Ruth leuwerik birthplace of country
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The House in Montevideo (1963 film)
1963 film
The House in Montevideo (German: Das Haus in Montevideo) is a 1963 German comedy film directed by Helmut Käutner and starring Heinz Rühmann, Ruth Leuwerik and Paul Dahlke.[1]
The film was based on the 1945 play The House in Montevideo by Curt Goetz, which had previously been turned into a film in 1951.
It was shot at the Bavaria Studios in Munich. The film's sets were designed by the art directorsIsabella Schlichting and Werner Schlichting.
Plot
[edit]Professor Traugott Nägler, a man with high moral standards, once repudiated his underage sister for having a baby out of wedlock. Many years later, having a loving wife and twelve children with only the small salary of a schoolmaster, he learns that said sister has died in South America, and that he should come with his oldest yet still underage daughter, Atlanta, who was named after the ship on which the couple was married at sea by the captain. In Uruguay, they find out that the sister had made a fortune and owned a house in Montevideo, an etablissement with several young ladies, that Atlanta inherits some money as marriage portion, and that a large amount of money could be inherited by the first underage female member in his house that behaves in t
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Geliebte Feindin
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Cinema, culture and modernity by Anne-Katrin Titze
At the Film Society of Lincoln Center inside the Furman Gallery of the Walter ReadeTheater, Olaf Möller, the curator of The Lost Years of German Cinema: 1949–1963, discussed with me the films of Helmut Käutner, including his Hamlet adaptation, Der Rest Ist Schweigen(The Rest Is Silence), starring Hardy Krüger, Der Traum Von Lieschen Müller(The Dream Of Lieschen Mueller) and Bildnis Einer Unbekannten(Portrait Of An Unknown Woman).
Oe Hasse, Lilli Palmerand Peter van Eyckin Harald Braun's The Glass Tower(Der Gläserne Turm)
Wolfgang Staudte's The Fair (Kirmes) starring Juliette Mayniel, and Harald Braun's The Glass Tower(Der Gläserne Turm) with Lilli Palmer, Oe Hasse and Peter van Eyck, along with Käutner's Redhead (Die Rote) with Gert Fröbeand Ruth Leuwerik,...
See full article at eyeforfilm.co.uk
Facing the music by Anne-Katrin Titze
Veronika