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  1. People named Albert Berger. People named. Albert Berger. View the profiles of people named Albert Berger. Join Facebook to connect with Albert Berger and others you may know.

  2. www.apaonline.it › speaker › albert-bergerAlbert Berger - APA

    Albert Berger formed Bona Fide Productions with Ron Yerxa in 1992. Their producing credits include King of the Hill, Election, Cold Mountain, Little Children, Peanut Butter Falcon and Best Picture Academy Award Nominees Little Miss Sunshine and Nebraska. Their most recent film Somewhere in Queens (Ray Romano & Laurie Metcalf) just finished its theatrical run. Berger’s executive producing ...

  3. TUM - Curriculum Vitae Albert Berger. Sitemap > TU München > Leitung der TUM > Leitung der TUM > Curriculum Vitae Albert Berger. Albert Berger. Senior Executive Vice President: Human Resources, Administration & Finance. 1962. Born in Munich. 1981. Abitur at the Humanistisches Karlsgymnasium, Munich. 1983 - 1988.

  4. Jan 29, 2020 · Berger, Albert (1865–1943) Photo courtesy of Brazilian White Center - UNASP. Albert Berger, canvasser and missionary, was born in Gutenberg, Germany, 1 on November 5, 1865. 2 On February 10, 1897, Albert married Lesley Klaus, with whom he had eight children. Lesley was born May 27, 1870, in the city of Teófilo Otoni, state of Minas Gerais.

  5. Albert Berger is an American film producer, known for films like The Ice Harvest, Little Miss Sunshine and Ruby Sparks. In 2013, along with co-producer Ron Yerxa, Berger was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Picture, for Alexander Payne's film Nebraska.

  6. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Ron_YerxaRon Yerxa - Wikipedia

    Yerxa and fellow producer Albert Berger founded the production company, Bona Fide Productions, and the two producers were nominated for an Academy Award for Best Picture for the 2013 film Nebraska. Yerxa attended the University of California Santa Cruz and Stanford University. References

  7. Dec 16, 2023 · GRAND FORKS – Colleagues at UND are remembering Albert Berger as a fierce advocate for the discipline of history — and for his unrelenting stance that the history department should be at the forefront in elevating the importance of this discipline both on campus, the community and the world at large.Berger died Dec. 1 at