The Prince of Pappenheim
1927 film
- Mona Maris
- Curt Bois
- Dina Gralla
- Lydia Potechina
- Heinrich Gärtner
- Bruno Mondi
Production
company
company
Richard Eichberg-Film
Release date
- 7 September 1927 (1927-09-07)
Running time
- Silent
- German intertitles
The Prince of Pappenheim (German: Der Fürst von Pappenheim) is a 1927 German silent comedy film directed by Richard Eichberg and starring Mona Maris, Curt Bois and Dina Gralla. Bois' character of an ambitious young man was closely modelled on the early film appearances of Ernst Lubitsch.[1] It was shot at the Babelsberg Studios and on location in Baden-Baden. The film's art direction was by Jacek Rotmil. It premiered at the Gloria-Palast in Berlin.
Cast
- Mona Maris as Prinzessin Antoinette
- Curt Bois as Egon Fürst
- Dina Gralla as Diana, genannt Diddi
- Lydia Potechina as Camilla Pappenheim, Inhaberin des Modesalons
- Hans Junkermann as Fürst Ottokar, Antoinettes Vater
- Werner Fuetterer as Sascha, Prinz von Gorgonien
- Gyula Szőreghy as Graf Katschkoff
- Albert Paulig as Adjutant des Prinzen
References
- ^ Prawer p.122
Bibliography
- Prawer, S.S. Between Two Worlds: The Jewish Presence in German and Austrian Film, 1910-1933. Berghahn Books, 2005.
External links
- The Prince of Pappenheim at IMDb
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Films directed by Richard Eichberg
- Daughter of the Night (1920)
- The Living Propeller (1921)
- Monna Vanna (1922)
- The Romance of a Poor Sinner (1922)
- Girl of the Berlin Streets (1922)
- Fräulein Raffke (1923)
- The Most Beautiful Woman in the World (1924)
- The Motorist Bride (1925)
- Women of Luxury (1925)
- The Girl on the Road (1925)
- Love and Trumpets (1925)
- Passion (1925)
- Princess Trulala (1926)
- The Prince and the Dancer (1926)
- Chaste Susanne (1926)
- The Prince of Pappenheim (1927)
- Fabulous Lola (1927)
- The Serfs (1928)
- Song (1928)
- Why Cry at Parting? (1929)
- The Flame of Love (1930)
- The Copper (1930)
- The Invisible Front (1932)
- A Precocious Girl (1934)
- The Czar's Courier (1936)
- The Tiger of Eschnapur (1938)
- The Indian Tomb (1938)
- The Trip to Marrakesh (1949)
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