Scandal in Budapest

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Scandal_in_Budapest an entity of type: Thing

Skandal in Budapest ist ein deutsch-ungarisches Liebes-Lustspiel aus dem Jahre 1933 von Istvan Szekely und Géza von Bolváry mit Franziska Gáal und Paul Hörbiger in den Hauptrollen. Der Geschichte liegt ein Bühnenstück von und zugrunde. rdf:langString
Scandal in Budapest (German: Skandal in Budapest) is a 1933 German-Hungarian comedy film, filmed in Hungary in the German language and directed by Géza von Bolváry and Istvan Szekely and starring Franciska Gaal, Werner Pledath, and Lotte Spira. It was made by the European subsidiary of Universal Pictures, headed by Joe Pasternak, which had recently left Germany in the face of Hitler's "de-Judification" of that country. A separate Hungarian-language version was also made, with a different cast, titled Pesti Szerelem (or Romance in Budapest). Both versions were released in the United States by Arthur Mayer's DuWorld Pictures Inc. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Skandal in Budapest
rdf:langString Scandal in Budapest
rdf:langString Scandal in Budapest
rdf:langString Scandal in Budapest
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rdf:langString Germany
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rdf:langString German
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rdf:langString Skandal in Budapest ist ein deutsch-ungarisches Liebes-Lustspiel aus dem Jahre 1933 von Istvan Szekely und Géza von Bolváry mit Franziska Gáal und Paul Hörbiger in den Hauptrollen. Der Geschichte liegt ein Bühnenstück von und zugrunde.
rdf:langString Scandal in Budapest (German: Skandal in Budapest) is a 1933 German-Hungarian comedy film, filmed in Hungary in the German language and directed by Géza von Bolváry and Istvan Szekely and starring Franciska Gaal, Werner Pledath, and Lotte Spira. It was made by the European subsidiary of Universal Pictures, headed by Joe Pasternak, which had recently left Germany in the face of Hitler's "de-Judification" of that country. A separate Hungarian-language version was also made, with a different cast, titled Pesti Szerelem (or Romance in Budapest). Both versions were released in the United States by Arthur Mayer's DuWorld Pictures Inc. The film was subsequently remade in Hollywood as Top Hat, starring Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers.
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