Top 10 similar words or synonyms for ahnfrau

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Top 30 analogous words or synonyms for ahnfrau

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Peer Raben He directed three films himself: "Die Ahnfrau - Oratorium nach Franz Grillparzer" (1971), "Adele Spitzeder" (1972) and "Heute spielen wir den Boß" (1981), for which he also composed the music.
Luise Fleck She also made use of Austrian literature in "Die Ahnfrau" ("The Ancestress"), based on the play of the same name by Franz Grillparzer, and "Lumpazivagabundus", both from 1919. From 1911 to 1922, the year in which her husband Anton died, Luise is known to have directed over 45 films, and the number may have been considerably higher.
Peer Raben In 1966, Raben, together with several others, founded the Action Theatre in Munich, which led to the Anti Theatre in 1968, where he was active as writer, composer and director. In 1969 and 1970 he produced Fassbinder’s first films. After working on a film of his own ("Die Ahnfrau"), he concentrated on composing for theatre and films.
Sappho (play) Following the success of his first great tragedy of fate, "Die Ahnfrau" (The Ancestress), which was written in 16 days, Franz Grillparzer wrote this second poetic drama, "Sappho", also composed at white heat, and resembling "Die Ahnfrau" in the general character of its poetry although differing from it in form and spirit. In its conception, "Sappho" is half way between a tragedy of fate and a more modern tragedy of character; in its form, too, it is half way between the classical and the modern. An attempt is made to combine the passion and sentiment of modern life with the simplicity and grace of ancient masterpieces. Its classic spirit is much like that of Goethe's "Torquato Tasso"; Grillparzer unrolls the tragedy of poetic genius, the renunciation of earthly happiness imposed upon the poet by her higher mission.
Karl Ehmann While he concentrated mostly on the theater during his early career, he did appear in a small role in the Austrian film, "Der Unbekannte" ("The Unknown") in 1912. In 1917, he would again begin performing in films, and during the late 1910s through the mid-20s, he had a successful run of starring and featured roles in silent films. Some of the more notable silent films in which he starred were: " Der Doppelselbstmord " (1918), "Die Ahnfrau" (1919), "Der tanzende Tod" (1920), "Der tote Hochzeitsgast" (1921), "Hoffmanns Erzählungen" (1923), and "Durch Nacht und Eis" (1926), which Ehmann also directed. He also directed two other films, "Junggesellenwirtschaft" (1920) and "Faustrecht" (1922), as well as penning the scripts for "Junggesellenwirtschaft" and "Verschneit" (1920).