Maria Theresia
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Maria Theresia
Summary
Maria Theresia is a television film[1]. It has Wikipedia articles in 8 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[2]
Key Facts
- Maria Theresia's instance of is recorded as television film[3].
- Maria Theresia's instance of is recorded as miniseries[4].
- Maria Theresia was directed by Robert Dornhelm[5].
- Mirka Zlatníková wrote the screenplay for Maria Theresia[6].
- Radek Bajgar wrote the screenplay for Maria Theresia[7].
- Maria Theresia's composer is recorded as Roman Kariolou[8].
- Maria Theresia's genre is historical film[9].
- Maria Theresia's genre is biographical film[10].
- Maria Theresia's genre is drama film[11].
- A cast member of Maria Theresia was Marie-Luise Stockinger[12].
- A cast member of Maria Theresia was Vojtěch Kotek[13].
- A cast member of Maria Theresia was Zuzana Stivínová[14].
- A cast member of Maria Theresia was Karl Markovics[15].
- A cast member of Maria Theresia was Fritz Karl[16].
- A cast member of Maria Theresia was Julia Stemberger[17].
- A cast member of Maria Theresia was Cornelius Obonya[18].
- A cast member of Maria Theresia was Anna Posch[19].
- A cast member of Maria Theresia was Dominik Warta[20].
- A cast member of Maria Theresia was Nathalie Köbli[21].
- A cast member of Maria Theresia was Tatiana Pauhofová[22].
- A cast member of Maria Theresia was Martin Myšička[23].
- A cast member of Maria Theresia was Vladimír Javorský[24].
- A cast member of Maria Theresia was Zuzana Mauréry[25].
- A cast member of Maria Theresia was Alexander Bárta[26].
- A cast member of Maria Theresia was Pavel Kříž[27].
Body
Authorship and Creation
Maria Theresia was directed by Robert Dornhelm[5]. Screenwriters include Mirka Zlatníková[6] and Radek Bajgar[7]. Cast members include Marie-Luise Stockinger[12], Vojtěch Kotek[13], Zuzana Stivínová[14], Karl Markovics[15], Fritz Karl[16], and Julia Stemberger[17].
Publication
Genres include historical film[9], biographical film[10], and drama film[11].
Why It Matters
Maria Theresia has Wikipedia articles in 8 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[2] It is known by 6 alternative names across languages and contexts.[28]