Konrad Petzold
An image from The Goose Princess, one of the productions that also features Konrad Petzold.
Konrad Petzold

Konrad Petzold

April 26, 1930 — Radebeul, Germany

Konrad Petzold (26 April 1930, Radebeul - 12 November 1999, Kleinmachnow) was a German film director, writer, and actor.

Born the youngest of six children in a poor family, he was the son of a worker and a housewife. After an internship at the Film and TV School of the Academy of Performing Arts in Prague (FAMU), he shot his first feature film in Czechoslovakia in 1955, a comedy called The Fools Among Us. His next film was an adventure film, A Dog in the Marsh, which brought him national recognition, especially among young people. However his next movie The Dress (1961), based on "The Emperor's New Clothes", was accused of hidden political satire, and he was temporarily dismissed from the profession.

Petzold, along with other directors such as Konrad Wolf, Heiner Carow, and Egon Günther, were part of the so-called "second DEFA generation" born in East Germany between 1920 and 1930.

In 1969, Petzold shot the first of five "american-indian films" (. After Gottfried Kolditz died suddenly on an aneurysm on 15 June 1982, Petzold directed his film Der Scout (The Scout), released 1983.

White Wolves

White Wolves

1969

The Goose Princess

The Goose Princess

1989

Alfons Zitterbacke

Alfons Zitterbacke

1966

Osceola

Osceola

1971

The Scout

The Scout

1983

Fatal Error

Fatal Error

1970

Kit & Co.

Kit & Co.

1974

Oh, diese Tante

Oh, diese Tante

1978