Friedrich Benscher was born in Hamburg, Germany on
October 13, 1906. He came in contact with the radio medium radio very early in
his career. In 1926 he worked at the NORAG , which was founded in 1924 in
Hamburg. The intermediate station Bremen, from the later station Radio Bremen
where he worked as an announcer.
Around the same time he also began his career as an
actor. Initially he worked as an extra with the Hamburg Volksoper, then he has
been engaged at the opera Schiller in Altona and the metropolitan Theater in
Berlin. At this time he was now know by
the stage name of Fritz Bernd. His stage credits include, among others as Moritz
Spiegelberg in “Die Räuber” and Armand Brissard in “Die keusche Susanne”. At
times, he was also known as a comedian.
After the takeover of the Nazis Benscher was banned from
performing. His petition to emigrate to the United States failed. Around 1935,
he joined the Association of German Jewish culture in Hamburg. The Cultural
Alliance was in Nazi Germany, and Fritz was one of Jewish initiators who helped
launched the self-help organization for the prohibition which affected Jewish
artists. In June 1943, he was sent by the Nazis to the concentration camp at
Theresienstadt and in September 1944 was sent to the Auschwitz concentration
camp. In January 1945, he was in the Dachau concentration camp , where he
witnessed the end of the Nazi tyranny.
After his release Fritz Benscher went to the nearby Munich,
where he found a new home. By May, he found, thanks Klaus Brill, whom he knew
from his Hamburg times year before, a job with the Bavarian Radio, the radio
was still called Munich. Brill, where he became the program director of the
station and its first announcer and later the station manager. An important
radio activity was the radio play. Here Fritz worked as a drama director and
spokesman in well over 100 productions. He appeared in the comedy “Die schöne
Lügnerin”, “Just Scheu” by Ernst Nebhut where he directed and appeared in the role of
Prince Talleyrand. To this day, thanks to some DVD releases, the radio drama
series about Dickie Dick Dickens (1958-1961) survives, in which he and other
radio actors appeared. Benscher also developed new entertainment programs.
Benscher in 1955 conceived the show “Nimm’s Gas weg bzw.”
from 1959 on it was retitled “Gute Fahrt”, the first motorist broadcast on
Bavarian Radio, where he was the moderator.
The ARD broadcasts “Tick-Tock Quiz” (1958 to 1967), “Der
Schlüssel zum Glück” (1959) and the afternoon show “Wie kamen Sie darauf?”
(1961) made him among the best known television game show hosts.
He was an entertainer in the best sense of the word
during those days, loose, always prone to spontaneous gags and kind which made
him a real crowd pleaser.
From 1949, he was seen in several feature and television
films, “Der Ruf” with Fritz Kortner 1953 alongside Hans Albers in “Käpt'n
Bay-Bay” and again with Albers in his only Euro-western “Johnny Saves Nebrador”
(1953). In 1968 he appeared in an episode of the TV series “Hafenkrankenhaus”
where Anneli Granget played the lead role.
Fritz Benscher died on March 10, 1970 in Munich, Germany
BENSCHER,
Fritz (Friedrich Benscher)
[10/13/1906, Hamburg, Hamburg, Germany - 3/10/1970, Munich, Bavaria, Germany] –
director, stage, radio, TV actor, co-founded Munich Radio.
Johnny Saves Nebrador - 1953 (Rubino)
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