Inge Appelt | |
---|---|
Born | |
Occupation | Actor |
Years active | 1967-present |
Ingeborg "Inge" Appelt (born 1 January 1943) is a Croatian actress. [1] She appeared in more than eighty films since 1967.
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
2002 | Fine Dead Girls | ||
1999 | Marshal Tito's Spirit | ||
1985 | Transylvania 6-5000 (1985 film) | ||
1977 | Don't Lean Out the Window | ||
1970 | Družba Pere Kvržice |
Inge is a given name in various Germanic language-speaking cultures. In Swedish and Norwegian, it is mostly used as a masculine, but less often also as a feminine name, sometimes as a short form of Ingeborg, while in Danish, Estonian, Frisian, German and Dutch it is exclusively feminine. The feminine name has the variant Inga.
Helmbrechts concentration camp was a women's subcamp of the Flossenbürg concentration camp founded near Helmbrechts near Hof, Germany in the summer of 1944. The first prisoners who came to the camp were political prisoners from the Ravensbrück camp in northern Germany. Later Jewish prisoners were brought.
Ingeborg "Inge" Helten is a former athlete from West Germany, who competed mainly in the 100 metres. She was born in Westum, Sinzig, Rhineland-Palatinate.
Gavella Drama Theatre is a Croatian theatre which is situated in Zagreb, in Frankopanska Street.
Ingeborg Stoll-Laforge was a female German motorcycle racer.
Svenskt biografiskt lexikon is a Swedish biographical dictionary, started in 1917. The first volume, covering names Abelin to Anjou, was published in 1918. As of 2017, names from A to S are covered.
Ingeborg ("Inge") Braumüller was a German track and field athlete who competed in the 1928 Summer Olympics.
Fine Dead Girls is a 2002 Croatian drama film that premiered in July 2002, at the Pula Film Festival. The film has been named one of the best Croatian films since Croatia's independence. It caught much attention due to its controversial, provocative themes.
Princess Christina Ingesdotter of Sweden was a Swedish princess and a princess consort of Veliky Novgorod, Rostov and Belgorod, by marriage to Grand Prince Mstislav I of Kiev.
Ingeborg Helen Gräßle is a German politician who served as a Member of the European Parliament (MEP) from 2004 until 2019. She is a member of the Christian Democratic Union of Germany, part of the European People's Party. Among other roles, she served as chair of the Budgetary Control Committee.
Družba Pere Kvržice is a Croatian children's film directed by Vladimir Tadej. It was released in 1970.
Will Not End Here is a 2008 Croatian / Serbian co-production directed by Vinko Brešan. It is based on a play by Mate Matišić.
The Girl from the Marsh Croft is a 1958 West German drama film directed by Gustav Ucicky and starring Maria Emo, Claus Holm and Eva Ingeborg Scholz. It was adapted from the 1908 novel The Girl from the Marsh Croft by Selma Lagerlöf. It was a remake of a 1935 film of the same name.
Big Request Concert is a 1960 Austrian family film directed by Arthur Maria Rabenalt. It was entered into the 2nd Moscow International Film Festival.
Jauja is a 2014 internationally co-produced historical drama film co-written and directed by Lisandro Alonso. It competed in the Un Certain Regard section at the 2014 Cannes Film Festival where it won the FIPRESCI Prize.
The Rose of Stamboul is a 1953 West German musical film directed by Karl Anton and starring Inge Egger, Albert Lieven and Grethe Weiser. It is based on Leo Fall's 1916 operetta of the same name.
Ingeborg "Inge" von Wangenheim was a German actress who married actor Gustav Von Wangenheim and joined the Communist Party. After the war, she became a successful East German writer.
Franjo Dijak is a Croatian actor. He appeared in more than twenty films since 1997.
The Man Under the Table is a Croatian drama film, directed by Neven Hitrec, based on motifs from short stories by Vjekoslav Domini.
Bandits of the Autobahn is a 1955 West German crime film directed by Géza von Cziffra and starring Eva Ingeborg Scholz, Hans Christian Blech and Paul Hörbiger.