Helmut Qualtinger was born in Vienna, Austria. He initially studied medicine, but quit university to become a newspaper reporter and film critic for local press, while beginning to write texts for cabaret performances and theater plays. Qualtinger debuted as an actor at a student theater and attended the Max Reinhardt Seminar as a guest student. Beginning in 1947, he appeared in cabaret performances. In 1949, Qualtinger's first theatrical play, Jugend vor den Schranken, was staged in Graz. Up to 1960, Qualtinger collaborated on various cabaret programmes with the Namenlosen Ensemble made up of Gerhard Bronner, Carl Merz, Louise Martini, Peter Wehle, Georg Kreisler, and Michael Kehlmann. Qualtinger was famous for his practical jokes. In 1951, he managed to launch a false report in several newspapers announcing a visit to Vienna of a (fictional) famous Inuit poet named Kobuk (author of "The Burning Igloo"). The reporters who assembled at the railway station however were to witness Qual...
Diary of a Serial Killer
1969
The Name of the Rose
1986
Mikosch of the Secret Service
1959
Mann im Schatten
1961
The Magnificent Rogue
1960
Hab’ ich nur Deine Liebe
1953
Sonnenschein und Wolkenbruch
1955
Mitgift
1976
End of the Game
1978
Ward 6
1974
April 1, 2000
1952
Tales from the Vienna Woods
1979
Radetzkymarsch
1965
Von und mit....Helmut Qualtinger
1975
Weights and Measures
1973
Man müßte nochmal zwanzig sein
1958
Grandison
1978
Die schöne Lügnerin
1959
Du bist die Richtige
1955
Der Herr Karl
1967
Eiszeit
1975
Biedermann und die Brandstifter
1963