Robert Muller  | |
|---|---|
| Born | 1 September 1925 Hamburg, Germany  | 
| Died | 27 May 1998 (aged 72) London, United Kingdom  | 
| Occupation | Writer | 
| Years active | 1956–1991 (film & TV) | 
Robert Muller (1 September 1925 – 27 May 1998) was a German-born British journalist and screenwriter, who mainly worked in television.[1] Since his father was Jewish, he emigrated to Britain in 1938 as a thirteen-year-old refugee from Nazi Germany.
Selected works
Film
- Woman of Straw (1964)
 - The Beauty Jungle (1964)
 - I'm an Elephant, Madame (1969)
 - The Roaring Fifties (1983)
 
Television
- London Playhouse: "Jane Clegg" (dir. Peter Cotes, 1956)
 - Armchair Theatre: "The Night Conspirators" (Philip Saville, 1962)[2]
 - Armchair Theatre: "Afternoon of a Nymph" (1962)
 - Armchair Theatre: "Thank You and Goodnight" (1962)
 - Armchair Theatre: "The Paradise Suite" (1963)
 - Playdate: "The Night Conspirators" (1963)
 - Armchair Theatre: "Pleasure Is Where She Finds It" (Charles Jarrott, 1964)
 - Story Parade: "The World That Summer" (Peter Sasdy, 1965)
 - Armchair Mystery Theatre: "Man and Mirror" (Patrick Dromgoole, 1965)
 - Armchair Theatre: "A Cold Peace" (Don Leaver, 1965)
 - Mystery and Imagination: "The Body Snatcher" (Toby Robertson, 1966)
 - Die Gentlemen bitten zur Kasse (John Olden and Claus Peter Witt, 1966, TV miniseries) — based on a non-fiction book by Henry Kolarz
 - The Wednesday Play: "The Executioner" (Michael Hayes, 1966)
 - Die Unberatenen (Peter Zadek, 1966) — based on a novel by Thomas Valentin
 - Out of the Unknown: "The Prophet" (Naomi Capon, 1967) — based on "Reason" by Isaac Asimov
 - Armchair Theatre: "Easier in the Dark" (Don Leaver, 1967)
 - Armchair Theatre: "A World of Time" (Don Leaver, 1967)
 - Theatre 625: "Henry IV" (Michael Hayes, 1967) — based on Luigi Pirandello's Henry IV
 - Haunted: "After the Funeral" (Don Leaver, 1967)
 - The Wednesday Play: "Death of a Private" (James Ferman, 1967) — loosely based on Woyzeck
 - Man in a Suitcase: "The Bridge" (Pat Jackson, 1967)
 - Armchair Theatre: "You and Me" (Kim Mills, 1968)
 - Nana (John Davies, 1968, TV miniseries)
 - Mystery and Imagination: "Frankenstein" (Voytek, 1968)
 - Out of the Unknown: "Beach Head" (James Cellan Jones, 1969) — based on a story by Clifford D. Simak
 - Out of the Unknown: "The Naked Sun" (Rudolph Cartier, 1969)
 - Mystery and Imagination: "The Suicide Club" (Mike Vardy, 1970)
 - Take Three Girls (1971, TV series, 4 episodes)
 - Bel Ami (John Davies, 1971, TV miniseries) — based on Guy de Maupassant's Bel-Ami
 - Die Sonne angreifen (Peter Lilienthal, 1971) — based on a novel by Witold Gombrowicz
 - Public Eye: "Shades of White" (Piers Haggard, 1971)
 - Man of Straw (Herbert Wise, 1972, TV miniseries) — based on Der Untertan by Heinrich Mann
 - Van der Valk und das Mädchen (Peter Zadek, 1972) — based on a novel by Nicolas Freeling
 - The Song of Songs (Peter Wood, 1973, TV miniseries)
 - Van der Valk und die Reichen (Wolfgang Petersen, 1973) — based on a novel by Nicolas Freeling
 - Colditz: "Chameleon" (Philip Dudley, 1974)
 - Fall of Eagles: "Indian Summer of an Emperor" (Donald McWhinnie, 1974)
 - Omnibus: "The Need for Nightmare" (Harley Cokeliss, 1974)
 - Churchill's People: "The Lost Island" (Philip Saville, 1975) — based on A History of the English-Speaking Peoples
 - A Legacy (Derek Martinus, 1975, TV miniseries)
 - Private Affairs: "A Dream of Living" (Philip Saville, 1975)
 - Van der Valk und die Toten (Marcel Cravenne, 1975) — based on a novel by Nicolas Freeling
 - Ten from the Twenties: "Motherlove" (Mark Cullingham, 1975) — based on a story by J. D. Beresford
 - Ten from the Twenties: "Her Wedding Morn" (Barry Letts, 1975) — based on a story by Sheila Kaye-Smith
 - Ten from the Twenties: "The Fifty Pound Note" (Mark Cullingham, 1975) — based on a story by A. E. Coppard
 - Supernatural: "Ghosts of Venice" (Claude Whatham, 1977)
 - Supernatural: "Countess Ilona" (Simon Langton, 1977)
 - Supernatural: "The Werewolf Reunion" (Simon Langton, 1977)
 - Supernatural: "Mr Nightingale" (Alan Cooke, 1977)
 - Supernatural: "Lady Sybil" (Simon Langton, 1977)
 - The Hunchback of Notre Dame (Alan Cooke, 1977) — based on The Hunchback of Notre-Dame
 - Supernatural: "Night of the Marionettes" (Alan Cooke, 1977)
 - Supernatural: "Dorabella" (Simon Langton, 1977)
 - Prince Regent (Michael Simpson and Michael Hayes, 1979, TV miniseries)
 - The World That Summer (Ilse Hofmann, 1980)
 - Exil (Egon Günther, 1981, TV miniseries) — based on a novel by Lion Feuchtwanger
 - Blood and Honor: Youth Under Hitler (Bernd Fischerauer, 1982, TV miniseries)
 - Russian Night... 1941 (Desmond Davis, 1982) — based on a story by Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn
 - Ein Kleid von Dior (Peter Weck, 1982) — based on Mrs. 'Arris Goes to Paris by Paul Gallico
 - Nachruf auf Othello (Michael Braun, 1983) — based on a novel by Nino Erné
 - Storyboard: "Secrets" (Peter Sasdy, 1983)
 - Weltuntergang (Imo Moszkowicz, 1984) — based on a novel by Milan Dor
 - Die Fräulein von damals (Dietrich Haugk, 1986)
 - Albert Schweitzer (Michael Braun, 1987, TV miniseries)
 - Rothenbaumchaussee (Dietrich Haugk, 1991)
 
References
- ↑ Grenville, p. 64
 - ↑ BFI screenonline Armchair Theatre (1956–74) page. Retrieved 25 February 2020. It was presented as a stage play in London and UK tour in 1963.
 
Bibliography
- Anthony Grenville. Refugees from the Third Reich in Britain. Rodopi, 2002.
 
External links
    This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.