Showing posts with label Rex Gildo. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rex Gildo. Show all posts

14 August 2014

Rex Gildo

German Schlager singer and actor Rex Gildo (1936-1999) was a teen idol in the 1960s and 1970s. The German Cliff Richard showed durability. In a career of 40 years, he sold around 39 million records and starred in more than 30 films.

Rex Gildo
Dutch postcard.

Rex Gildo
Dutch postcard by Gebr. Spanjersberg N.V., Rotterdam, no. CK 352. Photo: Ufa.

Conny Froboess, Rex Gildo, Peter Krauss, Rolf Pinegger
German postcard by ISV, no. E 13. Photo: Constantin / Grimm. With Conny Froboess, Peter Kraus and Rolf Pinegger.

Rex Gildo
Dutch postcard by Gebr. Spanjersberg N.V., Rotterdam, nr. CK 370. Photo: Ufa.

Rex Gildo
Big Dutch postcard.

Sexy Rexy


Rex Gildo was born as Ludwig Franz Hirtreiter in Straubing, Bavaria, in 1936.

He later claimed to have been a member of the Regensburger Domspatzen choir before attending acting lessons at the Otto-Falckenburg-Schule in Munich.

The German TV documentary series Legenden/Legends (Ulrike Bremer, 2009) revealed that in fact he had worked in a decorating apprenticeship before he met Fred Miekley, who would become his manager and longtime companion and presumably paid for Gildo's acting, dancing and singing lessons.

However, Ludwig made his stage debut as Alexander Gildo with the Munich Kammerspiele theatre group in 1956, but he quickly moved on to TV and to the cinema.

Ada Tschechowa, manager of the Munich Kammerspiele, introduced him for his film début in Immer wenn der Tag beginnt/Whenever the Day Starts (Wolfgang Liebeneiner, 1957) opposite Ruth Leuwerik and Hans Söhnker.

In 1958 he already played his first leading part opposite teen idols Conny Froboess in the film Hula-Hopp, Conny/Hula Hoop, Conny (Heinz Paul, 1959).

In 1959, his future record producer Nils Nobach, offered him a contract at record label Electrola and gave him the stage name Rex Gildo, recordedly inspired by the phrase 'sexy Rexy'.

In the following years Gildo sang and played in such forgettable Schlagerfilms as Ja, so ein Mädchen mit sechzehn/Yes, Such a Girl of Sixteen (Hans Grimm, 1959) again with Conny Froboess, Meine Nichte tut das nicht/My Niece Doesn't Do That (Franz Josef Gottlieb, 1960), Marina (Paul Martin, 1960), Schlagerparade (Franz Marischka, 1960) with Vivi Bach, Zwei blaue Vergissmeinnicht/Carnation Frank (Helmut M. Backhaus, 1963), and Apartmentzauber/Apartment Magic (Helmut M. Backhaus, 1963) with Helga Sommerfeld.

Rex Gildo
Dutch postcard by Takken, Utrecht, no. AX 4730.

Rex Gildo
Dutch postcard by NS, no. 34.

Conny Froboess
Vintage card, with Conny Froboess and at far left Rex Gildo.

Rex Gildo, Rocco Granata
Dutch postcard by Uitg. Takken, Utrecht, no. AX 4687. Photo: Hafbo. Publicity still for the Schlagerfilm Marina (Paul Martin, 1960), which was distributed in Holland as Teenagers Schlager Parade. The girl between Rex Gildo and Rocco Granata is the female lead of the film, Italian actress Giorgia Moll.

Gitte Haenning, Rex Gildo
German postcard by Friedrich-W. Sander-Verlag, Minden/Westf. in the Kolibri series. Photo: Wiener Stadthalle/Constantin. Publicity still for Jezt dreht die Welt sich nur um dich/The World Turns Just Around You Now (1964) with Gitte.

Gitte Haenning, Rex Gildo
Dutch postcard by SYBA, no. 36 with Gitte.

Rex Gildo
Dutch postcard by NSO. Sent by mail in 1963.

Rex Gildo
Dutch postcard by Gebr. Spanjersberg N.V., Rotterdam, no. 5955.

Rex Gildo
German postcard by Franz Josef Rüdel, Hamburg, no. 5191. Photo: publicity still for Was ist den bloss - mit Willi los?/What Is the Matter with Willi? (Werner Jacobs, 1970).

Fernweh


Early 1960, Rex Gildo had his first hit song with Sieben Wochen nach Bombay/Seven Weeks to Bombay, which reached to #13 in the German charts.

Rex's schlagers would become million sellers in Germany, but less so abroad. His hits, such as Speedy Gonzales (1962), Goodbye Susanna (1965), and Fiesta Mexicana (1972) were sentimental, ‘fernweh’ (wanderlust) evoking music, often flavoured with Spanish or Mexican elements.

In 1962, he formed the very popular duo Gitte & Rex with Danish singer Gitte Hænning.

Together they starred in the musical Jetzt dreht die Welt sich nur um dich/The World Turns Just Around You Now (Wolfgang Liebeneiner. 1964).

The two were rumoured to be engaged to be married. Later Gitte recalled that it was just a publicity stunt by the record company, and she was so sore about it that she broke off the collaboration with Gildo.

Rex later had his own TV show, Gestatten - Rex Gildo/May I - Rex Gildo.

During the 1980s and 1990s, his popularity decreased and he felt pressured to maintain his public image. Reportedly he became a tragic figure who desperately tried to mask his age with wigs and a lot of make-up.

He died in 1999 aged 63, having spent three days in an artificially-induced coma after attempting suicide.

Although he married his cousin Marion Hirtreiter in 1974, after his death it was reported that he had been gay. Rex Gildo was buried next to his former longtime companion Fred Miekley.

His life was the subject of the beautiful Dutch documentary Rex Gildo - De val van een schlagerkoning/Rex Gildo - The Fall of a Schlager King (Hans Heijnen, 2003).

Rex Gildo
Dutch postcard, ca. 1961.

Rex Gildo
German postcard by ISV, no. E 15. Photo: Constantin/Grimm.

Rex Gildo
German postcard by Electrola, no. 902/70. Photo: Schneider, München.

Rex Gildo
German postcard by ISV, no. K 13.



Rex Gildo sings the title song of Zwei blaue Vergissmeinnicht/Carnation Frank (1963). Source: fritz51203 (YouTube).


Rex Gildo and Gitte Hænning sing Der Hokuspokus in Jetzt dreht die Welt sich nur um dich (1964). Source: rexgildofan (YouTube).

Sources: Stephanie D'Heil (Steffi-line), Wikipedia and IMDb.

02 September 2012

Marie-France Dousset

French actress and singer Marie-France Dousset appeared in a few German films as Marie France.

Marie-France Dousset (aka Marie France)
German postcard by Krüger, no. 902/348. Photo: Bernard of Hollywood.

Marie France 1 or Marie France 2
There is not much known about the career and the life of French starlet Marie France-Dousset. IMDb confuses her with Spanish actress Paca Gabaldon (we did too in an earlier post), who also worked under the pseudonym Marie France in Germany during the 1960’s. At the time, Marie-France Dousset appeared as a singer in a few Schlager-films. The Schlager-film had been a popular German film genre since the introduction of the sound film around 1930. These were light romantic comedies in which recording artists sang their hit songs. There are examples from the 1930’s with Willy Fritsch and Hans Albers, but after the war, the genre became really popular. The big stars from the 1950’s were Vico Torriani, Peter Alexander and Catherina Valente. They were followed by the youth idols Freddy Quinn, Rex Gildo, Conny Froboess and Peter Kraus. They had some big blockbusters at the end of the 1950’s and the beginning of the 1960’s, when genres as the Heimatfilm and the Revuefilm became less popular. Around 1960, Schlager films even formed a quarter of the total output of the German cinema.

Peter Alexander, Caterina Valente, Silvio Francesco
Peter Alexander, Caterina Valente and Silvio Francesco. German postcard by WS-Druck, Wanne-Eickel, no. F 73. Photo: Lantin.

Conny Froboess, Rex Gildo, Peter Krauss, Rolf Pinegger
Conny Froboess, Rex Gildo, Peter Kraus, Rolf Pinegger. German postcard by ISV, no. E 13. Photo: Constantin / Grimm.

Mrs Beecher-Stowe Turning In Her Grave
Marie-France Dousset appeared in the Schlager films ...denn die Musik und die Liebe in Tirol/Because ... the music and the love in Tyrol (1963, Werner Jacobs) with Vivi Bach and Claus Biederstadt, and Die lustigen Weiber von Tirol/The Merry Wives of Tyrol (1964, Hans Billian) starring Gus Backus and Hannelore Auer. She appeared also in Onkel Toms Hütte/Uncle Tom's Cabin (1965, Géza von Radványi) based on the famous book by Harriet Beecher Stowe. The international cast included American actor John Kitzmiller as Uncle Tom and European stars like Herbert Lom and O.W. Fischer. Marie-France’s part was only a minor one. DB du Monteil reviews the film at IMDb: “Uncle Tom 's Cabin is more an European movie than a German one: Italian actors(Eleonora Rossi-Drago) meet German (Herbert Lom) or French ones (Juliette Gréco, Mylène Demongeot) ones. Mrs Beecher-Stowe would be turning in her grave if she saw some of the scenarists' ‘adaptations’: On the boat, there's a steamy (for the time) scene between Legree and Cassy. Exit chaste old cousin Ophelia, and make way for a vivacious gorgeous young Harriet. Besides, the deadly serious M. Saint-Clare goes to see a hostess in a bar (Juliette Gréco). The end of the movie becomes epic, as the slaves rise up against their ‘owners’. On the plus side: beautiful Negro spirituals during the Mississippi shots and a nice Evangeline Saint-Clare played by Gertraud Mittermayer. However, it's doubtful that this movie should be reissued some day.” More information about Marie-France Dousset is welcome.


German trailer for Onkel Toms Hütte/Uncle Tom's Cabin (1965). Source: KSMFilm (YouTube).

Sources: DB du Monteil (IMDb), Wikipedia (German), IMDb, and an anonymous comment.