressin and the Painter's Wife
- Episode 19 Flotsam
- Episode 60 Cash Breakdown
- Episode 84 The Man in the High Seat
Web links
Individual evidence
- ↑ Tatort Fundus / Tatort-Fundus.de. Retrieved January 21, 2015 .
- ^ The ghost train case at tatort-fundus.de , accessed on March 21, 2013
- ↑ Discussion at tatort-fundus.de , accessed on March 21, 2013