Erich John Waschneck (29 April 1887, Grimma, Kingdom of Saxony – 22 September 1970, Berlin ) was a German cameraman, director, screenwriter and film producer .
Contents
1Early life
2Career
3Personal life
4Selected filmography
Early life
Erich was the son of Karl Hermann Waschneck, a blacksmith, and his wife Therese Emilie, née Schneider. Waschneck went to finishing school at the Leipzig Art Academy and studied painting.
Career
He came in contact with the film industry in 1907 when he began to paint posters for films. He then worked as a still photographer and later as a camera assistant to cinematographer Fritz Arno Wagner .
In 1921, he did his first work as a cameraman in the adaptation of the fairy tale The Little Muck by Wilhelm Hauff. From 1924 he worked as a director. His film Eight Girls in a boat (1932) won the Gold Medal at the Venice Film Festival. In 1932 he became managing director of Beacon-Film GmbH in Berlin and film producer. After the Nazi rise to power, into force on 4th Waschneck April 1933 the National Socialist Factory Cell Organization German-born film directors with. [1] In 1940, he directed the anti-Semitic propaganda film The Rothschilds'.
After the war Waschneck was only able to direct two films.
Personal life
In 1933 Waschneck married the actress Karin Hardt. Waschneck is buried in the old cemetery in Wannsee.
Selected filmography
The Pearl of the Orient (1921)
Love at the Wheel (1921)
Barmaid (1922)
The Girl with the Mask (1922)
A Glass of Water (1923)
The Chain Clinks (1923)
The New Land (1924)
The Stolen Professor (1924)
Struggle for the Soil (1925)
My Friend the Chauffeur (1926)
The Man in the Fire (1926)
Regine (1927)
The Woman with the World Record (1927)
Aftermath (1927)
Sajenko the Soviet (1928)
Docks of Hamburg (1928)
Scandal in Baden-Baden (1929)
Favorite of Schonbrunn (1929)
Diane (1929)
Two People (1930)
Sacred Waters (1932)
Eight Girls in a Boat (1932)
Hände aus dem Dunkel (1933)
Adventure on the Southern Express (1934)
Music in the Blood (1934)
Regine (1935)
Mein Leben für Maria Isabell (1935)
Liebesleute - Hermann und Dorothea von Heute (1935), awarded: "artistically valuable"
Chute spillway of Llyn Brianne dam in Wales A spillway is a structure used to provide the controlled release of flows from a dam or levee into a downstream area, typically the riverbed of the dammed river itself. In the United Kingdom, they may be known as overflow channels . Spillways ensure that the water does not overflow and damage or destroy the dam. Floodgates and fuse plugs may be designed into spillways to regulate water flow and reservoir level. Such a spillway can be used to regulate downstream flows – by releasing water in small amounts before the reservoir is full, operators can prevent sudden large releases that would happen if the dam were overtopped. Other uses of the term "spillway" include bypasses of dams or outlets of channels used during high water, and outlet channels carved through natural dams such as moraines. Water normally flows over a spillway only during flood periods – when the reservoir cannot hold the excess of water entering the reservoir ove...
For other uses, see America (disambiguation). The Americas Area 42,549,000 km 2 (16,428,000 sq mi) Population 1,001,559,000 (2016 estimate) Population density 23.5389551 23.53896/km 2 ( 60.965614 60.9656/sq mi) GDP (nominal) $24.6 trillion (2016 estimate) GDP per capita $25,229 (2015) [1] HDI 0.736 [2] Demonym American, [3] New Worlder [4] (see usage) Countries 35 Languages Spanish, English, Portuguese, French, Haitian Creole, Quechua, Guaraní, Aymara, Nahuatl, Dutch and many others Time zones UTC−10:00 to UTC Largest cities Largest metropolitan areas Largest cities List 1.São Paulo 2.Lima 3.Mexico City 4.New York City 5.Bogotá 6.Rio de Janeiro 7.Santiago 8.Los Angeles 9.Caracas 10.Buenos Aires CIA political map of the Americas in Lambert azimuthal equal-area projection The Americas (also collectively called America ; French: Amérique , Spanish/Portuguese: América ) comprise the totality of the continents of North and Sou...