Twelve Girls and One Man
Appearance
(Redirected from 12 Mädchen und 1 Mann)
Twelve Girls and One Man | |
---|---|
Directed by | Hans Quest |
Written by | Wolfgang Ebert (play) Kurt Nachmann Hellmut Andics |
Produced by | Herbert Gruber |
Starring | Toni Sailer Margit Nünke Gunther Philipp |
Cinematography | Sepp Ketterer Hannes Staudinger |
Edited by | Herma Sandtner |
Music by | Franz Grothe |
Production company | |
Distributed by | Sascha Film UFA Film Hansa |
Release date |
|
Running time | 98 minutes |
Country | Austria |
Language | German |
Twelve Girls and One Man (German: Zwölf Mädchen und ein Mann) is a 1959 Austrian comedy film directed by Hans Quest and starring Toni Sailer, Margit Nünke and Gunther Philipp.[1]
It was shot at the Rosenhügel Studios in Vienna. The film's sets were designed by the art directors Theodor Harisch and Fritz Jüptner-Jonstorff.
Synopsis
[edit]Following a series of robberies, a detective goes undercover at an Alpine ski resort while at the same time twelve female students arrive there on holiday.
Cast
[edit]- Toni Sailer as Florian Thaler
- Margit Nünke as Eva, genannt 'Amazone'
- Gunther Philipp as Anderl Seidl, Hilfsgendarm
- Gerlinde Locker as Rosel Fuchs
- Joe Stöckel as Bürgermeister Fuchs
- Ernst Waldbrunn as Josef Walz - Gendarmerieposten-Kommandant
- Helga Schlack as Monika, genannt 'Mondänika'
- Veronika Bayer as Mäuschen, 'Die Unscheinbare'
- Ursula Heyer as Ruth 'Die Pedantische'
- Grit Boettcher as Do 'Lady Superfein'
- Martha Hauser as Coco, 'Der Papagei'
- Rosemarie Kirstein as Grit, 'Miß Kurvenreich'
- Lisbeth Gemzell as Sweety, 'Die wandelnde Konditorei'
- Eva Iro as Lizzi, 'Die Junke-Box'
- Ingemarie Tramm as Mimi, 'Mimosa, die Gekränkte'
- Susanne Cronau as Vera 'Die Nahrhafte'
- Monika Berger as Sabine, 'Die Handgestrickte'
- Wolf Neuber as Der stramme Max
- Raoul Retzer as Gentleman-Schorschi
- Rudolf Strobl as Rittmeister Lanz
References
[edit]- ^ Büttner & Dewald p.350
Bibliography
[edit]- Elisabeth Büttner & Christian Dewald. Anschluss an Morgen: eine Geschichte des österreichischen Films von 1945 bis zur Gegenwart. Residenz Verlag, 1997.
External links
[edit]