The film tells the story of the writing and performance of The Blue Danube.
Vienna | University of Vienna | Vienna State Opera | Vienna University of Technology | Congress of Vienna | University of Music and Performing Arts, Vienna | Academy of Fine Arts Vienna | Vienna Philharmonic | Vienna, Virginia | Battle of Vienna | Vienna Conservatory | Siege of Vienna | Vienna Secession | Vienna Festival | St. Stephen's Cathedral, Vienna | Vienna Boys' Choir | Vienna Basin | Medical University of Vienna | Vienna Symphony | Vienna Observatory | Vienna International Airport | First Vienna FC | Vienna Woods | Vienna Volksoper | Vienna State Opera Ballet | Vienna General Hospital | Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties | Tales from the Vienna Woods | Second Vienna Award | Heiligenstadt, Vienna |
Charles Frend started his career at British International Pictures in 1931 and after editing Hitchcock's Waltzes from Vienna (1934) moved to Gaumont British Pictures in 1933 where he worked as an editor on Alfred Hitchcock's movies Secret Agent (1936), Sabotage (1936) and Young and Innocent (1937).
Walzer aus Wien ("Waltzes from Vienna," titled The Great Waltz in English) is a singspiel pasticcio in three acts, libretto by Alfred Maria Willner, Heinz Reichert, and Ernst Marischka, music by Johann Strauss II (son), arranged by Erich Wolfgang Korngold and Julius Bittner, first performed at the Stadttheater in Vienna on 30 October 1930.