Wolfgang Schleif
Wolfgang Schleif (b 14 May 1912 in Leipzig, d 21 August 1984 in Berlin ) was a German editor, film director and screenwriter .
He studied philosophy, psychology and pedagogy at the University of Leipzig. In 1934 he passed the State Examination for teachers at the Volksschule. But then he took classes at the Acting School of the Deutsches Theater in Berlin, where he was trained in directing.
Schleif began working in film in 1935. By 1938, he was an assistant director. In 1939, he became a screenwriter and eventually an editor. Among his assignments, he was one of the editors of the propaganda films Jud Süß (1940) and Kolberg (1945). In 1947, Schleif was joined the DEFA, making his directorial debut in 1948 with the anti-capitalist production Grube Morgenrot. This was followed by the 1949 film biography of Johann Friedrich Böttger, Die blauen Schwerter.
After 17 June 1953, Schleif emigrated to West Germany. With Die Mädels vom Immenhof 1955 he managed an extraordinary success, which laid down his work but also for years on the production of such substances. He made several hit movies starring Freddy Quinn, but also war films such as Rommel ruft Cairo and crime films such as Der rote Rausch and, in the early seventies, Die Zwillinge von Immenhof (Twins from Immenhof) and Frühling im Immenhof (Spring in Immenhof).
Since the mid-sixties Schleif worked extensively for television. He often led directed series and mini-series, particularly 1967 five episode series Bürgerkrieg in Rußland. (Civil war in Russia).
He is buried in the Dahlem cemetery in Berlin.
Selected filmography
- The Journey to Tilsit (1939, director: Veit Harlan)
- The Buchholz Family (1944, director: Carl Froelich)
- Grube Morgenrot (1948)
- Die blauen Schwerter (1949)
- Die Mädels vom Immenhof (1955)
- Rommel ruft Cairo (1959, the German-language version of Foxhole in Cairo)
- Freddy, the Guitar and the Sea (1959)
- The Blue Moth (1959)
- Freddy and the Melody of the Night (1960)
- Eheinstitut Aurora (1961)
- Der rote Rausch (1962)
- Voyage to Danger (1962)
References
External links
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