7
90 min
Bonn 1948. The member of parliament and lawyer Elisabeth Selbert fights tirelessly for the inclusion of the sentence "Men and women have equal rights" in the Basic Law of the future Federal Republic of Germany. Despite the opposition she encounters during sessions in the Parliamentary Council , there is _she does not stop and stubbornly sticks to her plan . Selbert experiences a grandiose triumph when her application is included in the new Basic Law under Article 3, Paragraph 2 . In doing so , she lays the foundation for what has now been a 65-year political and social debate on the subjectEqual rights.
Name | Character | Team | |
---|---|---|---|
Anna Maria Mühe | Irma Lankwitz | Unowned | |
Iris Berben | Elisabeth Selbert | Unowned | |
Lena Stolze | Frieda Nadig | Unowned | |
Maja Schöne | Lore Mertens | Unowned | |
Eleonore Weisgerber | Helene Wessel | Unowned | |
Petra Welteroth | Helene Weber | Unowned | |
Rudolf Kowalski | Adam Selbert | Unowned | |
Walter Sittler | Albert Finck | Unowned | |
Max von Thun | Heinrich Bode | Unowned | |
Felix Vörtler | Carlo Schmid | Unowned | |
Klaus Mikoleit | Theodor Heuss | Unowned | |
Dietrich Mattausch | Konrad Adenauer | Unowned | |
Jochen Kolenda | Walter Strauss | Unowned | |
Peter Harting | Herbert Wagner | Unowned | |
Dagmar Sachse | Martha Wagner | Unowned |