And Yet Luck Came
1923 film
- Grete Diercks
- Eduard Rothauser
- Heinrich Schroth
Production
company
company
Kinomarkt
Release date
- 30 March 1923 (1923-03-30)
- Silent
- German intertitles
And Yet Luck Came (German: Und dennoch kam das Glück) is a 1923 German silent film directed by Gerhard Lamprecht and starring Grete Diercks, Eduard Rothauser and Heinrich Schroth.[1]
The film's sets were designed by the art director Otto Moldenhauer.
Cast
- Grete Diercks
- Eduard Rothauser
- Heinrich Schroth
- Karl Hannemann
- Frida Richard
- Ernst Gronau
- Martha Maria Newes
- Alice Torning
- Hubert Jarosch
References
- ^ Bock & Bergfelder p. 275
Bibliography
- Bock, Hans-Michael; Bergfelder, Tim, eds. (2009). The Concise Cinegraph: Encyclopaedia of German Cinema. New York: Berghahn Books. ISBN 978-1-57181-655-9.
External links
- And Yet Luck Came at IMDb
- v
- t
- e
Films directed by Gerhard Lamprecht
- The Graveyard of the Living (1921)
- The Buddenbrooks (1923)
- The House Without Laughter (1923)
- And Yet Luck Came (1923)
- The Other Woman (1924)
- The Hanseatics (1925)
- Slums of Berlin (1925)
- Children of No Importance (1926)
- People to Each Other (1926)
- Sister Veronika (1927)
- The Catwalk (1927)
- Under the Lantern (1928)
- The Old Fritz (1928)
- The Man with the Frog (1929)
- Different Morals (1931)
- Between Night and Dawn (1931)
- Emil and the Detectives (1931)
- The Black Hussar (1932)
- Spies at Work (1933)
- What Men Know (1933)
- Just Once a Great Lady (1934)
- A Day Will Come (1934)
- Princess Turandot (1934)
- Turandot, Princess of China (1935)
- The Higher Command (1935)
- One Too Many on Board (1935)
- A Strange Guest (1936)
- Madame Bovary (1937)
- The Yellow Flag (1937)
- The Gambler (1938)
- Woman in the River (1939)
- The Girl at the Reception (1940)
- Clarissa (1941)
- Diesel (1942)
- The Noltenius Brothers (1945)
- Somewhere in Berlin (1946)
- Quartet of Five (1949)
- Madonna in Chains (1949)
- The Angel with the Flaming Sword (1954)
- Sergeant Borck (1955)
This article related to a German film of the 1920s is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e