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Wie die Wilden | |
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Directed by | Ruth Heucke-Langenscheidt |
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Country | East Germany |
Language | German |
Wie die Wilden ("Like the Savages") is an East German television film. It was released in 1959.
Erdoğan Atalay is a German actor. He is known for his role as police detective Semir Gerkhan in Alarm für Cobra 11 - Die Autobahnpolizei.
Cornelia Maria Funke is a German author of children's fiction. Born in Dorsten, North Rhine-Westphalia, she began her career as a social worker before becoming a book illustrator. She began writing novels in the late 1980s and focused primarily on fantasy-oriented stories that depict the lives of children faced with adversity. Funke has since become Germany's "best-selling author for children". Her work has been translated into several languages and, as of 2012, Funke has sold over 20 million copies of her books worldwide.
Gert Wilden was a German film composer. He was born in Mährisch Trübau. From 1956 through his retirement, he scored music for 50 feature films in numerous genres. However, he is perhaps best known for his music for erotic films in the 1970s, especially the Schoolgirl Report series.
Eric Baumann is a German musicologist. He is an authority on the work of Karl May. He is better known popularly for his humorous book Der Komponist Ferdinand Loh, which is about the anonymous children's piece Der Flohwalzer.
Anthony George Wilden was a writer, social theorist, college lecturer, and consultant. Wilden published numerous books and articles which intersect a number of fields, including systems theory, film theory, structuralism, cybernetics, psychiatry, anthropological theory, water control projects, urban ecosystems, resource conservation, and communications and social relations.
For the poem by Heine, set to music as a lied by Schumann, see Die Lotosblume
Jan Wildens was a Flemish painter and draughtsman specializing in landscapes. His Realist landscapes show an eye for detail and have a serene character. He was a regular collaborator with Rubens and other leading Flemish Baroque painters of his generation in whose compositions he painted the landscapes.
The Wild Chicks is a series of children's and youth books written by the German author Cornelia Funke. The main protagonists are four girls, who go to class together and form the eponymous "Wild Chicks" girl gang. Five books were published between 1993 and 2003, which have sold over one million copies in Germany. Three feature-length film adaptations have been released.
Vivian Naefe is a German film director. Her films include the Die wilden Hühner series, Wellen, and two Tatort episodes.
Wilden is a village and civil parish located in the Borough of Bedford in Bedfordshire, England. The population of 399 in the 2011 Census was estimated at 392 in 2019.
Erol Sander is a Turkish-German actor.
Sextus Placitus of Papyra,, an ancient Roman physician, is best known for his Libri medicinae Sexti Placiti Papyriensis ex animalibus pecoribus et bestiis vel avibus Concordantiae.
Heinrich Friese was a German biologist and entomologist, specialist of bees (melittologist). Between 1883 and 1939 he described 1,989 new species and 564 new varieties or subspecies of insects, 99% of which were bees.
Grit Boettcher is a German actress.
Jürgen Roth was a German publicist and investigative journalist.
Die 3 Colonias is a music group from Cologne with many activities in the Cologne Carnival. Their predominant language of performances is Colognian.
"Elegie" is a poem written by the German lyric poet Walther von der Vogelweide. It is written in Middle High German and is a lament to the passage of the years.
Katy Nina Karrenbauer is a German actress, dubbing actress, singer, and author. She is known for her role as Christine Walter in the drama series Hinter Gittern – Der Frauenknast. In 2015 she received a special award from the German Film Academy for her role in Rosa von Praunheim's film Tough Love.
The Republic of Heinzenland was a short-lived and unrecognized nation in the region now known as the Austrian federal state of Burgenland, aimed at protecting the German-speaking population in Western Hungary. The state was a direct result of the disputes in Central Europe following the First World War on the future of Burgenland under either Austrian or Hungarian control. Its main leader was Social Democratic politician Hans Suchard. Due to its short life, it is known as the "Two-day Republic". The Republic was one of many unrecognized successor states in the region, including Lajtabánság and the Republic of Prekmurje.
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