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  1. Camillo Walzel (11 February 1829 –17 March 1895) was a German librettist and theatre director, who wrote under the pseudonym F Zell . Life and work. Walzel was born in Magdeburg. In his early years, he worked in his father's lithographic factory, then studied at the Academy of Fine Arts Vienna, before joining the army.

  2. Camillo Walzel, auch bekannt unter dem Pseudonym F. Zell bzw. Friedrich Zell[A 1] war ein deutscher Librettist. Er war zusammen mit Richard Genée einer der Librettisten der goldenen Operettenära.

  3. Boccaccio, oder Der Prinz von Palermo (Boccaccio, or the Prince of Palermo) is an operetta in three acts by Franz von Suppé to a German libretto by Camillo Walzel and Richard Genée, based on the play by Jean-François Bayard, Adolphe de Leuven, Léon Lévy Brunswick and Arthur de Beauplan, based in turn on The Decameron by Giovanni ...

  4. Camillo Walzel was born on 11 February 1829 in Magdeburg, Germany. He was a writer, known for Only One Night (1939), Musical TV Theater (1970) and Ryska snuvan (1937). He died on 17 March 1895 in Vienna, Austria.

    • Writer, Soundtrack
    • February 11, 1829
    • Camillo Walzel
    • March 17, 1895
  5. Camillo Walzel (1829-1895), as Friedrich Zell Language German Composer Time Period Comp. Period: Romantic: Piece Style Romantic: Instrumentation voices, mixed chorus (SATB), orchestra

    • 1881
    • 3 acts
  6. Camillo Walzel. Librettist. Productions. Bocaccio (Boccacio), 1941: Bocaccio (Boccacio), 1941: A night in Venice (Eine Nacht in Venedig), 1943: A night in Venice ...

  7. Wälzel, Camillo (pseudonym F. Zell) (b Magdeburg, 1829; d Vienna, 1895). Ger. librettist. Trans. Fr. comedies. Wrote texts, often collab. Richard Genée, for operettas by Suppé, Johann Strauss II, Millöcker, and others. Source for information on Wälzel, Camillo: The Concise Oxford Dictionary of Music dictionary.