16 April 2024

Lonny Kellner

Lonny Kellner (1930-2003) was a German Schlager singer and actress. She was married to comedian and radio and television personality Peter Frankenfeld.

Lonny Kellner
Austrian postcard by Austriapost, Wien, no. 396. Photo: Arion Film-Verleih. Lonny Kellner is written on the postcard as Loni (sic) Kellner.

Lonny Kellner in Das ideale Brautpaar (1954)
German postcard by Kolibri-Verlag, no. 678. Photo: Arthur Grimm / BBF-Nordfilm / Allianz. Lonny Kellner in Das ideale Brautpaar/The ideal bride and groom (Robert A. Stemmle, 1954).

Reaching the top ranks of the US charts


Lonny Kellner was born in 1930 in Remscheid, Germany. Lonny grew up in Remscheid, took acting lessons after her school education and began studying singing.

Her first roles followed at the Bonn Stadttheater and then at the Westfälisches Landestheater in classics such as 'Minna von Barnhelm' by Gotthold Ephraim Lessing, 'Scampolo' by Dario Niccodemi and 'Die versunkene Glocke' (The Sunken Bell) by Gerhart Hauptmann.

In 1948, through the recommendation of colleagues, she performed a few Schlager songs at the NWDR radio station in Cologne. She made her debut with the songs 'Wenn ich dich seh', dann fange ich zu träumen an' and 'Gib mir einen Kuss durchs Telefon'. Cabaret shows, radio plays and orchestral recordings for many radio stations soon followed.

She sang her first big hits 'Im Hafen von Adano' and 'La-Le-Lu' as a duet with René Carol. In 1952 Kellner made her first film appearance as a pop singer with the song 'Manhattan-Boogie' in the West German musical drama Königin der Arena/Queen of the Arena (Rolf Meyer, 1952) starring Maria Litto. This was followed by the films Tanzende Sterne/Dancing Stars (Géza von Cziffra, 1952) starring Germaine Damar, Die Blume von Hawaii/The Flower of Hawaii (Géza von Cziffra, 1953), Geld aus der Luft/Money from the Air (Géza von Cziffra, 1954) starring Josef Meinrad.

She co-starred in Keine Angst vor Schwiegermüttern/Don't Worry About Your Mother-in-Law (Erich Engels, 1954) with Grethe Weiser as her mother, Das ideale Brautpaar/The Perfect Couple (Robert A. Stemmle, 1954), and Auf Wiedersehen am Bodensee/I'll See You at Lake Constance (Hans Albin, 1956). She achieved great success with such film songs as 'So ein Tag, so wunderschön wie heute' and 'Du, du, lass mein kleines Herz in Ruh'. She even managed to reach the top ranks of the US charts.

Lonny Kellner and Claus Biederstaedt in Keine Angst vor Schwiegermüttern (1954)
German postcard by Rüdel-Verlag, Hamburg-Bergedorf, no. 1127. Photo: Arthur Grimm / Fono / Deutsche London. Lonny Kellner and Claus Biederstaedt in Keine Angst vor Schwiegermüttern/No fear of mothers-in-law (Erich Engels, 1954).

Lonny Kellner and Claus Biederstaedt in Keine Angst vor Schwiegermüttern (1954)
German postcard by Kolibri-Verlag, Hamburg-Bergedorf, no. 1300. Photo: Arthur Grimm / Fono / Deutsche London. Lonny Kellner and Claus Biederstaedt in Keine Angst vor Schwiegermüttern/No fear of mothers-in-law (Erich Engels, 1954).

Peter Frankenfeld


In 1956, Lonny Kellner turned down a career in the United States to marry entertainer Peter Frankenfeld, whom she had met on a joint tour. Max Schmeling and his wife Anny Ondra were witnesses at the wedding. The violinist Helmut Zacharias played 'Lullaby of Birdland'.

Frankenfeld adopted her son Thomas, born in 1951, from a previous relationship. After their marriage, Lonny Kellner-Frankenfeld and Peter Frankenfeld stood together more often in front of cameras and microphones and did shows and tours together.

The couple set up a recording studio in their house in Wedel, Holstein, where they produced sketches for radio and TV programmes such as the duets 'Bum-Budi-Bum' and 'Ich bin der Herr im Haus'. She completed an apprenticeship so that she could also work for Frankenfeld as a quasi-secretary.

After Frankenfeld's unexpected death in 1979, Kellner-Frankenfeld worked as an actress again. She appeared in 39 episodes of the family series Unsere Hagenbecks/Our Hagenbecks (1991-1994) and made guest appearances in the ZDF series Das Traumschiff/The Dream Ship (1983-1987). She also played leading roles in Ein unvergessliches Wochenende/An unforgettable weekend, an episode of the TV series Großstadtrevier/Big city district (2001) and in two episodes of Heimatgeschichten/Home stories (1998-2003).

Her last film role was in the romantic comedy Otto - Der Liebesfilm/Otto - The love film (Otto Waalkes, Bernd Eilert, 1992) starring Otto Waalkes. In memory of Frankenfeld, she endowed the Peter Frankenfeld Award for artistic versatility and humanitarian commitment in 2000. Lonny Kellner died of bone cancer in 2003 in Hamburg, Germany, at 72. Her first husband was Werner Labriga.

Lonny Kellner in Das ideale Brautpaar (1954)
German postcard by Rüdel-Verlag, Hamburg-Bergedorf, no. 793. Photo: Arthur Grimm / BBF-Nordfilm / Allianz. Lonny Kellner in Das ideale Brautpaar/The ideal bride and groom (Robert A. Stemmle, 1954).

Sources: Wikipedia (German and English) and IMDb.

15 April 2024

Photo by Rudolf Dührkoop & Atelier Dührkoop

Rudolf Dührkoop (1848-1918) was a Hamburg-based studio photographer, who from 1909 onward had a portrait studio in Berlin. When he died his talented daughter Minya Dührkoop (1873-1929) took over the studio. In the early 1930s, the company was called Gerstenberg-Dührkoop. Yet, in the postwar years, the name Dührkoop was used again for photos made for the new Ufa.

Henny Porten
German postcard by Meissner & Buch, Leipzig. Photo: Rud. Dührkoop.

Sturdy and blond Henny Porten (1890-1960) was one of Germany's most important and popular film actresses of silent cinema. She became the quintessence of German womanhood, ladylike yet kindhearted and a not a little petit bourgeois. She was also the producer of many of her films.

Else Berna
German postcard by Photochemie, Berlin, no. K. 1552. Photo: Rudolph Dührkoop, Berlin.

Actress and singer Else Berna appeared in 13 silent German films between 1917 and 1924.

Paul Heidemann as Teddy
German postcard by Verlag Hermann Leiser, Berlin-Wilm., no. 5233. Photo: R. Dührkoop.

Paul Heidemann (1884-1968) was a German stage and screen actor, film director and film producer. He was famous for his comical parts.

Viggo Larsen
German postcard by Ross Verlag, Berlin, no. 306/2, 1919-1924. Photo: Rudolf Dührkoop.

Viggo Larsen (1880-1957) was a Danish actor, director, scriptwriter and producer. He was one of the pioneers in film history. With Wanda Treumann he directed and produced many German films of the 1910s.

Charles Willy Kayser
German postcard by Ross Verlag, Berlin, no. 385/1, 1919-1924. Photo: Rudolph Dührkoop.

German actor Charles Willy Kayser (1881-1942) had a remarkable career in the silent cinema. However, today he is little known, while many of his films are considered lost now and there is little information about his work.

Rudolf Dührkoop


Hamburg-based photographer Rudolf Dührkoop (1848-1918) made portrait photos and also took artistic photographs in the style of Pictorialism. Rudolf Johannes Dührkoop was born in 1848, the son of carpenter Christian Friederich Dührkoop and Johanna Friederica Emile. When the Franco-Prussian War broke out in 1870, Dührkoop volunteered to join Infantry Regiment No. 76 and was sent to Paris as an ordinary soldier after the capitulation. In 1872, he returned home, went into business and married Maria Louise Caroline Matzen, with whom he had two daughters, Hanna Maria Theresia, born in 1872, and Julie Wilhelmine, born in 1874.

Dührkoop first worked as a railway employee and then as a merchant. It was during this time that he became interested in photography. Dührkoop acquired the necessary knowledge over the years and familiarised himself with the necessary photographic processes and optics. In 1882, he published his first photograph in Photographisches Wochenblatt, the magazine of the Photographischer Verein zu Berlin. At the end of 1882, Dührkoop applied to the Hamburg Chamber of Commerce for a photographer's licence, which was granted in January 1883.

In 1883, he opened a studio at Große Bäckerstraße 26 in Hamburg and effectively became a professional photographer without any training. Dührkoop began his professional career by making 'Cartes-de-Visite', a kind of business cards with small photographs. In addition, he mainly took portrait photos. He quickly gained success. Just six months after opening his studio, he moved to Hopfenmarkt. He was often asked to photograph prominent German personalities and joined the leading 'Deutschen Photographen-Verein' in 1886.

In 1888, Dührkoop moved into a studio in Ferdinandstraße and two years later, he opened an additional studio in Altona. Over the years, Dührkoop began to take reportage photographs. Outside his studio, he photographed, among other things, a celebration of the 25th anniversary of the 76th Regiment on the Heiligengeistfeld in 1891 and a festive scene on the Hopfenmarkt in 1892 on the occasion of a 50-year celebration to commemorate the outbreak of the Hamburg fire. He showed artistic aspirations and in 1898 he held his first exhibition, with a series of pictorialist portraits of his daughter Minya. From then on, his fame rose all over Germany and later internationally. He opened another studio in Berlin, published in leading photographic magazines such as Die Kunst in der Photographie and also wrote articles on portrait photography.

In 1904, he participated in the Louisiana Purchase Exposition in Saint Louis, where he came into contact with well-known pictorialist art photographers such as Gertrude Käsebier. In 1905, he became the first German member of the prestigious English Royal Photographic Society and in 1906 of the pictorialist photography society Linked Ring. At the time, photographic societies organised exhibitions of photographic works by their members and invited photographers. At regular meetings, the members informed themselves about the latest developments. At such meetings, Dührkoop spoke, for example, about the experiences and successes of his trip to America in 1904. In addition to his artistic work, Rudolf Dührkoop always remained active as a portrait photographer and captured a large number of well-known German personalities on film during his career.

Werner Fuetterer
German postcard by Ross Verlag, no. 3465/2, 1928-1929. Photo: Atelier Dührkoop, Berlin.

At the age of 18, German actor Werner Fuetterer (1907-1991) was discovered to play the young lover in a series of silent films. For more than four decades he went on to work as a supporting actor in nearly 100 films.

Ruth Weyher
German postcard by Ross Verlag, no. 4032/1, 1929-1930. Photo: Atelier Dührkoop, Berlin.

Ruth Weyher (1901-1983) was a German actress of the silent cinema.

Hans Stüwe
German postcard by Ross Verlag, no. 4237/1, 1929-1930. Photo: Atelier Dührkoop, Berlin.

Hans Stüwe (1901-1976) was a German singer and opera director. From 1926 on he was also a big film star in Germany. Four times he was the film partner of Ufa diva Zarah Leander.

Ery Bos
German collectors card by Salem Zigaretten in the series Bunte Filmbilder, no. 269 (in a series of 275). Photo: Dührkoop / Ross Verlag.

Dutch-German actress Ery Bos (1910-2005) had a short but productive film career in the early German sound film. In only three years, from 1932 to 1934, she took part in a dozen films.

La Jana
German cigarette card by Ross Verlag in the 'Künstler im Film' series for Zigarettenfabrik Monopol, Dresden, Serie 1, image 115 (of 200). Photo: Dührkoop.

Sexy German dancer and film actress La Jana (1905-1940) was the most popular showgirl in Berlin in the 1930s. She appeared in 25 European films, often dancing in exotic costumes. In 1940, she suddenly died of pneumonia and pleurisy.

Much more than a simple assistant


In 1887, Rudolf Dührkoop made his then 14-year-old daughter Julie Wilhelmine, known as Minya, his studio assistant. Minya Dührkoop was trained as an independent employee and was to become much more than a simple assistant in the years to come. Father and daughter ran the business together. In 1894, Minya married the photographer Luis Diéz Vazquez from Málaga. Nothing is known about any professional collaboration between the couple. When the marriage ended in divorce in 1901, Minya Diéz kept her married name.

Minya and Rudolf Dührkoop were able to assert themselves through the high artistic quality of their photographic work. In addition, the continuous cultivation and expansion of their artistic network was crucial to their success. In 1901, Minya and Rudolf Dührkoop embarked on their first trip to England. This was followed by trips to America in 1904/1905 to visit exhibitions and organise their own exhibitions, as well as to cultivate contacts with other photographers.

In September 1906, Minya Diéz-Dührkoop became a partner of "Rudolf Dührkoop." Rudolf left his daughter the newly rented Hamburg studio at Jungfernstieg 34 in the Heine-Haus and she managed the studio from this point onwards. Rudolf Dührkoop left Hamburg to open and run a "Werkstatt für künstlerische Camera-Bildnisse" and "Neuzeitliche Kamerabildnisse" in Berlin at Unter den Linden 10 in December 1906.

Minya Diéz-Dührkoop collected contemporary art. For example, she owned a painting by the painter Alma del Banco. She moved in artistic circles in Hamburg and numerous writers and artists frequented her studio at Jungfernstieg 34. In 1910, she became a passive member of the Expressionist artists' association "Brücke" and cultivated contacts with writers such as Richard Dehmel and his wife Ida and visual artists such as Max Pechstein, Franz Radziwill and Karl Schmidt-Rottluff

Encounters overseas also shaped her work. A highlight in Minya Diéz-Dührkoop's artistic and social life was the trip to the USA in 1911, which took place at the invitation of the Photographers Association of America. George Eastman had his portrait taken by Diéz-Dührkoop and there was also a professional exchange with the Swiss photographer Helmar Lerski in the USA. Minya and Rudolf Dührkoop's international fame grew steadily through various trips including trips to England in 1901 and 1908 to meet famous photographers such as Emil Otto Hoppé and Alvin Langdon Coburn. At that time, they were the only professional photographers from Germany to be accepted into the elite circle of the Brotherhood of the Linked Ring, otherwise only amateurs were admitted, who at the time had the higher artistic prestige.

Hertha Thiele
German postcard by Ross Verlag, no. 6845/1, 1931-1932. Photo: Gerstenberg-Dührkoop, Berlin.

For a brief period during the Weimar Republic, Hertha Thiele (1908 -1984) appeared in several controversial stage plays and films. She is best known for playing a 14-year-old schoolgirl in love with her female teacher in the ground-breaking Mädchen in Uniform/Girls in Uniform (1931). She received thousands of fan letters - mostly from women. Decades later, Thiele became a well-known film and television actress in East Germany.

Camilla Horn
German postcard by Ross Verlag, no. 7916/2, 1932-1933. Photo: Gerstenberg-Dührkoop, Berlin.

Ethereally blonde Camilla Horn (1903-1996) was a German dancer and film star. Her breakthrough role was Gretchen in the silent film classic Faust (Friedrich Wilhelm Murnau, 1926). She also starred in some Hollywood films of the late 1920s and a few British and Italian productions.

Peter Bosse
German Postcard by Ross Verlag, no. A 1276/1, 1937-1938. Photo: Dührkoop.

Actor, presenter and journalist Peter Bosse (1931-2018) was a popular child star of the German cinema in the 1930s. The boy with his cheeky face made 28 films.

Fritz Kampers
German postcard by Ross Verlag, no. A 3150/1, 1941-1944. Photo: Dührkoop, Berlin.

German actor and director Fritz Kampers (1891-1950) was a solidly built Bavarian character actor. In films from 1913, he was much in demand during the 1920s and 1930s. Kampers was often cast as robust or comic military types, or laconic, but good-hearted rustics in mountaineering or 'Heimat' films. He appeared in more than 260 films.

Rolf Weih
German postcard by Ross-Verlag, no. A 3586/1, 1941-1944. Photo: Dührkoop.

Rolf Weih (1906–1969) was a German film actor, who played supporting parts in many comedies and musicals of the 1930s and 1940s. After the war, he appeared in numerous Heimat films in West Germany.

Stars depicted in their own homes


Rudolf Dührkoop celebrated his 60th birthday on 1 August 1908 and two months later the studio celebrated its 25th anniversary. Dührkoop was presented with a gold medal from Duke Carl Theodor in Bavaria and the Silver Crown Medal from the Saxon Photographers' Association. In 1918, Rudolf Dührkoop died in Hamburg, aged 69.

Minya Diez-Dührkoop continued the company after the death of her father. She made many sepia-tinted portrait photos of artists such as the painters Max Liebermann, Franz Radziwill, Emil Nolde and Max Pechstein and the Hamburg dancers Lavinia Schulz (1896-1924) and Walter Holdt (1899-1924). Dance poses of Schulz and Holdt in expressionist costumes they made themselves were photographed in the Dührkoop studio in variations from the front and from behind, with different backgrounds and different costumes. The domain of contemporary dance must have inspired Minya Diéz-Dührkoop photographically and must have been of particular concern to her, as there are further images in Der künstlerische Tanz unserer Zeit (1928).

She also continued to depict the actors of silent German cinema like film diva Henny Porten. The stars were often depicted in their own homes, without the scenery or props commonly used at the time. In one article, published in the journal Deutsche Kunst und Dekoration, the Dührkoop studio was described as “radical” with a “determined striving towards the future”.

In 1926, Minya remarried. Her second husband was Fritz Karl Gustav Schulz. Minya Dührkoop died in 1929 in Hamburg. Fritz Karl Gustav Schulz continued to run the studio after his wife's sudden death. In the early 1930s, the company was called Gerstenberg-Dührkoop. The studio continued to make portraits of German film actors

From 1935, Antonio Machado, a long-time employee, was the owner of the "Dührkoop Werkstätten". In the postwar years, the name Dührkoop was used again for film star photos made for the new Ufa, but also for the Defa in East Germany. When the Dührkoop studio stopped to exist is unclear.

Sonja Sutter (1931-2017)
German postcard by VEB Progress Film-Vertrieb, no. 661, 1958. Photo: DEFA / Dührkoop. Publicity still for Lissy (Konrad Wolf, 1957).

German film actress Sonja Sutter (1931–2017) was one of the few actors who was allowed to appear in productions in both East and West Germany. She is remembered for DEFA films like Lissy (1957), her role as Fraulein Rottenmeier in the German TV series Heidi (1978) and for several roles in the TV series Derrick (1983-1998).

Hardy Krüger
German postcard by Ufa, Berlin-Tempelhof, no. FK 3058. Photo: Dührkoop / Ufa.

German actor and writer Hardy Krüger (1928-2022) was a blond heartthrob in the 1950s. He acted in numerous European movies and also in classic American films.

Renate Mannhardt
West German postcard by Ufa/Film-Foto, Berlin-Tempelhof, no. FK 3327. Photo: Dührkoop / Ufa.

Renate Mannhardt (1920-2013) was a German supporting actress of the 1950s. She was known for such films as Peter Lorre's Der Verlorene (1951), Die große Schuld/The great debt (1953) and Roberto Rossellini's Non credo più all'amore (La paura)/Fear (1954).
>
Heinz Drache
West German postcard by Ufa/Film-Foto, Berlin-Tempelhof, no. FK 3994. Photo: Dührkoop.

Heinz Drache (1923-2002) was the most in-vogue screen cop of post-war German cinema. He first established his reputation in the role of the charismatic Inspector Yates in Francis Durbridge's TV miniseries Das Halstuch (1962) and in the same vein he apprehended villains in a series of Edgar Wallace Krimis such as Der Zinker/The Squeaker (1963). He appeared in 42 films between 1953 and 2002.

Sabine Bethmann
German postcard by Ufa, Berlin-Tempelhof, no. FK 4230. Photo: Dührkoop / Ufa.

German film actress Sabine Bethmann (1931) is best known for Fritz Langs’s Der Tiger von Eschnapur (1959) and the sequel Das Indische Grabmal (1959), together known as 'Fritz Lang's Indian Epic'.

Sources: Viktoria Krieger (Liebermann Villa), MKG Collection, Wikipedia (Dutch and German).

14 April 2024

Ginette Maddie

Ginette Maddie (1898-1980) was a French actress who acted in French and German silent films. Between 1922 and 1958, she appeared in 20 films with such notable directors as Alfred Machin and Julien Duvivier.

Ginette Maddie
French postcard by Wyndham, Edit., Paris.

Ginette Maddie in Vindicta (1923)
French postcard. Photo: Film Gaumont. Ginette Maddie in Vindicta (Louis Feuillade, 1923).

Ginette Maddie
French postcard by Editions Cinémagazine, no. 107. Photo: Wyndham.

The second woman


Ginette Maddie was born Marcelle Namur in 1898 in Paris, France. She was the daughter of a dressmaker. Officially adopted at the age of seven, she took the name Marcelle Yvonne Gourier.

She started her film career in 1922 opposite Claude Mérelle in Le diamant noir/The Black Diamond (André Hugon, 1922). Her breakthrough was the 5-part serial Vindicta (1923), directed by Louis Feuillade. Maddie was the leading lady in Sarati le terrible/Sarati the Terrible (René Hervil, Louis Mercanton, 1923), La gitanilla (André Hugon, 1924) and the comedy Les héritiers de l'oncle James/The Heirs of Uncle James (Alfred Machin, Henry Wulschleger, 1924).

Other films in which she starred were L'ornière/The Rut (Édouard Chimot, 1924), Le coeur des gueux/The Heart of the Beggars (Alfred Machin, Henry Wulschleger, 1925), and La lueur dans les ténèbres/The Glow in the Darkness (Maurice Charmeroy, 1928) with Edmond van Daele.

Ginette Maddie also often played the second woman in French and German films opposite e.g. Dolly Davis, Madeleine Erickson, Xenia Desni, and Dita Parlo. In the early sound era, Maddie acted in two more films. She appeared opposite singer Damia in Sola/Alone (Henri Diamant-Berger, 1931) and opposite Gina Manès in L'Ensorcellement de Séville (Benito Perojo, 1931).

Years later, two more, small performances followed in 1943 and 1958. Ginette Maddie passed away at the International Hospital of the University of Paris in 1980. She was 82. She is buried in the Pantin cemetery in Paris, in the same vault as the singer Damia.

Ginette Maddie
Spanish card by La Novela Semanal Cinematográfica, no. 113.

Georges Biscot, Ginette Maddie, Michel Floresco and Fernand Hermann in Vindicta (1923)
French postcard by Ciné Cartes, Paris, no. 3. Photo: Film Gaumont. Georges Biscot as Césarin at right, Ginette Maddie as Blanche, Michel Floresco as Morales at left and Fernand Hermann as Bajart in Vindicta (Louis Feuillade, 1923). Caption: La cour du faux marquis (The court of the false marquis).

Ginette Maddie and Henry Deneyrieux in Vindicta (1923)
French postcard in the Ciné-cartes series, Paris, no. 3. Photo: Film Gaumont. Ginette Maddie as Blanche and Henry Deneyrieux as Louiset in Vindicta (Louis Feuillade, 1923).

Ginette Maddie
Spanish collector card in the Célebres Artistas Cinematográficos series by Chocolate E. Juncosa, Barcelona, Series D, no 10.

Ginette Maddie
French postcard by Wyndham, Edit., Paris.

Sources: Wikipedia (French and English) and IMDb.