Immenhof (TV series)

Last updated

Immenhof
Starring Anneliese Uhlig
Claudia Rieschel
Erich Hallhuber
Country of origin Germany
No. of seasons2
No. of episodes20
Release
Original releaseJanuary 1994 (1994-01) 
August 1995 (1995-08)

Immenhof is a German television series. The series featured a "pony ranch" from the Immenhof film series based on the novels by Ursula Bruns (born 1922).

See also


Related Research Articles

Eva Habermann German actress

Eva Felicitas Habermann is a German actress who has appeared in numerous films and TV series. She is best known for playing the role of Zev Bellringer in the television series Lexx.

Jutta Speidel German actress

Jutta Speidel is a German actress.

Bernd Herzsprung German actor

Bernd Herzsprung is a German television actor.

Kurt Waitzmann was a German film actor. He appeared in 52 films between 1937 and 1969.

Paul Henckels German actor

Paul Henckels was a German film and stage actor. He appeared in more than 230 films between 1921 and 1965. Paul Henckels had started his acting career on the stage in the 1900s.

Heidi Brühl German singer, actress

Heidi Rosemarie Brühl was a German singer and actress who came to prominence as a young teenager and had a prolific career in film and television. She was also a successful recording artist, and is known for her participation in the 1963 Eurovision Song Contest.

Josef Sieber was a German film actor.

Wolfgang Schleif was a German film director, screenwriter and film editor.

Paul Klinger, whose real name was Paul Karl Heinrich Klinksik, was a German stage and film actor who also worked in radio drama and soundtrack dubbing.

Hermann Leitner was an Austrian film editor and film director. His 1962 documentary film Mediterranean Holiday was entered into the 3rd Moscow International Film Festival.

Margarete Haagen was a German stage and film actress. Haagen appeared in over a hundred films during her career, generally in character roles. She specialised in playing good-natured elderly ladies. Following the Second World War, she appeared in several rubble films, such as In Those Days (1947). During the 1950s, she often appeared in heimatfilm and costume films.

Igor Oberberg (1907–1996) was a Russian Empire-born German cinematographer. His younger sister Ira Oberberg became a film editor.

Gero Wecker (1923–1974) was a German film producer. In the post-Second World War era he produced populist entertainment films for the West German market.

Katharina Brauren was a German actress. She appeared in more than 85 films and television shows between 1937 and 1997.

Matthias Fuchs (1939–2001) was a German stage, film and television actor.

The Immenhof films were a series of German Heimatfilme that appeared in cinemas between 1955 and 1974. They were set on the fictitious farm estate of Immenhof in Schleswig-Holstein. First appearing in the 1950s as a successful trilogy, they were followed in the 1970s by two further films. January 2019 will see the release of a fresh interpretation entitled Immenhof – Das Abenteuer eines Sommers.

<i>The Twins from Immenhof</i> 1973 film directed by Wolfgang Schleif

The Twins from Immenhof is a 1973 West German family drama film directed by Wolfgang Schleif and starring Heidi Brühl, Horst Janson and Olga Tschechowa. Set in Schleswig-Holstein, the film is in the post-war Heimatfilm tradition.

<i>Spring in Immenhof</i> 1974 film directed by Wolfgang Schleif

Spring in Immenhof is a 1974 West German family film directed by Wolfgang Schleif and starring Heidi Brühl, Horst Janson and Olga Tschechowa. It is the fifth and last of the series of Immenhof films, part of the heimatfilm tradition. It marked the final film appearance of the veteran actress Olga Tschechowa.

Kurt Nachmann (1915–1984) was an Austrian screenwriter and film actor and director.

Schöneberger Sängerknaben German boys choir

The Schöneberger Sängerknaben were a German boys' choir from Berlin, named after the Bezirk Schöneberg. The choir performed with about 30 boys at a time. They wore short black trousers, black blazers with emblems, white shirts and white knee socks. The repertoire initially included German folk songs, Berlin popular songs and Schlager, later also opera choruses and other classical works.