....θυμάμαι τον τίτλο....δεν θυμάμαι να την έβλεπα διότι μου έκανε πιο σοβαρή από ότι η τότε ηλικία μου "σήκωνε"......μια εντελώς αμυδρή ανάμνηση μου έρχεται σε θεματολογία 1ου Παγκοσμίου Πολέμου......μα που το θυμήθηκες ????!!!!!!
......μόλις βρήκα αυτό.....
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Private_Schulz_(TV_series)
Private Schulz (TV series)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to:
navigation,
search
Private Schulz was a
BBC television comedy drama mini-series starring
Michael Elphick in the title role and
Ian Richardson playing various parts. Other notable actors included
Tony Caunter,
Billie Whitelaw,
Billy Murray and
Mark Wingett.
It tells the story, over six one-hour episodes, of a German fraudster who tricks the
Nazis into making counterfeit British five pound notes. Millions of which will be used to destroy the British economy. However, Schulz is primarily interested in stealing them.
It was based on several real life incidents: - The
Venlo incident, when two British offiers were abducted from the Netherlands - The real though unrealised plot by the Germans,
Operation Bernhard [1]. -
Salon Kitty a Nazi sponsored brothel used to spy on its wealthy clients. -
Sachsenhausen concentration camp counterfeiting operation.
Additionally many of the main characters are real people, though occasionally under a different name.
It also starred
Billie Whitelaw as a prostitute working in 'The Salon Kitty', where German officers were secretly recorded by the
SS in the prostitutes' bedrooms. Whitelaw's character claimed to have a psychological block that prevented her sleeping with any soldier below the rank of
major.
The screenplay was by
Jack Pulman, who had previously adapted
I, Claudius for the BBC. He died in 1979 before any filming had taken place. In 1982, he was posthumously awarded a writers award by The
Royal Television Society for his work on
Private Schulz.
Other notable names involved in the show include composer
Carl Davis and former
Doctor Who producer
Philip Hinchcliffe.