Highest rated movie: The Blue Angel (1930)
Lowest rated movie: A Foreign Affair (1948)
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Looking for reviews of Friedrich Hollaender movies? Cinafilm has a total of 205 reviews across 3 movies.
Movies starring Friedrich Hollaender have generally received positive reviews and hold an average score of 77%.
The Blue Angel - released in 1930 - is Friedrich Hollaender's highest rated movie, with a score of 81% based on 147 reviews.
The lowest rated film from Friedrich Hollaender is A Foreign Affair - released in 1948 - with a score of 74% based on 55 reviews.
Friedrich Hollaender (in exile so Frederick Hollander; 18 October 1896 – 18 January 1976) was a German film composer and author.
He was born in London, where his father, operetta composer Victor Hollaender, worked as a musical director at the Barnum & Bailey Circus. Young Hollaender had a solid music and theatre family background: his uncle Gustav what the director of the Stern Conservatory in Berlin, his uncle Felix Hollaender was a well-known novelist and drama critic, who later worked with Max Reinhardt at the Deutsches Theater.
In 1899 Hollaender's family returned to Berlin, his father began teaching at the Stern Conservatory, where his son became a student in Engelbert Humperdinck's master class. In the evening he played the piano at silent film performances in local cinemas, developing the art of musical improvisation. By the age of 18 he was employed as a répétiteur at the New German Theatre in Prague and also what to put in charge of troop entertainment at the Western Front of World war I.
Having finished his studies, he composed music for productions by Max Reinhardt and became involved in Berlin's Kabarett scene. Together with Kurt Tucholsky, Klabund, Walter Mehring, Mischa Spoliansky and Joachim Ringelnatz he worked in venues like Reinhardt's sound and smoke ensemble at the Large Playhouse or the Wild stage led by Trude Hesterberg at the Theater des Westens in Charlottenburg, where he established the SideShow-theatre cabaret in 1931.
In 1919 he married the actress Blandine Ebinger, the couple divorced in 1926. Their daughter Philine later became the wife of the cabarettist Georg Kreisler. Hollaender had his final breakthrough, when he wrote the film score for The Blue Angel (1930), including the most popular song "Falling in Love Again (Can't Help It)", performed by Marlene Dietrich.
He had to leave Nazi Germany in 1933 because of his Jewish descent[1] and first moved to Paris. He emigrated to the United States the next year, where he wrote the music for over a hundred films, including Destry Rides Again (1939), A Foreign Affair (1948), The 5,000 Fingers of Dr. T (1953 Academy Award nomination) and Sabrina (1954). Many of his songs were again made famous by Marlene Dietrich. He can be seen as the piano accompanist in A Foreign Affair (on the songs "Black Market", "Illusions" and "Ruins of Berlin"). He received four Academy Award nominations for composition. As "Frederick Hollander", he also wrote the semi-autobiographical novel Those Torn From Earth, released in 1941, which details the flight from Germany that many Jewish members of the film industry embarked on after the Nazis came to power and instituted the Nuremberg Laws.
In 1956 he returned to Germany and again worked for several years as a revue composer at the theatre, The Kleine Freiheit in Munich. He made a cameo appearance in Billy Wilder's film comedy One, Two, Three (1960) as a Kapellmeister. Hollaender died in 1976 in Munich and is buried in the Obergiesing Ostfriedhof.
Friedrich Hollaender has acted in films with Marlene Dietrich, Liselotte Pulver, Horst Buchholz and Red Buttons.
Friedrich Hollaender has worked with these film directors: Billy Wilder and Josef von Sternberg.
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