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・ Wolfgang Krull
・ Wolfgang Krätschmer
・ Wolfgang Kröger
・ Wolfgang Kubin
・ Wolfgang Kuck
・ Wolfgang Kummer
・ Wolfgang Köhler
・ Wolfgang Köpcke
・ Wolfgang Kügler
・ Wolfgang Lackerschmid
・ Wolfgang Laib
・ Wolfgang Lakenmacher
・ Wolfgang Lange
・ Wolfgang Lange (general)
・ Wolfgang Langewiesche
Wolfgang Langhoff
・ Wolfgang Larrazábal
・ Wolfgang Lauenstein
・ Wolfgang Lazius
・ Wolfgang Lehmacher
・ Wolfgang Leonhard
・ Wolfgang Lettl
・ Wolfgang Leu
・ Wolfgang Liebe
・ Wolfgang Liebeneiner
・ Wolfgang Lindenhofer
・ Wolfgang Linger
・ Wolfgang Lippert
・ Wolfgang Lippert (actor)
・ Wolfgang Lippert (pilot)


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Wolfgang Langhoff : ウィキペディア英語版
Wolfgang Langhoff

Wolfgang Langhoff (born 6 October 1901 in Berlin, Germany; died: 26 August 1966 in Berlin, GDR)〔The Internet Movie Database. ("Wolfgang Langhoff" ). Accessed 17 August 2007.〕 was a German theatre, film and television actor and theatre director.
==Early career==
From 1923 Langhoff worked at the Thalia Theater Hamburg, and in Wiesbaden. In 1926 he married the actress Renata Edwina Malacrida, who bore him two children, Thomas (1938) and Matthias (1942). From 1928 to 1932 he played at the ''Schauspielhaus'' in Düsseldorf and then from 1932–33 at the Grand Theatre in Düsseldorf. Langhoff was involved at this time with the German Communist Party and was the artistic director of the agitprop troupe "ran northwest," founded in 1930, which performed at union events. The dancer Hilarius Gilges was one its members.
Langhoff was arrested by the Gestapo in February 1933 and initially detained in the Düsseldorf jail, where he was subjected to severe torture by the SA. A few days later he was transferred to the "Ulmer Höhe" prison. In July 1933 he was taken to concentration camp Börgermoor, in Emsland. While there he revised a song lyric written by Johann Esser, creating what was later to become the famous protest song Peat Bog Soldiers (Moorsoldaten). The melody was composed by another prisoner, Rudi Goguel. After the transfer to the Lichtenburg concentration camp, Langhoff was released as part of the so-called Easter amnesty in 1934. Overall, Langhoff spent 13 months in prisons and concentration camps.
Three months later – in June of that year – he fled to Switzerland, just before closure of the border. At the Schauspielhaus in Zurich, he found shelter and work as a director and actor. In 1935, he published the autobiographical memoir ''The Peat Bog Soldiers: 13 months in concentration camps''. After it was translated by Lilo Linke into English it became one of the first internationally known eyewitness accounts of brutality in the Nazi concentration camps. Langhoff was a founding member of the Free Germany Movement in Switzerland.

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