Famous people ending with orf - FMSPPL.com
Raimund Harmstorf
Raimund Harmstorf was a German actor. He became famous as the protagonist of a German TV mini series based on Jack London's the Sea-Wolf and starred later on successfully in another German TV series based on Jules Verne's Michael Strogoff.
Nina Kunzendorf
Nina Kunzendorf is a German actress. Her credits include the television series Tatort and the films Phoenix, Woman in Gold and Unspoken.
Mario Adorf
Mario Adorf is a German actor, considered to be one of the great veteran character actors of European cinema. Since 1954, he has played both leading and supporting roles in over 200 film and television productions, among them the 1979 Oscar-winning film The Tin Drum. He is also the author of several successful mostly autobiographical books.
Jerry Reinsdorf
Jerry Michael Reinsdorf is an American billionaire businessman, and the owner of the NBA's Chicago Bulls and the MLB's Chicago White Sox. He started his professional life as a tax attorney with the Internal Revenue Service. He has been the head of the White Sox and Bulls for over 35 years.
Clarence Seedorf
Clarence Clyde Seedorf is a Dutch professional football manager and former player. He last was the manager of the Cameroon national team.
Bert Tischendorf
Bert Tischendorf is a German actor.
Tetje Mierendorf
Tetje Mierendorf is a German comedian, musical theatre, and voice actor.
Johanna Gastdorf
Johanna Gastdorf is a German actress. She has appeared in more than 100 films and television shows since 1993.
Wilhelm Burgdorf
Wilhelm Emanuel Burgdorf was a German general during World War II, who served as a commander and staff officer in the German Army. In October 1944, Burgdorf assumed the role of the chief of the Army Personnel Office and chief adjutant to Adolf Hitler. In this capacity, he played a role in the forced suicide of Field Marshal Erwin Rommel. Burgdorf committed suicide in the Führerbunker on 2 May 1945 at the conclusion of the Battle of Berlin.
Ulrich Deppendorf
Ulrich Deppendorf is a German journalist and television presenter.
Otto Ohlendorf
Otto Ohlendorf was a German SS functionary and Holocaust perpetrator during the Nazi era. An economist by education, he was head of the Sicherheitsdienst (SD) Inland, responsible for intelligence and security within Germany. In 1941, Ohlendorf was appointed the commander of Einsatzgruppe D, which perpetrated mass murder in Moldova, south Ukraine, the Crimea and, during 1942, the North Caucasus. He was tried at the Einsatzgruppen Trial, convicted and executed in 1951.
Matthias Moosdorf
Matthias Moosdorf is a German cellist and politician.
Peter Hagendorf
Peter Hagendorf was a German mercenary soldier in the Thirty Years' War. He wrote a diary which gives a unique historic record of the life in the contemporary army from the viewpoint of a simple Landsknecht.
Horst Niendorf
Horst Helmut Hermann Niendorf was a German actor and voice actor. He appeared in more than ninety films from 1951 to 1996.
Wolfgang Herrndorf
Wolfgang Herrndorf was a German author, painter, and illustrator.
Rudi Gutendorf
Rudolf Gutendorf was a German football manager, renowned for managing the highest number of national teams – a total of 18 teams plus Iran's Olympic team in 1988 and the China Olympic team in 1992.
Dieter F. Uchtdorf
Dieter Friedrich Uchtdorf is a German aviator, airline executive and religious leader. He is a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Called as an apostle in 2004, he served as Second Counselor to Thomas S. Monson in the church's First Presidency from 2008 until Monson's death on 2 January 2018. Currently, Uchtdorf is the sixth most senior apostle in the ranks of the church.
Carl Leubsdorf
Carl Philipp Leubsdorf is an American journalist and columnist. He is currently a Washington columnist for The Dallas Morning News, where he was Washington bureau chief from 1981 through 2008.
Karl Lütgendorf
Karl Ferdinand Lütgendorf, born Karl Ferdinand Freiherr von Lütgendorf was an Austrian soldier and politician who served as the Defense Minister of Austria from 1971 to 1977. He died in 1981, in an apparent suicide, after the discovery of his part in the Lucona affair.
Ida Krottendorf
Ida Krottendorf was an Austrian actress. She was married from 1955 to Austrian actor Ernst Stankovski and in the second marriage from 1960 until 1991 to Klausjürgen Wussow. Together they had two children, Barbara and Alexander Wussow.
Sherwin Seedorf
Sherwin Dandery Seedorf is a Dutch professional footballer who plays for Scottish club Motherwell, as a winger.
Willi Holdorf
Willi Holdorf was a West German athlete.
Lena Oberdorf
Lena Sophie Oberdorf is a German footballer. She currently plays as a midfielder for VfL Wolfsburg and the German national team.
Frank Castorf
Frank Castorf is a German theater director and was the artistic director of the Volksbühne am Rosa-Luxemburg-Platz from 1992 to 2015. His work is often associated with postdramatic theatre.
Lutz Eigendorf
Lutz Eigendorf was a German professional footballer who played as a midfielder.
Constantin von Tischendorf
Lobegott Friedrich Constantin (von) Tischendorf was a German biblical scholar. In 1844, he discovered the world's oldest and most complete Bible, dated to around the mid-4th century and called Codex Sinaiticus, after the St. Catherine's Monastery at Mt. Sinai, where Tischendorf discovered it. Tischendorf was made an Honorary Doctor by Oxford University on 16 March 1865, and an Honorary Doctor by Cambridge University on 9 March 1865 following this find of the century. While a student gaining his academic degree in the 1840s, he earned international recognition when he deciphered the Codex Ephraemi Rescriptus, a 5th-century Greek manuscript of the New Testament.
Holger Glandorf
Holger Glandorf is a German retired handball player.
Dirk Adorf
Dirk Adorf is a German racing driver.
Andreas Neuendorf
Andreas "Zecke" Neuendorf is a German former professional footballer who played as a midfielder.
Léonie Geisendorf
Léonie Geisendorf, née Kaplan, was a Polish-born, Swedish architect. She lived most of her professional life in Stockholm, Sweden. At the time of her death, she was living in Paris, France.