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Herbert Lichtenfeld (16 June 1927 in Leipzig-11 December 2001 in Hamburg) was one of the most successful television screenplay writers in Germany. He wrote over 300 film scripts. Many of his scripts were successful in Germany. ==Life== After graduating, Lichtenfeld moved into the Federal Republic, and there worked as a reporter on several newspapers. In the 1960s he became the television correspondent for Hörzu magazine. At this time he started to write radio plays and books. From 1968 he worked full-time as a screenplay writer. His first television film ''Deutschlandreise'' (German Journey) (1970, co-production between NDR og NRK) was co-written with Adolf Grimme-Preis. A little later he began a partnership with the then still unknown director Wolfgang Petersen. Together they developed a series of detective TV movies called ''Kriminalreihe'' (Crime Scene). These achieved ratings of over seventy per cent. The high point of this series was ''School Leaving Certificate'' (1974) with Nastassja Kinski and Christian Quadflieg, about a relationship between a teacher and a pupil. While Wolfgang Petersen moved to the cinema and today works successfully in Hollywood, Lichtenfeld remained a writer for television. Besides writing further ''Kriminalreihe'' scripts he wrote for other crime film series such as ''Der Alte'' (The old man). Also outside of the crime film genre he wrote numerous books, radio plays, television films and television series. Lichtenfeld's film scripts were always complex, with very precise dialogue, often not without a shot of irony. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Herbert Lichtenfeld」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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