
Herbert Tiede
Acting
Biography
No biography available for Herbert Tiede.
Born: March 3, 1915
Place of Birth: Osnabrück, Germany
Known For

Dalli Dalli

Das Kriminalmuseum
Das Kriminalmuseum was a German television series. It ran from 1963 to 1970 on ZDF and was one of its first programs. Each episode began with a tracking shot through an unspecified crime museum, stopping at one of the displays, whose story was then told. Each episode was between 60 and 75 minutes long and featured different actors as the criminal commissioner. The best known was Erik Ode, who in 1969 moved to Der Kommissar, appearing in 97 episodes. The theme music of the series was written by German composer Martin Böttcher, who also composed the complete scores for five episodes.

Das Kriminalmuseum
Das Kriminalmuseum was a German television series. It ran from 1963 to 1970 on ZDF and was one of its first programs. Each episode began with a tracking shot through an unspecified crime museum, stopping at one of the displays, whose story was then told. Each episode was between 60 and 75 minutes long and featured different actors as the criminal commissioner. The best known was Erik Ode, who in 1969 moved to Der Kommissar, appearing in 97 episodes. The theme music of the series was written by German composer Martin Böttcher, who also composed the complete scores for five episodes.

Destination Death
A group of West German men on a stag party find themselves stranded in a Montenegrin village inhabited only by vengeful women since all their men were shot during the war.

Der Kommissar
Der Kommissar is a German television series about a group of detectives of the Munich homicide squad. All 97 episodes, which were shot in black-and-white and first broadcast between 1969 and 1976, were written by Herbert Reinecker and starred Erik Ode as Kommissar Herbert Keller. Keller's assistants were Walter Grabert, Robert Heines, and Harry Klein who, in 1974, was replaced by his younger brother Erwin Klein.

Es muss nicht immer Kaviar sein
Es muss nicht immer Kaviar sein is a TV adaption of a novel of the same name by Austrian author Johannes Mario Simmel. Directed by Thomas Engel Siegfried Rauch walks in the footsteps of O. W. Fischer who played the protagonist "Thomas Lieven" already in 1961, just one year after the bestseller had been released. The series is unique for providing a little cooking show at the end of each episode. The book also includes recipes because "Thomas Lieven" is an accomplished amateur cook.

The Parallel Street
Feature-documentary "pointing up a thousand facets of this world and probing to determine what may lie beneath the surface".

Alpha Alpha
Alpha Alpha was a 1972 German science fiction fantasy television series which aired on ZDF. It starred Karl Michael Vogler, Lilith Ungerer, Arthur Brauss and Horst Sachtleben. Each episode was only 25 minutes long, the series lasted only one season. Karl Michael Vogler played agent alpha of an unnamed secret organization, investigating mysteries, technical and psychic phenomena and even alien encounters. Alpha Alpha's tenor is comparable to the later X-Files drama television series.

Love '47
A young man and woman meet on a bridge, both about to commit suicide by jumping into the river, and recount to each other their experiences.

Die seltsamen Methoden des Franz Josef Wanninger
Die seltsamen Methoden des Franz Josef Wanninger is a German television series.
Filmography
as Professor Schiermann
as Major
as Prokurist Jenner
as Nachmieter
as Shakespeare
as Johannes Schrahl / Georg Schrahl
as Mr. George Anderson
as Smalsund
as Self
as Dr. Martens
as John McCone
as Direktor Berwig
as Dr. Winkelmann
as Wilhelm Voss
as Museumsdirektor Plinier
as Priest
as Gaston de la Vallenois
as Inspektor Ernst Sobotka
as Merkel
as Herr Kersch
as Gremiumsmitglied Nr. 5
as Dr. Heinz Stephans Anwalt
as Inspector Graven
as Joachim Brand
as Paulsen
as Mark Halliday
as Kriminalkommissar Iversen
as Chef der Kriminalpolizei Krämer
as Kriminaloberkommissar Pleiken
as Tschanz
as Peter Remmers