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  1. Nov 7, 2013 · The final possibility is contained in the book’s most startling chapter; in 1921, Lisa Rosenthal, Lang’s wife, died from a single gunshot wound. According to Lang and Thea von Harbou (Lang’s writing partner and soon-to-be wife), Rosenthal surprised the pair while having sex in Lang’s office.

  2. Feb 10, 2001 · The director tried to hide the fact that he was first married to a Lisa Rosenthal, who died in suspicious circumstances in 1920. There is no record that he ever mentioned her in accounts of his...

  3. Lotte Eisner in Fritz Lang states that Lang’s wife “committed suicide” and wrote in her biography Ich hatte einst ein schones Vaterland: Memoiren, published in 1984 and never translated into English: “[Lisa Rosenthal] then went into the bedroom [sic] and shot herself.”

  4. One day Lisa Rosenthal comes home unexpectedly and finds Lang and Harbou engaged in “violent petting,” as Lang described it later, on the sofa. Shortly thereafter, Rosenthal is found dead in the bathtub from a gunshot to the chest delivered by Lang’s WWI sidearm that he kept as a memento.

  5. Lisa Rosenthal, Lang's first wife, committed suicide in 1921 by shooting herself in the chest. Little else is known about her; she was apparently a Russian Jew from Vilnius. However, it was and is believed by some that her suicide was perhaps brought on by the discovery of an affair her husband may have been having with his "friend," Thea von ...

  6. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Fritz_LangFritz Lang - Wikipedia

    In 1919, he married Lisa Rosenthal, who died in 1920 under mysterious circumstances of a single gunshot wound deemed to have been fired by a sidearm weapon from World War I. Career Expressionist films: the Weimar years (1918–1933)

  7. Jul 13, 1997 · His first wife, Lisa Rosenthal, died from a gunshot wound in the chest in the Langs’ apartment. Lang and Thea von Harbou, his mistress, scenarist and the wife of his leading actor, were in...

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