Die Fledermaus
0 sources
Die Fledermaus
Summary
Die Fledermaus is a television film[1]. It draws 80 Wikipedia views per month (television_film category, ranking #451 of 3,555).[2]
Key Facts
- Die Fledermaus's instance of is recorded as television film[3].
- Die Fledermaus was directed by Yan Frid[4].
- Yan Frid wrote the screenplay for Die Fledermaus[5].
- Die Fledermaus's composer is recorded as Johann Strauss II[6].
- Die Fledermaus's genre is musical film[7].
- Die Fledermaus's genre is operetta[8].
- Die Fledermaus's genre is comedy film[9].
- Die Fledermaus's based on is recorded as Die Fledermaus[10].
- A cast member of Die Fledermaus was Yury Solomin[11].
- A cast member of Die Fledermaus was Lyudmila Maksakova[12].
- A cast member of Die Fledermaus was Larisa Udovichenko[13].
- A cast member of Die Fledermaus was Vitaly Solomin[14].
- A cast member of Die Fledermaus was Oleg Vidov[15].
- A cast member of Die Fledermaus was Igor Dmitriev[16].
- A cast member of Die Fledermaus was Yury Vasilyev[17].
- A cast member of Die Fledermaus was Yevgeny Vesnik[18].
- A cast member of Die Fledermaus was Glikeria Bogdanova-Chesnokova[19].
- A cast member of Die Fledermaus was Olga Volkova[20].
- A cast member of Die Fledermaus was Sergey Filippov[21].
- A cast member of Die Fledermaus was Ivan Lyubeznov[22].
- A cast member of Die Fledermaus was Vladimir Lyakhovitsky[23].
- A cast member of Die Fledermaus was Aleksandr Demyanenko[24].
- Die Fledermaus's production company is recorded as Lenfilm[25].
- Die Fledermaus's production company is recorded as Studio Ekran[26].
- Die Fledermaus's director of photography is recorded as Anatoli Nazarov[27].
Body
Authorship and Creation
Die Fledermaus was directed by Yan Frid[4]. Yan Frid wrote the screenplay for it[5]. Cast members include Yury Solomin[11], Lyudmila Maksakova[12], Larisa Udovichenko[13], Vitaly Solomin[14], Oleg Vidov[15], and Igor Dmitriev[16].
Publication
Die Fledermaus was published on March 4, 1979[28]. The original language of it was Russian[29]. Genres include musical film[7], operetta[8], and comedy film[9].
Why It Matters
Die Fledermaus draws 80 Wikipedia views per month (television_film category, ranking #451 of 3,555).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 6 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[30]