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Helmut Käutner

Date of Birth
03/25/1908 - 12:00
Geburtsort
Düsseldorf
Sterbedatum
04/20/1980 - 12:00
Sterbeort
Castellina, Italien
Biography

Helmut Käutner was born March 25, 1908, in Düsseldorf, as the son of merchant Paul Läutner and his wife Claire, born Röntgen. In 1916, the family moved to Essen where Käutner attended Helmholtz-Realgymnasium and participated in school theatre performances. After finishing high school in 1926, he took dancing and pantomime lessons at Folkwang school and studied graphics, costume design, set design, and interior design at Kunstgewerbeschule. In 1928, he went to Munich's university to study German studies, philosophy, psychology, art history, and theatre studies. Käutner wrote feuilletons and reviews and attended the theatre seminar of Arthur Kutscher whose students – besides Käutner, Kurt E. Heyne and Bernhard Eichhorn, Käutner's lifelong, close friends – performed in revues and other shows under the name of "Die Zirkusleute".

In the spring of 1930, Käutner formed a cabaret group that also included Heyne, Bobby Todd (= Hans Karl Rohrer), and Werner Kleine, who called themselves "Die vier Nachrichter" from 1931 on. The group became known even beyond Munich with their program "Hier irrt Goethe", a parody about the hype during the "Goethe-Jahr" 1932. From 1932 to 1935, the group made guest performances in Germany, Austria, and in Switzerland. In 1932, they starred together in "Kreuzer Emden" ("Cruiser Emden"). The literary and rather unpolitical group was banned in 1935 for "lack of reliability and aptitude according to national socialist governance". As a result, Todd and Heyne emigrated, while Käutner devoted himself to graphics and interior design again, and wrote chansons and popular songs.

From 1936 on, he worked as an actor at Landesbühne Luisenburg in the Fichtelgebirge, and later at Schauspielhaus Leipzig where he also worked as a director and met his later wife Erika Balqué. On April 3, 1937, his play "Ein Auto geht in See" premiered at Städtische Bühnen Frankfurt, and on December 25, 1937, his play "Juchten und Lavendel", with music by B. Eichhorn, premiered at Schauspielhaus Leipzig, and was later shown at Munich's Kammerspiele and several theatres in Berlin, including Komödie, Staatstheater, Schiffbauerdamm, and Kabarett der Komiker. Besides, Käutner wrote screenplays, most of them together with the author Bobby E. Lüthge.

 

Käutner's first film as a director, "Kitty und die Weltkonferenz" ("Kitty and the World Conference"), was banned for its alleged pro-British tendencies shortly after its premiere when the war broke out in 1939. Subsequently, Käutner mainly finished deliberately unpolitical films that were situated in the personal realm and did not transport any underlying Nazi ideology. Only in "Auf Wiedersehen, Franziska!" (1940/41), Käutner was instructed by the government department to insert a scene with war propaganda but set the scene off with black stripes and a change of perspective. "Romanze in Moll" ("Romance in a Minor Key", 1942), "Große Freiheit Nr. 7" ("Great Freedom No. 7", 1943/44), and "Unter den Brücken ("Under The Bridges", 1944/45), his last three films before the end of the war, mainly constituted Käutner's international renown for his so-called "poetic realism".

After the end of he war, he set up a contact point for artists in Hamburg, worked for NWDR from the fall of 1945 on (where he produced "Der Hauptmann von Köpenick" as a radio play, among others), and directed plays at Ida Ehre's Hamburger Kammerspiele. Käutner at first received a British, later an American film license that he used for setting up the production company Camera-Film GmbH Hamburg (later: Hamburg-München). Filmed under difficult conditions at original locations, Käutner finished his first post-war film in the winter of 1946/47. "In jenen Tagen" ("Seven Journeys") dealt with the living conditions unter the Nazi regime in seven episodes about the changing owners of a car. In 1946, he also presented "In jenen Tagen" as a theatre production.

Together with Carl Zuckmayer, Käutner wrote the screenplay "Anno 1948", but the film was never realized. He then produced and co-wrote the first film of his longtime assistant director Rudolf Jugert, "Film ohne Titel" ("Film Without Title"), with Käutner's cinematographer Igor Oberberg, and music by B. Eichhorn. After his ambitious, but muddled and unclear films "Der Apfel ist ab" ("The Original Sin", his last film produced by his production company Camera-Film GmbH) and "Epilog" (1950). Käutner was considered to be "worn out".

Besides his work at the theatre (for instance at Schloßpark-Theater Berlin in 1950, and in Bochum in 1952), Käutner often worked as a ghostwriter and revised screenplays but was not able to get sufficient funding for his own projects, for instance, for "Kameliendame 1952", or has to work – according to him – with too small budgets.

In early September 1953, Käutner started to shoot "Die letzte Brücke" ("The Last Bridge") in Yugoslavia that told the story of a physician (Maria Schell) who collaborated with partisans during the war. The film's surprising success brought Käutner back into the first line of German film directors. He then further established his position with films like "Ludwig II." (1954), "Des Teufels General" ("The Devil"s General", 1954/55), "Ein Mädchen aus Flandern" ("The Girl From Flanders", 1955/56), "Der Hauptmann von Köpenick" ("The Captain from Köpenick", 1956), and "Die Zürcher Verlobung" ("The Affairs of Julie", 1956/57). His films received multiple awards and turned out to be national as well as international box office hits. "Der Hauptmann von Köpenick", for instance, won six German film awards, was shown in 53 countries, and is considered to be the first successful German post-war film in the USA).

Visually and performance-wise often outstanding, Käutner's films dealt more or more less explicitly with political topics but did not formulate the expected, consistent political engagement but were mainly informed by his humanistic, ready to compromise attitude that refers to the personal – tragic personal powerlessness or victories of wide-awakeness. However, some critics who regarded Käutner as one of the most promising directors of post-war German film were disappointed: "Käutner's compromises would be easier to bear if they were presented by a director who does not see the real problems. But that is exactly Käutner's special position… he sees the problems more clearly and sharply than others." (Schmieding, 1961).

In the summer of 1956, Käutner made his first trip to the USA where he made a seven-year contract with Universal to make one film a year under ideal conditions. In October he returned to film "Die Zürcher Verlobung" und "Monpti". Together with Wolfgang Staudte and Harald Braun, he set up the production company Freie Film Produktion GmbH, Hamburg, that closely collaborated with Walter Koppel (Real-Film) and Europa-Filmverleih and that was meant to allow every partner to make on film of high artistic quality a year. However, the company realized only one film: Käutner's contemporary film version of "Hamlet", "Der Rest ist Schweigen" ("The Rest Is Silence", 1959), starring Hardy Krüger.

From the summer of 1957 to the spring of 1958, Käutner worked in Hollywood with the intention to make typically American films. Later, he called the two, rather trivial, films he made in the US, "The Restless Years" and "Stranger in My Arms", "unfortunate hybrids". (Eser, 1981).

Käutner was not able to establish himself in 1960s cinema. He neither connected with the New German Cinema nor with commercial entertainment movies. After filming the Franz Seitz produced "Lausbubengeschichten" ("Tales of a Young Scamp", 1964), he focused on TV productions, with the exception of one late foray onto the movie screen with "Feuerzangenbowle" ("The Fire Tongue Bowl", 1970). Käutner mainly directed his own adaptations of theatre plays and ennobled the cast of films like "Babeck" (1968), or "Die Frau in Weiß" (1971). As actor, director, and set designer, Käutner worked at theatres in Bochum, Düsseldorf, Hamburg, Frankfurt, and Berlin. In 1974, Käutner made his probably best performance as a film actor in the title role of Syberberg's "Karl May". His impairing health forced him to several hospital stays before he relocated to Tuscany in November 1977.

Helmut Käutner, a member of Akademie der Künste in West Berlin, of the PEN Center of West Germany, and co-founder of Freunde der Deutschen Kinemathek Berlin e.V., died on April 20, 1980, in his house near Castellina/Chianti, Italy.

Filmography
2007/2008
Wer ist Helmut Käutner?
  • Participation
1994
Heinz Rühmann. Ein großer, kleiner Mann
  • Participation
1979
Laterna Teutonica. 6. Käutner und dann Staudte
  • Participation
1977/1978
Mulligans Rückkehr
  • Director
1975/1976
Margarete in Aix
  • Director
1976
Auf eigene Faust
  • Cast
1976
Der Künstlerstammtisch
  • Participation
1975/1976
Feinde
  • Cast
1975
Hundert Mark. Sieben Geschichten um eine runde Summe.
  • Cast
1975
Herz mit Schnauze. Erinnerungen an Grethe Weiser
  • Participation
1974/1975
Nur Aufregungen für Rohn
  • Cast
1975
Erlebte Filmgeschichte - Helmut Käutner
  • Participation
1974
Stiftungsfest
  • Director
1973/1974
Die preußische Heirat
  • Director
  • Screenplay
1974
Karl May
  • Cast
1973
Van der Valk und die Reichen
  • Cast
1973
Die große Rolle. 2. Jud Süß - die Alptraumrolle
  • Cast
1972
Ornifle oder Der erzürnte Himmel
  • Director
  • Screenplay
  • Set design
1972
Ein Oldtimer erzählt
  • Voice
1972
Versuchung im Sommerwind
  • Cast
1971/1972
Die seltsamen Abenteuer des geheimen Kanzleisekretärs Tusmann
  • Director
1971
Der Richter in Weiß
  • Cast
1971
Der trojanische Sessel
  • Cast
1971
Die gefälschte Göttin
  • Cast
  • Director
  • Screenplay
1971
Die Frau in Weiß
  • Cast
1970
Hauser's Memory
  • Cast
1970
Anonymer Anruf
  • Director
1969/1970
Einladung ins Schloß oder Die Kunst das Spiel zu spielen
  • Director
  • Screenplay
  • Translation
1970
Messer im Rücken
  • Cast
1970
Die Feuerzangenbowle
  • Director
  • Screenplay
1969/1970
Das Bastardzeichen
  • Cast
1969
Christoph Kolumbus oder Die Entdeckung Amerikas
  • Director
  • Screenplay
1968/1969
Tagebuch eines Frauenmörders
  • Director
  • Adaptation
  • Production design
1968
Babeck
  • Cast
1967/1968
Bel ami
  • Voice
  • Director
  • Screenplay
1967
Ein Mann namens Harry Brent
  • Cast
1967
Valentin Katajews chirurgische Eingriffe in das Seelenleben des Dr. Igor Igorowitsch
  • Cast
  • Director
  • Adaptation
  • Production design
1967
Der Teufel und der liebe Gott
  • Cast
1966/1967
Stella
  • Director
  • Adaptation
  • Production design
1966/1967
Die spanische Puppe
  • Director
  • Adaptation
1965/1966
Leben wie die Fürsten
  • Director
  • Adaptation
  • Production design
1965/1966
Robin Hood, der edle Räuber
  • Director
  • Adaptation
  • Lyrics
1966
Wir machen Musik. Eine kleine Harmonielehre
  • Cast
1965
Die Flasche
  • Director
  • Production design
1965
Romulus der Große
  • Director
  • Adaptation
  • Production design
1964
Auskunft über Jean Renoir
  • Participation
1964
Lausbubengeschichten
  • Director
1964
Das Gespenst von Canterville
  • Cast
  • Director
  • Adaptation
1963
Das Haus in Montevideo
  • Director
  • Screenplay
  • Lyrics
1963
Vorspiel auf dem Theater
  • Cast
  • Director
  • Adaptation
1962
Annoncentheater. Ein Abendprogramm des Deutschen Fernsehens im Jahre 1776
  • Director
1962
Die Rebellion
  • Producer
1962
Die Rote
  • Director
  • Screenplay
1961
Der Traum von Lieschen Müller
  • Voice
  • Director
  • Screenplay
  • Lyrics
1961
Diesmal muß es Kaviar sein
  • Co-Director
1961
Es muß nicht immer Kaviar sein
  • Co-Director
1960/1961
Schwarzer Kies
  • Director
  • Screenplay
  • Story
1960/1961
Zu jung für die Liebe?!
  • Cast
  • Creative supervisor
  • Adaptation
  • Production design
1960
Wir Kellerkinder
  • Cast
1960
Das Glas Wasser
  • Director
  • Screenplay
  • Lyrics
1960
Wer will unter die Soldaten ...
  • Commentary
1960
Kirmes
  • Producer
1959
Die Gans von Sedan
  • Cast
  • Director
  • Screenplay
1959
Der Rest ist Schweigen
  • Cast
  • Director
  • Screenplay
  • Producer
1958/1959
Stranger In My Arms
  • Director
1958
Der Schinderhannes
  • Cast
  • Director
1957/1958
The Restless Years
  • Director
1958
Ein Glas Wasser
  • Screenplay
1957/1958
Das gab's nur einmal
  • Participation
1957
Monpti
  • Cast
  • Director
  • Screenplay
1957
Franziska
  • based on
1956/1957
Die Zürcher Verlobung
  • Cast
  • Director
  • Screenplay
  • Lyrics
1956
Der Hauptmann von Köpenick
  • Cast
  • Director
  • Screenplay
1955/1956
Ein Mädchen aus Flandern
  • Cast
  • Director
  • Screenplay
1955
Himmel ohne Sterne
  • Voice
  • Director
  • Screenplay
1954/1955
Des Teufels General
  • Cast
  • Director
  • Screenplay
1955
Griff nach den Sternen
  • Screenplay
1955
Das Wunder des Films
  • Voice
1954/1955
Ludwig II.
  • Director
1954
Bildnis einer Unbekannten
  • Cast
  • Director
  • Co-author
  • Lyrics
1953/1954
Die letzte Brücke
  • Cast
  • Voice
  • Director
  • Screenplay
1952/1953
Käpt'n Bay-Bay
  • Director
  • Co-author
1951/1952
Nachts auf den Straßen
  • Screenplay
1951
Weiße Schatten
  • Director
  • Screenplay
1950/1951
Der Verlorene
  • Co-author
1950
Epilog
  • Cast
  • Director
  • Screenplay
  • Story
1949/1950
Königskinder
  • Cast
  • Director
  • Screenplay
1949
1 x 1 der Ehe
  • Producer
1948
Der Apfel ist ab
  • Cast
  • Director
  • Screenplay
  • based on
  • Producer
1947/1948
Film ohne Titel
  • Screenplay
  • Producer
1946/1947
In jenen Tagen
  • Voice
  • Director
  • Screenplay
  • Producer
1944/1945
Unter den Brücken
  • Director
  • Screenplay
1943/1944
Große Freiheit Nr. 7
  • Cast
  • Director
  • Screenplay
  • Lyrics
1942/1943
Romanze in Moll
  • Cast
  • Director
  • Screenplay
  • Lyrics
1942
Wir machen Musik
  • Director
  • Screenplay
  • Lyrics
1941/1942
Anuschka
  • Director
  • Adaptation
1940/1941
Auf Wiedersehn, Franziska!
  • Director
  • Screenplay
1940
Kleider machen Leute
  • Director
  • Screenplay
1939/1940
Frau nach Maß
  • Director
  • Screenplay
1939
Kitty und die Weltkonferenz
  • Director
  • Screenplay
  • Lyrics
1939
Schneider Wibbel
  • Screenplay
1939
Marguerite: 3
  • Screenplay
1938/1939
Die Stimme aus dem Äther
  • Screenplay
1938/1939
Salonwagen E 417
  • Screenplay
1932
Kreuzer Emden
  • Cast
Source-URL: https://www.filmportal.de/en/person/helmut-kautner_efc0caa3df3d03c1e03053d50b372d46