View allAll Photos Tagged Denger

View of the Mountain Hoher Göll with Milky Way from the Rossfeld Panoramastrasse,

 

Single shot with the Walimex 14mm F2.8 Lens

 

_1738_flickr

Schweiz, Zermatt, Grindjisee

Say cheese and smile....ha,ha.

Have a grand week guys. Thank you for comments and faves.

My Zenfolio site- noro8.zenfolio.com/

My DeviantART- noro8.deviantart.com/

 

stock- depositphotos.com/home.html and my own.

Utakleiv, Nordland, Lofoten, Norwegen

 

IMG_3081-5_flickr

 

my website

panorama from Vikten beach at sunset.

nordland, lofoten, norway

 

IMG_3129-2_flickr

Norway, Troms, Senja, Tungeneset

Oldervik, Troms, Norway

 

Vareid, Nordland, Norwegen

 

IMG_3387_flickr

Oldervik, Troms, Norway

Lens:

Walimex 14mm 2,8

 

Oldervik, Troms, Norwegen

 

Externsteine,

Sandstein-Felsformation in Horn-Bad Meinberg, Teutoburger Wald

 

my website

happy new year my friends, a happy new year!

special thanks for the great support in 2015 and all the best for you in 2016!

 

IMG_3153-9

the "wrinkled old" is superfluous. Just don't date drunks, they suck!

Aunque me tengas mas votada qe la shusha Te amo mejor amiga :) !

Norway, Troms, Senja, Tungeneset,

 

IMG_3454

Bad Schandau, Sachsen, Deutschland

Oldervik, Troms, Norway

No Photoshop. These guys kept falling over, and was the longest shoot I’ve done!

kamera saya tidak bisa shot kembang api, akhirnya jagung yang jadi sasaran.. sambil denger lagu Reza ya when you love someone

Locust at 12th Street

Tel. MA 1-4600 Teletype: SL 505

St. Louis's largest hotel is conveniently located downtown in the heart of things. Completely air conditioned for your comfort. Free TV and radio. Visit the gay an exciting Gas House. Free Reservations by Reservatron - reserves and confirms your hotel room in 4 seconds.

 

Mailed from St. Louis, Missouri to Mary K. Denger of Minneapolis, Minnesota on March 6, 1963:

 

Wed Dear Mary K. - Got your later and I'm glad the patients are both getting along better. If I had know your mother was to be there more than a couple days I would surely have seal her something. When will she be home. I'll write more later - This is quite a city. Love, Flo

 

International Hotel Supply

Lusterchrome

CAPA-012471

Hujan akhirnya turun dan kabutpun menebal dengan jarak pandang hanya beberapa meter, kami kembali kedalam mobil, dan perlahan menyusuri jalan mecari lokasi lain. beberapa kali kami harus memutar karena jalan didepan berubah menjadi semacam sungai karena gerusan air hujan.. sempat ngeri dan mencekam.. tapi karena pemandu kami sudah sangat ahli.. akhirnya berubah menjadi teriakan gembira, sewaktu mobil kami loncat karena tersandung bebatuan.. seru seru

 

sambil denger lagu Gangnam style

  

lokasi masih sekitar

BROMO

dan cuaca disini selalu berubah ubah dalam hitungan jam dalam sehari.. sungguh sangat menarik disini

 

German postcard, no. 15 (of 32). Photo: Rialto / Constantin. Harald Leipnitz in Der Ölprinz/The Oil Prince (Harald Philipp, 1965). Caption: The Oil Prince has arrived at Lake Shelly with his servant Knife. There he meets the chief executive of the Arizona Commercial Bank and his secretary. After demonstrating fake oil chains to the director, he sells them to him for 75,000 dollars. But that is not enough. After issuing the cheque, he has them both killed by the Finders Gang.

 

In the Karl May adaptation Der Ölprinz/The Oil Prince (Harald Philipp, 1965), Apache Chief Winnetou (Pierre Brice) and scout Old Surehand (Stewart Granger) team up to assist a wagon-train of settlers who are threatened by the machinations of an unscrupulous crook known as 'the Oil Prince' (Harald Leipnitz). The West German-Yugoslav Western was also known as Rampage at Apache Wells. The film was one of a series of Karl May films made by Rialto Film.

 

The bandit The Oil Prince wants to sell the banker Duncan a fake oil well. However, a trek of settlers who want to settle in the area, of all places, stands in his way. The Oil Prince has the settlers' scout replaced by a member of the Finders Gang. Old Surehand and Winnetou track him down and are able to warn the trek. Winnetou convinces the Navajo chief Nitsas-ini of the peaceful nature of the settlers, and he lets them pass through his territory unhindered with Old Wabble as their guide to a stopover at the Chinla River. On the way to Utah, Old Surehand is lured into a trap by the Finders bandits, but Winnetou is able to rescue him. At the Chinla River, the settlers, among them the widow Ebersbach, the cantor Hampel, the cardsharp Richard Forsythe and the shady businessman Bergmann, are getting ready to spend the night when the Finders bandits attack. However, the attack can be repelled by Winnetou and Old Surehand, who arrive in time. After the attack fails, the oil prince comes up with something new. He murders the son of the chief Mokaschi and blames the Indians for it on the settlers. The Indians surround the settlers at the river, but are persuaded to wait with their attack if Old Surehand delivers the real murderer to them within a day. Winnetou tries to bring the women and children to safety on the raging river with a raft. However, they fall into the water and are only saved when Old Surehand arrives. Old Surehand sets off in pursuit of the oil prince, who in the meantime has taken the money for the fake oil well from the banker Duncan and has trapped him in the oil cave with an avalanche of rubble. Old Surehand is able to capture and tie up the oil prince after a short chase and a fight. The Indians have become impatient in the meantime and begin their attack on the settlers. The first wagons are already in flames when Old Surehand returns. The Oil Prince, who has been brought along, is handed over to the Indians and receives his just punishment from them.

 

Apart from Der Schut, Der Ölprinz/The Oil Prince is the only Karl May film in which the title character is a villain. For the second time, Stewart Granger plays Old Surehand, deviating from the Karl May novel in which Old Shatterhand takes the main role. Producer Horst Wendlandt was unable to cast Lex Barker as Old Shatterhand because of Artur Brauner's production Through Wild Kurdistan. The part of Lizzy (Macha Méril) was originally supposed to be played by Marie Versini, but she was also already under contract with Brauner at the time of filming. Fred Denger wrote the script, which was subsequently revised by Harald Philipp. As Harald Reinl and Alfred Vohrer were busy, Wendlandt originally wanted Paul Martin as director. When the collaboration did not materialise, he called Harald Philipp in Berlin at Christmas 1964, who immediately agreed. Martin Böttcher once again composed an atmospheric score. Der Ölprinz/The Oil Prince was shot at the Spandau Studios in Berlin and on location in Yugoslavia. The film's sets were designed by the art director Dusan Jericevic. Jericević had transformed the Western town of "Golden Hill" from Old Shatterhand into "Tucson". Der Ölprinz (1965) recorded admissions of 409,817 in France, 1,449,558 in Spain, and over 3 million in Germany.

 

Sources: Wikipedia (English and German), and IMDb.

 

And, please check out our blog European Film Star Postcards.

German postcard, no. 1 (of 32). Photo: Rialto / Constantin. Harald Leipnitz in Der Ölprinz/The Oil Prince (Harald Philipp, 1965). Caption: This is the oil prince, a ruthless adventurer who will do anything to get his hands on land and oil wells. His helpers are members of the Finders Gang. He has now commissioned them to intercept and kill the scout Bill Forner, who is to lead a trek of settlers to Lake Shelly. A member of the Finders Gang is to take his place and lead the trek astray because he needs the area around Lake Shelly for his machinations.

 

In the Karl May adaptation Der Ölprinz/The Oil Prince (Harald Philipp, 1965), Apache Chief Winnetou (Pierre Brice) and scout Old Surehand (Stewart Granger) team up to assist a wagon-train of settlers who are threatened by the machinations of an unscrupulous crook known as 'the Oil Prince' (Harald Leipnitz). The West German-Yugoslav Western was also known as Rampage at Apache Wells. The film was one of a series of Karl May films made by Rialto Film.

 

The bandit The Oil Prince wants to sell the banker Duncan a fake oil well. However, a trek of settlers who want to settle in the area, of all places, stands in his way. The Oil Prince has the settlers' scout replaced by a member of the Finders Gang. Old Surehand and Winnetou track him down and are able to warn the trek. Winnetou convinces the Navajo chief Nitsas-ini of the peaceful nature of the settlers, and he lets them pass through his territory unhindered with Old Wabble as their guide to a stopover at the Chinla River. On the way to Utah, Old Surehand is lured into a trap by the Finders bandits, but Winnetou is able to rescue him. At the Chinla River, the settlers, among them the widow Ebersbach, the cantor Hampel, the cardsharp Richard Forsythe and the shady businessman Bergmann, are getting ready to spend the night when the Finders bandits attack. However, the attack can be repelled by Winnetou and Old Surehand, who arrive in time. After the attack fails, the oil prince comes up with something new. He murders the son of the chief Mokaschi and blames the Indians for it on the settlers. The Indians surround the settlers at the river, but are persuaded to wait with their attack if Old Surehand delivers the real murderer to them within a day. Winnetou tries to bring the women and children to safety on the raging river with a raft. However, they fall into the water and are only saved when Old Surehand arrives. Old Surehand sets off in pursuit of the oil prince, who in the meantime has taken the money for the fake oil well from the banker Duncan and has trapped him in the oil cave with an avalanche of rubble. Old Surehand is able to capture and tie up the oil prince after a short chase and a fight. The Indians have become impatient in the meantime and begin their attack on the settlers. The first wagons are already in flames when Old Surehand returns. The Oil Prince, who has been brought along, is handed over to the Indians and receives his just punishment from them.

 

Apart from Der Schut, Der Ölprinz/The Oil Prince is the only Karl May film in which the title character is a villain. For the second time, Stewart Granger plays Old Surehand, deviating from the Karl May novel in which Old Shatterhand takes the main role. Producer Horst Wendlandt was unable to cast Lex Barker as Old Shatterhand because of Artur Brauner's production Through Wild Kurdistan. The part of Lizzy (Macha Méril) was originally supposed to be played by Marie Versini, but she was also already under contract with Brauner at the time of filming. Fred Denger wrote the script, which was subsequently revised by Harald Philipp. As Harald Reinl and Alfred Vohrer were busy, Wendlandt originally wanted Paul Martin as director. When the collaboration did not materialise, he called Harald Philipp in Berlin at Christmas 1964, who immediately agreed. Martin Böttcher once again composed an atmospheric score. Der Ölprinz/The Oil Prince was shot at the Spandau Studios in Berlin and on location in Yugoslavia. The film's sets were designed by the art director Dusan Jericevic. Jericević had transformed the Western town of "Golden Hill" from Old Shatterhand into "Tucson". Der Ölprinz (1965) recorded admissions of 409,817 in France, 1,449,558 in Spain, and over 3 million in Germany.

 

Sources: Wikipedia (English and German), and IMDb.

 

And, please check out our blog European Film Star Postcards.

Human character in different place

i - City, Shah Alam, Selangor

East-German postcard by VEB Bild und Heimat Reichenbach I.V., no. G 6163, 1963. Photo: DDR Deutscher Fernsehfunk / Denger, 1963.

 

Helga Piur (1939), is a German actress and voice actress, who was mainly known for her TV roles in the GDR. She also appeared in DEFA films of the 1960s.

 

Helga Piur was born in 1939 in Berlin. She was the youngest of six children. At the age of five, her mother dies. Helga grows up with her father's sister and her husband. As a child Helga sang in the radio children's choir. She later acted for a lay playgroup and was a secretary at the Dietz publishing house in Berlin. Several applications at the drama school failed. Therefore, she took private lessons with actor Eduard von Winterstein. Since 1959, she regularly appeared on German television. First, she acted mainly in childrens programs. She portrayed such popular characters as the doll Edelgard or Bastelinchen in programs such as Unser Sandmännchen/Our Sandman (1959), Bahnhof Puppenstadt/Station Puppet City or Treff mit Petra. Piur was also quickly cast in TV comedies and thrillers. From the early 1960s, she is also engaged by the DEFA for some films, including the love story Wo der Zug nicht lange hält/Where the train does not stop long (Joachim Hassler, 1960) with Stefan Lisewski, and the musical Das Stacheltier - Der Dieb von San Marengo/The Stinging Animal - The Thief of San Marengo (Günter Reisch, 1963) with Horst Drinda. Das Stacheltier was a satirical series of short films that was produced in East Germany by the DEFA Film Studios from 1953 to 1964. Over the next two decades, she appeared in a variety of roles in a wide variety of film genres. She was also active as a voice actress and performed for the radio.

 

From 1967 to 1982 Helga Piur was heard as Brigitte Neumann in most of the 678 episodes of the popular radio drama series Neumann, zweimal klingeln/Neumann, ring twice on Radio DDR I. Her films in this period included Orpheus in der Unterwelt/Orpheus in the underworld (Horst Bonnet, 1974) with Dorit Gäbler and Rolf Hoppe. Piur became a superstar in the GDR with the television series Zahn um Zahn/Tooth for a Tooth (1985-1988), where she portrayed the receptionist Victoria Happmeyer, called Häppchen, on the side of Alfred Struwe as the Berlin-based dentist Dr. Alexander Wittkuge. Since 1988 Piur belonged to the permanent ensemble of the DFF, which ended however in 1991. Nevertheless, she was later often seen on television even after the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989-1990 and is particularly dedicated to synchronisation work. In the GDR, Piur was often awarded. She gave Brigitte Bardot her voice in synchronised films. Helga Piur was married to the actor Gert Andreae until his death in 1972. In 1974 she married the writer and director Günter Stahnke, with whom she was married until his death in 2018. She often appeared in his TV-films. In 2009 her book Ein Häppchen von mir (A Slice of Me) appeared. Helga Piur lives in Fredersdorf. She has a daughter.

 

Sources: DEFA Stiftung (German), Wikipedia (German) and IMDb.

 

And, please check out our blog European Film Star Postcards.

East-German postcard by VEB Bild und Heimat Reichenbach I.V., no. G 6104, 1964. Photo: Denger / Deutscher Fernsehfunk DDR, 1962.

 

Rolf Herricht (1927-1981) was an East German comedian. He starred in several popular DEFA comedies during the 1960s and the 1970s.

 

Rolf Oskar Ewald Günter Herricht was born in Magdeburg in 1927. He graduated from school in 1943 after passing a 'War Abitur', a form of an Abitur designated to free school pupils to be mobilised. In 1945, he was drafted to the Volkssturm and assigned as an anti-aircraft battery assistant. After the war's end, he began working as property master and stage manager in a theatre in his native Magdeburg, while studying acting in a local studio. After completion, he went to appear on the stages of theatres in Salzwedel, Stendal, Staßfurt, Güstrow and also in the Kleist Theater in Frankfurt am Oder. Herricht first met fellow actor Hans-Joachim Preil in 1951, while they both worked in Bernburg. The two formed the 'Herricht and Preil' comedy duo, staging their first sketch, 'The Chess Match', in 1953. In the sketch, Preil vainly attempts to play chess with Herricht, who is completely oblivious to the rules of the game. In their act, Herricht played the 'funny man', while Preil served as the 'straight man'. The pair were active until Herricht's passing away. In 1957, Herricht returned to the Magdeburg Theater, where he remained until 1961. He mainly played comical characters, like the scribe in The Beaver Coat and the drunkard from Auerbach's Cellar in Faust I. During his time in Magdeburg, he also worked in the radio. He and Preil first performed on television when one of their sketches was broadcast by Deutscher Fernsehfunk in 1959. The show was well received by the audience and the two began making regular appearances on TV. Herricht and Preil became the German Democratic Republic's most celebrated comedians.

 

Rolf Herricht made his film debut in DEFA's comedy Bevor der Blitz einschlägt/Before the Lightning Strikes (Richard Groschopp, 1959), playing a minor part of a locomotive constructor. The same year, he starred in the romantic comedy Musterknaben/The Goodies (Johannes Knittel, 1959) with Hartmut Reck and Brigitte Krause. Herricht later appeared in some twenty feature films, while also playing in many television films. In 1964, he joined the regular cast of the Metropol Theater in Berlin. He also had a career as a singer. Herricht appeared on screen in relatively minor roles until writer Maurycy Janowski and director Gottfried Kolditz decided to create a film the plot of which would be based on his comical skill, the musical Geliebte weiße Maus/Beloved White Mouse (Gottfried Kolditz, 1964). Herricht portrayed a traffic policeman who falls in love with a woman and only dares speak to her when she makes an accident on the road. The picture met with considerable success. Herricht starred in several other popular DEFA comedies during the 1960s and the 1970s: among others, he played the erratic National People's Army reserve soldier Ralf Horricht in Der Reserveheld/The reserve hero (Wolfgang Luderer, 1965) and the last-minute-travel-guide Hurtig in Meine Freundin Sybille/My Friend Sybille (Wolfgang Luderer, 1967) with Evelyn Opoczynski. His crime comedy Hände hoch oder ich schieße/Hands Up or I'll Shoot (Hans-Joachim Kasprzik, 1965), in which he again appeared as the eccentric policeman officer Holms, was banned at the 11th plenary session of the Socialist Unity Party of Germany. His later films included Seine Hoheit - Genosse Prinz/His Highness - Comrade Prince (Werner W. Wallroth, 1969) with Rolf Ludwig, Husaren in Berlin/Hussars in Berlin (Erwin Stranka, 1971) with Manfred Krug, and Der Mann, der nach der Oma kam/The man who came after Grandma (Roland Oehme, 1972), also starring Ilse Voigt. Herricht was twice awarded the Kunstpreis der Deutschen Demokratischen Republik (Art Prize of the German Democratic Republic): in 1973 and in 1977. Rolf Herricht died of a heart attack at the age of 53, while performing the role of one of the gangsters in 'Kiss Me, Kate' on the stage of the Metropol. He is buried in Berlin's I Französischer Friedhof. He was married to Christa Herricht. They had one child. 28 years after Herricht''s death, Hände hoch oder ich schieße/Hands Up or I'll Shoot was finally completed and distributed in 2009, making it the last East German film to be released.

 

Sources: Wikipedia and IMDb.

 

And, please check out our blog European Film Star Postcards.

@kinalJKT48 : mereka jalan duluan wah kita pikir kita aman;'( soalnya devilsattack kan aktif bgt. org masih ngantuk cape kalau denger yg heboh wkwkwk (via Twitter)

German postcard, no. 10 (of 32). Photo: Rialto / Constantin. Harald Leipnitz and Pierre Brice in Der Ölprinz/The Oil Prince (Harald Philipp, 1965). Caption: In the Comanche camp he tells the chief that one of the settlers is in possession of a silver dollar sack. This must be the only survivor of the stagecoach robbery.

 

In the Karl May adaptation Der Ölprinz/The Oil Prince (Harald Philipp, 1965), Apache Chief Winnetou (Pierre Brice) and scout Old Surehand (Stewart Granger) team up to assist a wagon-train of settlers who are threatened by the machinations of an unscrupulous crook known as 'the Oil Prince' (Harald Leipnitz). The West German-Yugoslav Western was also known as Rampage at Apache Wells. The film was one of a series of Karl May films made by Rialto Film.

 

The bandit The Oil Prince wants to sell the banker Duncan a fake oil well. However, a trek of settlers who want to settle in the area, of all places, stands in his way. The Oil Prince has the settlers' scout replaced by a member of the Finders Gang. Old Surehand and Winnetou track him down and are able to warn the trek. Winnetou convinces the Navajo chief Nitsas-ini of the peaceful nature of the settlers, and he lets them pass through his territory unhindered with Old Wabble as their guide to a stopover at the Chinla River. On the way to Utah, Old Surehand is lured into a trap by the Finders bandits, but Winnetou is able to rescue him. At the Chinla River, the settlers, among them the widow Ebersbach, the cantor Hampel, the cardsharp Richard Forsythe and the shady businessman Bergmann, are getting ready to spend the night when the Finders bandits attack. However, the attack can be repelled by Winnetou and Old Surehand, who arrive in time. After the attack fails, the oil prince comes up with something new. He murders the son of the chief Mokaschi and blames the Indians for it on the settlers. The Indians surround the settlers at the river, but are persuaded to wait with their attack if Old Surehand delivers the real murderer to them within a day. Winnetou tries to bring the women and children to safety on the raging river with a raft. However, they fall into the water and are only saved when Old Surehand arrives. Old Surehand sets off in pursuit of the oil prince, who in the meantime has taken the money for the fake oil well from the banker Duncan and has trapped him in the oil cave with an avalanche of rubble. Old Surehand is able to capture and tie up the oil prince after a short chase and a fight. The Indians have become impatient in the meantime and begin their attack on the settlers. The first wagons are already in flames when Old Surehand returns. The Oil Prince, who has been brought along, is handed over to the Indians and receives his just punishment from them.

 

Apart from Der Schut, Der Ölprinz/The Oil Prince is the only Karl May film in which the title character is a villain. For the second time, Stewart Granger plays Old Surehand, deviating from the Karl May novel in which Old Shatterhand takes the main role. Producer Horst Wendlandt was unable to cast Lex Barker as Old Shatterhand because of Artur Brauner's production Through Wild Kurdistan. The part of Lizzy (Macha Méril) was originally supposed to be played by Marie Versini, but she was also already under contract with Brauner at the time of filming. Fred Denger wrote the script, which was subsequently revised by Harald Philipp. As Harald Reinl and Alfred Vohrer were busy, Wendlandt originally wanted Paul Martin as director. When the collaboration did not materialise, he called Harald Philipp in Berlin at Christmas 1964, who immediately agreed. Martin Böttcher once again composed an atmospheric score. Der Ölprinz/The Oil Prince was shot at the Spandau Studios in Berlin and on location in Yugoslavia. The film's sets were designed by the art director Dusan Jericevic. Jericević had transformed the Western town of "Golden Hill" from Old Shatterhand into "Tucson". Der Ölprinz (1965) recorded admissions of 409,817 in France, 1,449,558 in Spain, and over 3 million in Germany.

 

Sources: Wikipedia (English and German), and IMDb.

 

And, please check out our blog European Film Star Postcards.

Aku tidak berharap untuk menjadi seseorang terpenting dalam hidupmu,

Aku cuma berharap suatu hari nanti kalo kamu denger namaku..

kamu akan tersenyum dan bilang...

"Dia itu SAHABAT AKU"

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