Yahoo Web Search

  1. Winrich Kolbe

    American film director

Search results

  1. Winrich Ernst Rudolf Kolbe (1940 – September 2012) was a German-American television director and television producer best known for directing 48 episodes of Star Trek across four television series. These included the Hugo Award -winning " All Good Things... ", which was the series finale of Star Trek: The Next Generation .

    • Winrich Ernst Rudolf Kolbe, 9 August 1940, Netherlands
  2. www.imdb.com › name › nm0463926Winrich Kolbe - IMDb

    Winrich Kolbe. Director: Star Trek: The Next Generation. Winrich Kolbe was born on 9 August 1940 in Amsterdam, Netherlands. He was a director and producer, known for Star Trek: The Next Generation (1987), 24 (2001) and McCloud (1970). He died on 1 September 2012 in the USA.

    • Director, Producer, Additional Crew
    • August 9, 1940
    • Winrich Kolbe
    • September 1, 2012
  3. Remembering Winrich Kolbe, 1940-2012. By StarTrek.com Staff. StarTrek.com is saddened to report the death of veteran Star Trek director Winrich Kolbe. Kolbe, who’d been ill for several years, passed away in September at the age of 71, but news of his death had not been made public until now.

  4. Sci-fi. Star Trek. Winrich "Rick" Ernst Rudolf Kolbe (9 November 1940 – September 2012; age 71) was a German national born in the Netherlands (during its occupation in World War II), who had worked on all four Star Trek spin-off series of the Rick Berman era. A character listed in a piece of background signage in...

  5. Sep 1, 2012 · Winrich Kolbe is known as an Director, Actor, Producer, and Writer. Some of his work includes 24, Star Trek: The Next Generation, Knight Rider, Angel, Star Trek: Voyager, Star Trek: Enterprise, Star Trek: Deep Space Nine, and Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman.

  6. Oct 30, 2012 · Veteran Star Trek director Winrich Kolbe has died following an illness, at the age of 71.

  7. Nov 26, 2016 · Ronald D. Moore wrote "Our Man Bashir" based on a story pitch by Robert Gillan. The late Winrich Kolbe directed the episode. The episode's working title was "Untitled Holosuite." "Our Man Bashir" had the distinction of having the single-longest shoot -- nine days, vesus the usual seven -- of any DS9 episode.

  1. People also search for