The Famous Woman

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

Die berühmte Frau ist ein deutscher Stummfilm aus dem Jahre 1927 von Robert Wiene mit Lily Damita in der Titelrolle sowie Fred Solm und Warwick Ward als die beiden um ihre Gunst buhlenden Rivalen. Der Geschichte liegt das Stück Die Tänzerin von Melchior Lengyel zugrunde, der auch das Drehbuch verfasste. rdf:langString
The Famous Woman (German: Die berühmte Frau) is a 1927 German silent drama film directed by Robert Wiene and starring Lili Damita, Fred Solm and Warwick Ward. It was based on the play Die Tänzerin by Melchior Lengyel, who also wrote the film's screenplay. While performing in Barcelona, a dancer falls in love with a Spanish aristocrat. He proposes marriage to her providing she give up her profession. She agrees and the wedding preparations begin. When her troupe returns to Spain, however, she is drawn back to her true calling as a dancer and her aristocratic lover reluctantly allows her to go free. Damita's performance was particularly praised, as was the cinematography of Otto Kanturek who had done location shooting in Barcelona. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Die berühmte Frau
rdf:langString The Famous Woman
rdf:langString The Famous Woman
rdf:langString The Famous Woman
xsd:integer 35976937
xsd:integer 1114947365
rdf:langString Fred Solm and Lili Damita
rdf:langString Germany
xsd:date 1927-10-29
rdf:langString Die berühmte Frau ist ein deutscher Stummfilm aus dem Jahre 1927 von Robert Wiene mit Lily Damita in der Titelrolle sowie Fred Solm und Warwick Ward als die beiden um ihre Gunst buhlenden Rivalen. Der Geschichte liegt das Stück Die Tänzerin von Melchior Lengyel zugrunde, der auch das Drehbuch verfasste.
rdf:langString The Famous Woman (German: Die berühmte Frau) is a 1927 German silent drama film directed by Robert Wiene and starring Lili Damita, Fred Solm and Warwick Ward. It was based on the play Die Tänzerin by Melchior Lengyel, who also wrote the film's screenplay. While performing in Barcelona, a dancer falls in love with a Spanish aristocrat. He proposes marriage to her providing she give up her profession. She agrees and the wedding preparations begin. When her troupe returns to Spain, however, she is drawn back to her true calling as a dancer and her aristocratic lover reluctantly allows her to go free. Damita's performance was particularly praised, as was the cinematography of Otto Kanturek who had done location shooting in Barcelona.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 3004
xsd:date 1927-10-29

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