Gerhard Menzel  | |
|---|---|
| Born | 29 September 1894 | 
| Died | 4 May 1966 (aged 71) | 
| Occupation | Screenwriter | 
| Years active | 1933–1965 | 
Gerhard Menzel (29 September 1894 – 4 May 1966) was a German screenwriter. He wrote for nearly 40 films between 1933 and 1965. He was supportive of Nazism and worked for Nazi propaganda.[1][2] He was responsible for writing the script of Heimkehr, one of the most infamous pieces of Nazi cinema, which featured racism and hateful images of Poles.[3]
He was born in Waldenburg, Lower Silesia, Germany (now Walbrzych, Poland) and died in Comano, Ticino, Switzerland.
Selected filmography
- Morgenrot (1933)
 - Refugees (1933)
 - Night in May (1934)
 - The Young Baron Neuhaus (1934)
 - Savoy Hotel 217 (1936)
 - Under Blazing Heavens (1936)
 - Wells in Flames (1937)
 - La Habanera (1937)
 - Woman in the River (1939)
 - A Mother's Love (1939)
 - Robert Koch (1939)
 - Heimkehr (1941)
 - The Great King (1942)
 - Destiny (1942)
 - Late Love (1943)
 - The Heart Must Be Silent (1944)
 - The Sinner (1951)
 - Hanussen (1955)
 - Ich suche Dich (1956)
 - King in Shadow (1957)
 
References
- ↑ No Place Like Home: Locations Of Heimat In German Cinema - Page 56 Johannes Von Moltke - 2005 In the words of the scriptwriter, Gerhard Menzel (a Nazi loyalist and renowned playwright who had collaborated with Ucicky on Flüchtlinge in 1933),
 - ↑ The Ministry of Illusion: Nazi Cinema and Its Afterlife By Eric Rentschler page 131 Menzel was a well known party loyalist, and his fervent nationalism was no secret. He provided the scenarios for some of Nazi cinema's most strident productions
 - ↑ The Ministry of Illusion: Nazi Cinema and Its Afterlife By Eric Rentschler page 132
 
External links
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