Schaggi Streuli
Know for: Acting
Born: 1899-07-04
Place of birth:
Also know as:
Marie-Louise (1944)
The titular Marie-Louise is a young French lass who is evacuated to Switzerland when her country is overrun by the Nazis. Suffering a nervous...
Polizischt Wäckerli (1956)
Wäckerli, policeman in the small Swiss village of Allenwil, is in trouble. His son Ruedi is unhappy in his apprenticeship and spends way too...
Sacred Waters (1960)
Water is a scarce and sometimes dangerous resource in the Swiss Mountain Village. Anytime the wooden pipe is damaged and the supply breaks, one man...
Oberstadtgass (1956)
Realist melodrama set in Zurich.
Anne Bäbi Jowäger I. Part - How Jakobli comes to a woman (1960)
The trials of the wealthy Emmentaler farming family Jowäger, adapted from the 19th century novel of the same name by Jeremias Gotthelf (pen-name...
Gilberte de Courgenay (1941)
Gilberte Montavon was a legend in her own lifetime. As a young woman, she was confidante to hundreds of thousands of Swiss-German speaking soldiers...
Füsilier Wipf (1938)
A hairdresser is being recruited during World War I by the Swiss military where they turn this soft civilian into a 'real man'.
Palace Hotel (1952)
The paths of guests and employees cross at the Palace Hotel in St. Moritz: A chambermaid experiences financial difficulties. A guest has been robbed....
Madness Rules (1947)
If any one man is responsible for the rejuvenation of the postwar Swiss film industry, that man was director Leopold Lindtberg. Matto Regiert...
The Ghost of Allenwil (1951)
Schaggi Streuli was not his real name. Born Emil Kägi, he had little luck in the first 30 years of his life. As the sixth child of an alcoholic...
Die missbrauchten Liebesbriefe (1940)
While on a longer business trip, a wannabe poet urges his beautiful but more simple wife to answer his overly swollen love letters. With no idea how...
Polizischt Wäckerli (1956)
Wäckerli, policeman in the small Swiss village of Allenwil, is in trouble. His son Ruedi is unhappy in his apprenticeship and spends way too...