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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Fritz_RotterFritz Rotter - Wikipedia

    Fritz Rotter (1900–1984) was an Austrian writer and composer. Along with his brother Alfred he owned several Berlin theatres during the Weimar Republic but, due to his Jewish background, was forced to emigrate following the Nazi rise to power in 1933.

  2. Dec 28, 2019 · Learn about the life and death of the Rotter brothers, who staged many famous operettas in Berlin before fleeing from the Nazis in 1933. Read an excerpt from Peter Kamber's biography of the brothers, published in German in March 2020.

  3. www.imdb.com › name › nm0745444Fritz Rotter - IMDb

    Fritz Rotter was born on 3 March 1900 in Vienna, Austria-Hungary [now Austria]. He was a writer and composer, known for The Mistress (1952), Woman in the Moon (1929) and The Comeback (1930). He died on 11 April 1984 in Ascona, Ticino, Switzerland.

    • Writer, Music Department, Composer
    • March 3, 1900
    • Fritz Rotter
    • April 11, 1984
  4. "That's All I Want from You" is a popular song by Fritz Rotter (writing as "M. Rotha"), published in 1955. The song was recorded by a number of artists, but became a major hit for Jaye P. Morgan, reaching No. 3 on the Billboard chart in the United States.

  5. Fritz Rotter (1900–1984) was an Austrian writer and composer. Along with his brother Alfred he owned several Berlin theatres during the Weimar Republic but, due to his Jewish background, was forced to emigrate following the Nazi rise to power in 1933.

  6. Fritz Rotter is known as an Writer, Story, Lyricist, Screenplay, Actor, Music, Original Story, and Songs. Some of his work includes September Affair, Strange Illusion, The Wonderful Lies of Nina Petrovna, Nights on the Road, Something in the Wind, Kleine Mutti, When the White Lilacs Bloom Again, and Love in the Ring.

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  8. The Rotter kidnapping (German: Rotter-Entführung) was a failed organized kidnapping in Liechtenstein of Fritz Rotter and Alfred Rotter , German film directors and theatre managers of Jewish background, by Liechtenstein citizens sympathetic to Nazi Germany. The attack was additionally supported by five German nationals within the country.

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