Walter Feuchtenberg

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Walter Feuchtenberg , also Walther Feuchtenberg (born February 7, 1923 in Nuremberg ) is a former German actor .

Life

Feuchtenberg received his artistic training from Martin Hellberg and made his debut at the theater in Munich in the late 1940s . This was followed by seven years of permanent engagement at the Stadttheater Saarbrücken ; at that time he was based in Baltersweiler near St. Wendel . Feuchtenberg later worked mostly freelance. He played mostly rather unkempt lower-class characters. His voice had a distinct Frankish accent.

From 1957 he was seen in one or the other film and television production. Most of them were rather shallow comedies and comedies. As its first film appearance, the IMDb film database has the comedy Once a Grand Lady from 1957, in which Feuchtenberg, directed by Erik Ode, starred as hotel detective Zwingeli alongside Dietmar Schönherr , Grethe Weiser and Gudula Blau . In the comedy film Woe, when they let go (1958) he played the comic role of the servant Alfred. In 1961 he took on the role of the friendly knife grinder Josef in the cinema production Frau Holle - Das Märchen von Goldmarie und Pechmarie at the beginning of the film , who takes Goldmarie, who is on the way to her aunt, on his vehicle to the village. In 1962, under the direction of Wolfgang Staudte, he played the Hakenfinger-Jakob in his Brecht / Weill film adaptation of The Threepenny Opera .

In the 1970s, he played all sorts of subordinate batches in Soft sex movies German and Swedish provenance . He mainly took on roles in clothing, but was also seen in some soft sex scenes. In these sex films, however, Feuchtenberg was mainly used as a comedian, who often knew how to draw his characters in his roles through the stylistic device of exaggeration. He succeeded in creating a more subtle character portrait under the direction of Kurt Nachmann as a teacher in the Josefine Mutzenbacher film adaptation Josefine Mutzenbacher II - My 365 Lovers (1972), where he is receptive to Christine Schuberth's youthful charms. In the sex clothes Auf der Alm da there's koa Sünd (1974), under the direction of Franz Josef Gottlieb , he played the role of Professor Solo, a crazy scientist who developed a formula that can be used to make gasoline from garbage is on the run from two agents who want to steal his formula from him. In the horror film Lady Dracula from 1975 (theatrical release: 1978) he had a small role as a notary, again directed by Franz Josef Gottlieb. In 1979, this time directed by Franz Marischka , he played the teacher Spitzeder in the sex film Zum Gasthof der lively girls .

He also worked in several films from the schoolgirl report series, where he was mostly used as an authority figure (father, police officer), for example in the films Schoolgirl Report - What Parents Often Despair (1972) and Schoolgirl Report - Maturity Examination Before Abitur ( 1975).

He was on television in 1965, directed by Eugen York , in the documentary television play Geld - Geld - Geld: Two billion against the Bank of England as the graphic artist Hans Komorowsky. He also played supporting roles in the crime series Kommissar Freytag and Der Kommissar . The film database IMDb documents a role in the television series Meister Eder and his Pumuckl from 1988, where Feuchtenberg played the role of Master Eder's nephew Dieter in the episode Die Bergtour as the last television appearance .

Walter Feuchtenberg has also worked for radio and as a voice actor. Feuchtenberg, father of three sons, was married to a former actress.

Filmography (selection)

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Piet Hein Honig, Hanns-Georg Rodek : 100001. The show business encyclopedia of the 20th century. Showbiz-Data-Verlag, Villingen-Schwenningen 1992, ISBN 3-929009-01-5 , p. 318.
  2. a b c lt. Film archive Kay Less
  3. Walter Feuchtenberg . Entry in the European Girls Adult Film Database (with photo): German, 1970s, non-sex roles in hard films, a couple of sex roles in soft films.
  4. Money - Money - Money: Two billion against the Bank of England . TV program from June 15, 1965
  5. Pumuckl and the mountain tour Production details on Pumuckl homepage