Tingeltangel may refer to:
Friedrich Hollaender was a German film composer and author.
Friedrich Rudolf Klein, better known as Rudolf Klein-Rogge, was a German film actor, best known for playing sinister figures in films in the 1920s and 1930s as well as being a mainstay in director Fritz Lang's Weimar-era films. He is probably best known in popular culture, particularly to English-speaking audiences, for playing the archetypal mad scientist role of C. A. Rotwang in Lang's Metropolis and as the criminal genius Doctor Mabuse. Klein-Rogge also appeared in several important French films in the late 1920s and early 1930s.
Karol Juliusz "Igo" Sym was a Polish actor and collaborator with Nazi Germany. He was killed in Warsaw by members of the Polish resistance movement.
Artur Semyonovich Berger was an Austrian-Soviet film architect and set designer. He was active in Austria between 1920 and 1936, during which time he worked on about 30 feature films. In 1936 he emigrated to the Soviet Union, where he continued to work on films until the early 1970s.
Ernő Verebes was a Hungarian-American actor who began his career in Hungarian silent films in 1915. During his film career he worked and lived in Hungary, Germany and in the United States. He was born into a Hungarian emigrant family in New York, but his family later returned to Austria-Hungary.
Bruno Mondi was a German cameraman and director of photography.
Dolly Davis was a French film actress.
Alfred Braun was a German screenwriter, actor and film director.
Paul Wilhelm Constantin Hartmann was a German stage and film actor.
Jaap Speyer (1891–1952) was a Dutch film director. He was married to the German actress Mia Pankau.
Otto Rippert was a German film director during the silent film era.
Elisabeth Pinajeff was a Russian-German actress.
The Yellow Flag is a 1937 German drama film directed by Gerhard Lamprecht and starring Hans Albers, Olga Tschechowa and Dorothea Wieck.
Trude Herr was a German film actress, singer and theatre owner. She was a popular entertainer in Germany from the early 1960s until her retirement.
Tingeltangel is a 1922 German silent film directed by Otto Rippert and starring Gisela Schönfeld, Friedrich Kühne and Hans Heinrich von Twardowski.
Tingel Tangel is a 1927 Austrian silent film directed by Gustav Ucicky and starring Dolly Davis, Igo Sym and Rudolf Klein-Rogge.
Tingel-Tangel is a 1930 German comedy film directed by Jaap Speyer and starring Elisabeth Pinajeff, Ernő Verebes, and Fritz Kampers.
Maud Rozita Auer, is a Swedish belly dancer, actress and singer. She grew up in Gubbängen in Stockholm. Through friends she came into contact with Indian dance and then Turkish dance. She started working as a belly dancer at Klubb Kamelen in Gamla Stan in Stockholm in 1969. Besides doing that she also studied acting at Calle Flygares teaterskola.
Hedi Schoop was a Swiss-born German dancer, cabaret artist, sculptor and painter. From 1929 to 1933, she appeared in Berlin in the cabarets Die Katakombe and Tingel-Tangel-Theater. She emigrated with her first husband, Friedrich Hollaender, to California, where she turned to pottery. She founded a factory where ceramics based on her designs were produced from 1940 to 1958.
Friedrich Emil Albes was a German actor and film director of the silent era.