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Karlheinz Martin

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Name
  
Karlheinz Martin


Role
  
Film director

Karlheinz Martin httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Died
  
January 13, 1948, Berlin, Germany

Movies
  
From Morn to Midnight, The Pearl of the Orient

Spouse
  
Rose Stradner (m. ?–1937), Traute Carlsen

Similar People
  
Georg Kaiser, Erna Morena, Ernst Deutsch, Rose Stradner, Tom Mankiewicz

Von morgens bis Mitternacht + Dagora @ Goethe-Institut Amsterdam 13-05-2011


Karlheinz Martin (May 6, 1886 – January 13, 1948) was a German stage and film director, best known for his expressionist productions.

After enjoying success with experimental productions in Frankfurt am Main and Hamburg, Martin went to Berlin, where he premiered Ernst Toller's anti-war drama, Transfiguration (Die Wandlung) on September 30, 1919. Performed in a hall seating fewer than 300 spectators, the production used the intimacy of the space to drive home the horrors of Toller's script. The sets were jagged flats placed against blackness, and lit with harsh white spotlights. Scenes ended in blackouts not, as was customary at the time, with the curtain falling. Fritz Kortner became famous for his intense portrayal of the young hero.

Martin turned to film in 1920, when he directed a cinematic adaptation of one of the most celebrated expressionist dramas, Georg Kaiser's From Morn to Midnight (Von morgens bis mitternachts) with actor Ernst Deutsch as the Cashier who embezzles money from a bank and goes on a desperate search for meaning in his life in a nightmarish metropolis.

After World War II, Martin revived Bertolt Brecht's The Threepenny Opera in Berlin, and premiered Georg Kaiser's pacifist drama, The Soldier Tanaka (Der Soldat Tanaka).

References

Karlheinz Martin Wikipedia