
Director
Herbert Rappaport
Born 1908 · Vienna, Austria
Herbert Rappaport (July 7, 1908 – September 5, 1983), known in the Soviet Union as Gerbert Moritsevich Rappaport, was an Austrian-Soviet screenwriter and film director. Rappaport was born in 1908 in Vienna, Austria-Hungary, to Jewish parents from Lemberg (now Lviv, Ukraine). From 1927 to 1929 he studied law at University of Vienna. Rappaport worked as screenwriter, music editor, and assistant director in Austria, Germany, and the United States from 1928 onward. During the early 1930s he worked as an assistant to Georg Wilhelm Pabst. In 1936 he was officially invited to the Soviet Union to internationalize the Soviet Cinema which he accepted and spent the following 40 years working as a filmmaker there. Among Rappaport's best known films is Cherry Town (1962), an adaptation of Dmitri Shostakovich's operetta Moscow, Cheryomushki. In 2008 the first workshow was initiated outside Russia by the Austrian Filmmuseum and SYNEMA-Gesellschaft für Film und Medien, showing about half of his films.
Directed

Comradeship
Assistant Director · 1931

Collection of Films for the Armed Forces #2
Director · 1941

Poddubensky Ditties
Director · 1957
Film Concert 1941
Director · 1941

Black Rusks
Director · 1972

Police Sergeant
Director · 1975
No Matter How the Rope Twists
Director · 1961

Alexander Popov
Director · 1949

The Sun and the Rain
Director · 1960
Stars of the Russian Ballet
Director · 1954

Professor Mamlock
Director · 1938

Air Taxi
Director · 1943

High and Low
Assistant Director · 1933

A Circle
Director · 1972

Cherry Town
Director · 1963

Andrus' Happiness
Director · 1955

It Doesn't Concern Me
Director · 1977

Two Tickets for a Daytime Picture Show
Director · 1967