Category Archives: ProducerDocs

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Roland Garve

Roland Garve (born December 9, 1955 in Boizenburg/Elbe) is a German dentist and ethnomedical specialist.

Garve, born and raised in Boizenburg/Elbe, attended the Polytechnic High School from 1962 to 1972 and then the extended High School Boizenburg, where he received his Abitur in 1974. After his military service, he studied dentistry at the University of Greifswald from 1976 and received his license to practice dentistry in 1981. From 1981 to 1983 he was imprisoned in Brandenburg-Görden for preparing an “illegal border crossing” from the GDR. During his imprisonment he treated fellow inmates as a trained dentist. Finally, after being expelled from the GDR in 1984, he left the GDR and received his doctorate from the University of Hamburg in 1986. After working as an assistant in a dentist’s office in Jesteburg, Garve ran a dental practice in Geesthacht in Schleswig-Holstein from 1985 to 2010. He subsequently retired from dental practice. He undertook numerous research trips (including Africa, Brazil, Thailand, Venezuela, and Papua New Guinea) to study indigenous peoples in collaboration with the Ethnological Museums in Dresden and Leipzig. Garve also gives lectures on ethnodentistry and ethnology. He has authored several books about his experiences. Garve also works part-time as a cameraman, photographer, and documentary film producer.

Since 2011, Roland Garve has been a lecturer at the Center for Human Cultural and Natural History, Faculty of Medicine/Dentistry, Krems (Austria), at the Danube Private University.[1]

In 2012, he received his diploma in Tropical Medicine from the Bernhard Nocht Institute for Tropical Medicine at the University of Hamburg.

In 2014, he was appointed Associate Professor and Head of the Department of Ethno-Dentistry at the Danube Private University Krems. Garve is considered the founder of the interdisciplinary research field of ethno-dentistry.

https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roland_Garve

https://www.imdb.com/de/name/nm2672181

https://www.aufbau-verlage.de/autor-in/roland-garve

https://gutelehre.at/projekt/ethnozahnmedizin-ein-interdisziplinaeres-seminar-zur-bereicherung-der-zahnmedizinischen-forschung-und-lehre-um-ethnologische-und-kulturelle-aspekte


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Keith Ablow

Keith Ablow

Keith Russell Ablow (born November 23, 1961) is an American author, life coach, former television personality, and former psychiatrist. He is a former contributor for Fox News Channel and TheBlaze.

Formerly an assistant clinical professor at Tufts University School of Medicine,[2] Ablow resigned as a member of the American Psychiatric Association in 2011, in protest to the APA’s tacit support of transgender surgeries, which he considered irresponsible.[3] Ablow’s medical license was suspended in May 2019 by the Massachusetts Board of Registration in Medicine. The board concluded he posed an “immediate and serious threat to the public health, safety and welfare”, stating that he had engaged in sexual and unethical misconduct towards patients.

Ablow was born in Marblehead, Massachusetts, the son of Jewish parents Jeanette Norma and Allan Murray Ablow. Ablow attended Marblehead High School, graduating in 1979.[6] He graduated from Brown University in 1983, magna cum laude, with a Bachelor of Science degree in neurosciences. He received his Doctor of Medicine degree from Johns Hopkins Medical School in 1987[7] and completed his psychiatry residency at the Tufts-New England Medical Center. He was Board Certified by the American Board of Psychiatry & Neurology in psychiatry in 1993 and forensic psychiatry in 1999.[8]

While a medical student, he worked as a reporter for Newsweek and a freelancer for The Washington Post and Baltimore Sun and USA Today. After his residency, Ablow served as medical director of the Tri-City Mental Health Centers and then became medical director of Heritage Health Systems and Associate Medical Director of Boston Regional Medical Center.

Ablow has written columns for publications including The New York TimesThe Washington PostU.S. News & World ReportUSA TodayNewsweekThe Baltimore SunThe Boston Herald and FoxNews.com. He has appeared on The Oprah Winfrey ShowThe Today ShowThe Howard Stern ShowGood Morning AmericaCBS Early ShowLarry King LiveThe Tyra Banks ShowNancy Grace (CNN) programCatherine Crier LiveThe Dr. Oz ShowFox & FriendsGeraldoImusMontelInside EditionShowbiz Tonight, and The O’Reilly Factor.[11] Ablow has written 15 books, some published by the American Psychiatric Association, been published in the Journal of the American Medical Association and written for Psychiatric Times.[12]

From June 2006 through September 2007, Ablow was host and executive producer of his own national daily talk showThe Dr. Keith Ablow Show, syndicated by Warner Bros. Domestic Television Distribution. Since his show’s cancellation, Ablow has been a contributing editor for Good Housekeeping and a columnist for the New York Post. He contributed commentary and analysis for the Fox News Channel until 2017.

https://www.youtube.com/@DrKeithAblow1

https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Keith_Ablow

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Keith_Ablow


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Michael Alexander Verhoeven

Michael Alexander Verhoeven (born in Berlin 13 July 1938 – died in Munich 22 April 2024) was a German film directorscreenwriterfilm and television produceractor. He was also a qualified doctor of medicine. He is considered being a politcal filmmaker

Michael Verhoeven stems from a theatre and film family, the son of the German film director Paul Verhoeven (1901-1975, not to be confused with the Dutch film director of the same name) and actress Doris Kiesow (1902-1973), brother of actress Lis Verhoeven (1931-2019) who had been married to (and divorced from) actor Mario Adorf – and therefore uncle to actress Stella Maria Adorf.

Michael Verhoeven married Austrian actress Senta Berger in 1966 and stayed with her until his death in 2024 – in what is considered one of the longest-running scandal-free marriages in show business. Their sons are screenwriter/director/actor Simon Verhoeven (born 1972) and producer/actor Luca Verhoeven (born 1979). Verhoeven and Berger met at the Berlinale in 1960 and played together in front of the camera in the 1963 film Jack and Jenny, where he was supposed to kiss her in one scene. The two fell in love during filming. The couple had two sons, Simon Vincent (born 1972) and Luca Paul (born 1979). The children followed in their parents’ footsteps: Simon Verhoeven is a director and screenwriter, whereas Luca Verhoeven is a producer. Both sons started out as actors and also work in the family business Sentana Filmproduktion.

Verhoeven died in the presence of his family at his Grünwald home on 22 April 2024 at the age of 85 after a short, serious illness.[2]

Michael Verhoeven began his career as an artist as a nine-year-old in plays (including a stage adaptation of Pünktchen und Anton based on the novel by Erich Kästner, a friend of the family) and subsequently appeared in films in the 1950s (such as Kästner’s The Flying ClassroomThe Juvenile Judge and The Crammer with Heinz Rühmann). He directed his first play at the Tübingen Zimmertheater in 1962[3].

As a young adult, however, Verhoeven decided to study medicine against the wishes of his parents, who encouraged him to continue his acting career. He obtained his doctorate in 1969 with a thesis on psychiatric masking of brain tumors with special consideration of misleading findings and worked as a doctor for several years – including in the USA, where he had followed his wife Senta Berger, who was acting in Hollywood films in the 1960s alongside stars like Charlton HestonDean MartinFrank SinatraRichard WidmarkJohn WayneKirk Douglas, and Yul Brynner.

Back in Munich in 1965, he founded Sentana Filmproduktion together with his wife and began directing films – starting with The Dance of Death based on August Strindberg‘s play of the same name[4]. He followed up with two frolicky sixties lifestyle comedies Up the Establishment with Mario Adorf and Gila von Weiterhausen in the leading roles (1968)[5], and Student of the Bedroom (1969), both produced by Rob Houwer.

Verhoeven’s political and experimental 1970 anti-Vietnam War film o.k. was entered into the 20th Berlin International Film Festival, but led to a scandal[6] that forced the collapse of the festival without the awarding of any prizes:[7] The then jury president George Stevens felt offended and threatened to remove the experimental film from the program because of its supposed anti-American invective[8]. The Berlinale regulations were subsequently reformed. Later that year o.k. went on to win the German Film Award in Gold. For its 50th anniversary, MoMA conducted a special screening in 2021[9].

In the 1970s, Verhoeven worked increasingly for television, including directing one of the first episodes of Germany’s longest running crime procedural series Tatort (for which he would direct another episode 33 years later in 2005). After becoming a father for the first time in 1972, he wrote and directed the anarchic children’s series Krempoli in 1975, in which he played a smaller part and also cast his father Paul Verhoeven and his sister Lis Verhoeven alongside Senta Berger. In 1980, he made the television film Die Ursache with Otto Sander. In the same year his theatrical release Sunday Children (Sonntagskinder) got screened at the Cannes Film Festival in 1980.

In 1982, he wrote, directed and co-produced the story of the resistance fighters against the Nazi regime, the siblings Hans and Sophie Scholl, in Die weiße Rose (The White Rose). The German Foreign Office banned official screenings abroad when Verhoeven refused to remove a critical commentary from the credits. The film won Silver at the German Film Awards. Based on the true story essay book “A Case of Resistance and Persecution, Passau 1933-39,” by Anja Romus, he wrote and directed The Nasty Girl ( Das schreckliche Mädchen) in 1990, which won the Silver Bear for Best Director at the 40th Berlinale, the BAFTA for Best Foreign Language Film, Best Foreign Language Film at the 56th New York Film Critics Circle Award, and gained an Oscar nomination for Best Foreign Language Film at the 63rd Academy Awards. These two films cemented his international reputation as an important political voice in European film. Along with his adaptation of George Tabori‘s memoire My Mother’s Courage [de] (with music by his son Simon Verhoeven who also played a supporting part), and the documentary Der unbekannte Soldat (The Unknown Soldier), Verhoeven was praised for his relentless examination of the Nazi regime in Germany and its aftermath.

Promoting The Nasty Girl in the US in 1990, Verhoeven explained his interest in rememberence culture or rather the lack thereof: “The danger is that we will really forget. But we are very rich right now, and it could happen that we become not quite so rich. Many social problems will show up with the so-called reunification, and with the social problems it could be that Germans again look for enemies. This is what I am scared of. We know so little about Eastern Germany, and the eastern people also don’t know too much about our history. What they were told in school is even more wrong than what we were told.”[10]

In 1992, he became a member of the jury at the 42nd Berlin International Film Festival.[11]

Verhoeven became a professor at the Filmakademie Baden-Württemberg in Ludwigsburg in the 1990s, passing on his knowledge to the next generation of filmmakers. For decades, Verhoeven also ran movie theaters in Berlin: the Toni at Antonplatz and the Olympia Filmtheater in Prenzlauer Berg until he sold the properties in the late 2010s.

In 2000, Verhoeven wrote and directed the controversial television film Enthüllung einer Ehe (Uncover of a Marriage), which deals with the then still taboo subject of transgender identity, for which he won the Robert Geisendörfer Preis, as well as two FIPA Awards at the International Festival of Audiovisual Programmes[12] in Biarritz.

Together with wife Senta Berger he was awarded the Federal Cross of Merit in 1999 as well as the Bavarian Order of Merit in 2002. In 2005, Verhoeven received the Marion Samuel Prize, which honors particularly effective ways of combating the forgetting, suppression and relativization of the crimes committed by Germans during the Nazi era[13]. In 2006 he got an Honorary Lifetime Award from the Bavarian Film Awards[14].

In 2000, Verhoeven made his first documentary: Der Fall Liebl – Ein Bayer in Togo, about a late repatriate who was unfamiliar with German bureaucracy and was threatened with deportation. In 2006, after seven years of work, his second documentary The Unknown Soldier about reactions to the Wehrmacht exhibition was released. In his 2008 documentary Human Failure (Menschliches Versagen), Verhoeven dealt with the question of the extent to which the German civil population profited from the confiscation of Jewish assets during the Nazi era. The film was screened at the Jerusalem Film Festival[15]. In his 2011 documentary The Second Execution of Romell Broom (Die zweite Hinrichtung – Amerika und die Todesstrafe), made in collaboration with Bayerischer Rundfunk, Verhoeven took on the subject of Capital punishment, following the death sentence for Romell Broom, found guilty for rape and murder, and his execution on September 15, 2009 in Lucasville, Ohio, which failed 18 times and was finally aborted[16].

However, Verhoeven was no stranger to light entertainment, most notably with his 1989 – 2002 television series Die schnelle Gerdi (Fast Gerdi) which starred Senta Berger as a smart and self-reliant Munich cab driver.

Verhoeven was one of the founding members of the Deutsche Filmakademie (German Film Academy, an organisation akin to the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences) in 2003.

His last directorial and screenwriting work, Let’s go!, was adapted in 2014 from the autobiographical novel Von Zuhause wird nichts erzählt by Laura Waco about her Jewish family in post-war Munich.

In 2015, Verhoeven co-produced Welcome to Germany (Willkommen bei den Hartmanns) written, directed and co-producted by son Simon Verhoeven, in which Senta Berger played the leading role. This sharp-tongued comedy about the 2015 refugee crisis became the most successful German cinema film of the year (3.8 million viewers) and won the German Film Award, the Bavarian Film Award for Best Production as well as the Audience Award, the Peace Prize of German Film, the Goldene Leinwand, and the Bambi Award, among others.

wikipedia DE

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portrait BR


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George Miller

George MillerAO (born 3 March 1945) is an Australian filmmaker best known for his Mad Max franchise, whose second installment, Mad Max 2, and fourth, Fury Road, have been hailed as two of the greatest action films of all time, with Fury Road winning six Academy Awards.[1] Miller is very diverse in genre and style as he also directed the biographical medical drama Lorenzo’s Oil, the dark fantasy The Witches of Eastwick, the Academy Award-winning animated film Happy Feet, produced the family-friendly fantasy adventure Babe and directed the sequel Babe: Pig in the City.

interview

Miller’s first work, the short film Violence in Cinema: Part 1 (1971), polarised critics, audiences and distributors so much that it was placed in the documentary category at the 1972 Sydney Film Festival due to its matter-of-fact depiction of cinematic violence.[7] In 1979, Miller made his feature-length directorial debut with Mad Max. Based on a script written by Miller and James McCausland in 1975, the film was independently financed by Kennedy Miller Productions and went on to become an international success.[5] As a result, the film spawned the Mad Max series with two further sequels starring Mel GibsonMad Max 2 also released as The Road Warrior (1981) and Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome (1985). The third film in the series Mad Max: Fury Road (2015) stars Tom Hardy and Charlize Theron.

During the time between the second and third Mad Max films, Miller directed a remake of “Nightmare at 20,000 Feet” as a segment for the anthology film Twilight Zone: The Movie (1983).[8] He also co-produced and co-directed many acclaimed miniseries for Australian television including The Dismissal (1983) and The Cowra Breakout (1984).

In 1987, Miller directed The Witches of Eastwick, starring Jack NicholsonSusan SarandonCher and Michelle Pfeiffer. The film proved to be a troubling experience for Miller. “I quit the film twice and Jack [Nicholson] held me in there,” said Miller. “He said, ‘Just sit down, lose your emotion, and have a look at the work. If you think the work is good, stick with the film.’ And he was a great man. I learnt more from him than anybody else I think I’d worked for – he was extraordinary.”[9] Nicholson also coached Miller to exaggerate his needs during the production, asking for 300 extras when he only needed 150, knowing that his producers would give him less than he requested.[10] The award-winning production designer Polly Platt also collaborated closely with Miller on The Witches of EastwickCher later said that prior to working on the film, Miller called her at home, the day after her 40th birthday, to inform her that he and Nicholson didn’t want her in the film. She was deemed “too old and not sexy”.[11]

Following The Witches of Eastwick, Miller focused primarily on producing Australian projects.[12] His role as producer of FlirtingDead Calm and the TV miniseries Bangkok Hilton and Vietnam, all starring Nicole Kidman, was instrumental in the development of her career.

Miller returned to directing with the release of Lorenzo’s Oil (1992), which he co-wrote with Nick Enright.[13]

In 1993, Miller was hired to direct Contact based on the story by Carl Sagan and Ann Druyan.[14] After working on the film for over a year, Warner Bros. and Miller mutually agreed to part ways and Robert Zemeckis was eventually brought on to direct.[15]

Miller also co-wrote the comedy-drama Babe (1995) and wrote and directed its sequel Babe: Pig in the City (1998).[16]

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gch2Mm1wPEE

Miller was also the creator of Happy Feet, a musical epic about the life of penguins in Antarctica.[17] The Warner Bros.-produced film was released in November 2006. As well as being a runaway box office success, Happy Feet also brought Miller his fourth Academy Award nomination, and his first win in the category of Best Animated Feature.

In 2007, Miller signed on to direct a Justice League film titled Justice League: Mortal.[18] While production was initially held up due to the 2007–08 Writers Guild of America strike,[19] further production delays and the success of The Dark Knight led to Warner Bros. deciding to put the film on hold and pursue different options.[20]

In 2011, the Happy Feet sequel Happy Feet Two was released.[21] The following year, Miller began principal photography on Mad Max: Fury Road, the fourth film in the Mad Max series, after several years of production delays.[22] Fury Road was released on 15 May 2015.[23] The film was met with widespread critical acclaim and received 10 Academy Award nominations including Best Picture, while Miller himself was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Director.[24]

interview

In October 2018 it was announced that Miller would direct Three Thousand Years of Longing, which began filming in November 2020.[25] The film premiered at the Cannes Film Festival in May 2022.[26]

In April 2017, Miller said that he and co-writer Nico Lathouris have finished two additional post-Fury Road scripts for the Mad Max series. The Fury Road lead, Tom Hardy, is committed to the next sequel.[27] In 2015, and again in early 2017, Miller said “the fifth film in the franchise will be titled Mad Max: The Wasteland.”[27][28] In 2020, it was reported that Miller would next direct the Mad Max spinoff Furiosa.[29]

interview

Miller was married to actress Sandy Gore from 1985 to 1992; they have a daughter. He has been married to film editor Margaret Sixel since 1995; they have two sons. The two initially met during the production of Flirting,[dubious – discuss] and Sixel has since worked on all of Miller’s directorial efforts in some capacity.

Miller is the Patron of the Australian Film Institute and the BIFF (Brisbane International Film Festival) and a co-patron of the Sydney Film Festival.

Miller has said on multiple occasions that the 1940 version of Pinocchio is one of his favourite films.

Miller is a feminist, having told Vanity Fair in May 2015, “I’ve gone from being very male dominant to being surrounded by magnificent women. I can’t help but be a feminist.”

wikipedia DE

wikipedia EN

Internet Movie Database

portrait Kythera family

article | Artikel Financial Review Magazine

article | Artikel female magazine | happy feet


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Michael Crichton

4/11/02 Michael Crichton ’64, HMS ’69 speaks on “The Media and Medicine” at Harvard Medical School in Boston, MA on Thursday, April 11, 2002. staff photo by Jon Chase/Harvard University News Office

John Michael Crichton (/ˈkraɪtən/; October 23, 1942 – November 4, 2008) was an American writer and filmmaker. His books have sold over 200 million copies worldwide, and over a dozen have been adapted into films. His literary works heavily feature technology and are usually within the science fictiontechno-thriller, and medical fiction genres. 

youtube collection Jurassic Parc

Crichton was also involved in the film and television industry. In 1973, he wrote and directed Westworld, the first film to use 2D computer-generated imagery. He also directed Coma (1978), The First Great Train Robbery (1978), Looker (1981), and Runaway (1984). He was the creator of the famed television series ER (1994–2009), and several of his novels were adapted into films, most notably the Jurassic Park franchise.

John Michael Crichton[1] was born on October 23, 1942, in Chicago, Illinois,[2][3][4][5] to John Henderson Crichton, a journalist, and Zula Miller Crichton, a homemaker. He was raised on Long Island, in Roslyn, New York,[1] and he showed a keen interest in writing from a young age; at 16, he had an article about a trip he took to Sunset Crater published in The New York Times.[6][7]

Crichton later recalled, “Roslyn was another world. Looking back, it’s remarkable what wasn’t going on. There was no terror. No fear of children being abused. No fear of random murder. No drug use we knew about. I walked to school. I rode my bike for miles and miles, to the movie on Main Street and piano lessons and the like. Kids had freedom. It wasn’t such a dangerous world… We studied our butts off, and we got a tremendously good education there.”[8]

Crichton had always planned on becoming a writer and began his studies at Harvard College in 1960.[6] During his undergraduate study in literature, he conducted an experiment to expose a professor who he believed was giving him abnormally low marks and criticizing his literary style.[9]: 4  Informing another professor of his suspicions,[10] Crichton submitted an essay by George Orwell under his own name. The paper was returned by his unwitting professor with a mark of “B−”.[11] He later said, “Now Orwell was a wonderful writer, and if a B-minus was all he could get, I thought I’d better drop English as my major.”[8] His differences with the English department led Crichton to switch his undergraduate concentration. He obtained his bachelor’s degree in biological anthropology summa cum laude in 1964[12] and was initiated into the Phi Beta Kappa Society.[12] He received a Henry Russell Shaw Traveling Fellowship from 1964 to 1965 and was a visiting lecturer in anthropology at the University of Cambridge in the United Kingdom in 1965.[12] Crichton later enrolled at Harvard Medical School.[9][page needed] Crichton later said “about two weeks into medical school I realized I hated it. This isn’t unusual since everyone hates medical school – even happy, practicing physicians.”[13]

According to Crichton’s brother Douglas, Crichton was diagnosed with lymphoma in early 2008.[118] In accordance with the private way in which Crichton lived, his cancer was not made public until his death. He was undergoing chemotherapy treatment at the time of his death, and Crichton’s physicians and relatives had been expecting him to recover. He died at age 66 on November 4, 2008.

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biography

wikipedia DE

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Mathias Knoll

Multitalent, several media of publication: CD-productions, books, graphics, radio broadcastings, essays in press media, lecturing with scenical acting etc.

exhibition with graphics:Essen, Hamburg, Gütersloh, Köln, Bonn, Osnabrück, Karsruhe, Bremen,
Dortmund, Salzburg, Berlin, Düsseldorf, Solingen, Bad Godesberg etc.
 
publications of essays etc.:SWF, WDR III, Dtsch, Allgemeines Sonntagsblatt (Hamburg), F A Z (Frankfurt),
ärztl. Reise und Kulturmagazin (München), Generalanzeiger (Bonn),
Neue Zürcher Zeitung (Zürich), Renovation (Regensburg), Deutsches Ärzteblatt (Köln),
Medical Tribune (Wiesbaden), Hellweg Radio, DOM (Paderborn), „Kult” (Goldbach),
 „Die Kribbe”(Bonn ), “Medizin+Kunst” (München), Radio Sauerland, “Das Gedicht” (München). “Unsere Kirche” (Bielefeld).,Anthologie – Zeitschrift “Kurtzgeschichten”, Erasmus-Magazin (Universität Rotterdam), Der Allgemeinarzt.
 
numerous (also scenical) readings:1997 participation at 10th NRW-Author meeting “Haus der Geschichte” (Bonn).
one act piece „Der Regenbogen” (Scenical reading Schauspielhaus Bonn).
 
Selected Lyrics & Prosa by Hans Claßen and Mathias Knoll
Rezitator: Hans Theopold is reading
KonturenPoesie and ProsaISBN 3-930271-88-5
In den Wind geschriebenNew poesia and prosaISBN 3-930271-30-3
Bergschädenshort prosa and lyricsISBN 3-930271-02-X
A 45 Längs der Autobahn und anderswoLiterarische FahrtenISBN 3-933749-37-9
Poetischer Frühling im SauerlandPolen erlesenISBN 3-932037-04-9
Kürschners Deutscher Literatur – Kal. 02 – 03keine AngabenISBN 3-598-23585-2
Landschaft, Lyrik, Literatur.Wort-Bild-KontrasteLyrik & ProsaISBN 3-8311-0491-3
TastengeflüsterKurzgeschichtenISBN 3-89906-752-5

Promotion team of Dikie-the food-locker-mouse

from left:
Stefania (Sängerin),
Laszlo Püski, (Musiklehrer, Produktion)
Robert Josek (Arrangeur,Tontechnik, Produktion)
Dr. Mathias Knoll (Idee, Text, Produktion
  on the volcano
click on covers to read some extracts in Amazon and order there. flight afraidness
 the cangoroo
click on covers to read some extracts in Amazon and order there. if the south wind blows…
 on the search for the lost word
click on covers to read some extracts in Amazon and order there.CD: “Dikie, die Speisekammermaus”

web

Portrait

https://DoctorsTalents.com/en/cd00129en