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  1. Austrian postcard by Iris Verlag no. 780. Photo: Riess, Berlin. Rudolf Klein-Rogge is best remembered as Fritz Lang's Dr. Mabuse and Lang's mad scientist in Metropolis, but he played an enormous amount of parts in German cinema. Rudolf, originally Friedrich Rudolf, Klein-Rogge (1888-1955), was born in Cologne Germany. he took acting lessons while studying art history and made his acting debut ...

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  2. The Testament of Dr. Mabuse: Directed by Fritz Lang. With Rudolf Klein-Rogge, Thomy Bourdelle, Gustav Diessl, Rudolf Schündler. A criminal mastermind uses hypnosis to rule the rackets after death.

  3. Friedrich Rudolf Rudolf Klein-Rogge (24 Nov 1885 - 29 May 1955) 0 references . Sitelinks. Wikipedia (20 entries) edit. afwiki Rudolf Klein-Rogge; arzwiki رودولف ...

  4. I am researching the famous German silent film star, Rudolf Klein-Rogge, who starred in many of the most important Weimar era films such as Metropolis. He is alleged to have been a member of the Nazi Party, and I would like confirmation whether he was or not, and if so, when and where did he join.

  5. 'Friedrich Rudolf Klein (24 November 1885 – 29 May 1955), better known as Rudolf Klein-Rogge, was a German film actor, best known for playing sinister figure...

  6. After conversations with Lang and von Harbou, Jacques agreed to discontinue the novel and the sequel instead became the 1933 movie The Testament of Dr. Mabuse, in which the Mabuse of 1922 – played again by Rudolf Klein-Rogge – is an inmate in an insane asylum but has for some time been obsessively writing meticulous plans for crime and ...

  7. Alfred Abel, who would play the master of Metropolis, had starred in Lang's Dr. Mabuse, der Spieler (1922). So had Rudolf Klein-Rogge, whose flamboyant performances as the villains in that and other Lang films made him a natural for Rotwang, the mad scientist who would later serve as inspiration for the title character in Dr. Strangelove (1964).

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