Rolf gruber biography of donald
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Daniel Truhitte
American actor
Daniel Truhitte | |
|---|---|
| Born | (1943-09-10) September 10, 1943 (age 81) Sacramento, California, U.S. |
| Years active | 1965–present |
| Spouses |
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| Children | 3, including Thomas Rolf Truhitte |
Daniel Truhitte (born September 10, 1943)[1] is an American actor best known for his portrayal of Rolf Gruber, the young Austrian telegram delivery boy in The Sound of Music (1965). Truhitte is a singer, actor, dancer and performance teacher.
Biography and career
[edit]Daniel Truhitte began dance training at the age of 6 and began taking voice lessons at the age of 10. When he was 15 years old, he received a scholarship to The Sacramento Ballet. After high school, Truhitte re
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Evil-doer
Occupation
Powers / Skills
Manipulation
Goals
Have Liesl for han själv and aid Zeller in his villainous plot to capture the Von Trapps (both failed).
Crimes
Type of Villain
In-Love Traitor
| “ | I am now occupied with more important matters, and your father better be too if he knows what's good for him. | „ |
| ~ Rolf leaving Liesl. |
Rolf Gruber, or better known as Rolf, is a major antagonist of the 1959 musical The Sound of Music, and its 1965 film adaptation of the same name. He was an Austrian delivery boy who fell in love with Liesl Von Trapp until he betrayed her and her family to serve for Hans Zeller and the Nazi Party.
He was portrayed by Daniel Truhitte in the film.
Biography[]
Rolf first appeared delivering a telegram at the Von Trapp estate. He asks the family's butler Franz to give the telegram to Liesl's father Captain Georg Von Trapp, which Franz does. Rolf later meets up with Liesl and after inadve
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Rolf Gruber (born 1921) was an Austrian Nazi Party member at the time of the Anschluss in 1938.
Biography[]
Rolf Gruber was born in Salzburg, Austria in 1921, and he worked as a delivery boy during his youth. Gruber had a flirtatious friendship with the daughter of Captain Georg von Trapp, but he later put this aside when he joined the Nazi Party. Gruber believed that the people of Austria were truly Germans, and he was seduced by the ideas of German nationalism. He was the one to send a telegraph to Von Trapp ordering him to report to the German naval station at Bremerhaven to serve in the new Kriegsmarine, and he attempted to prevent Von Trapp and his family from fleeing to Switzerland after the Anschluss, but the Nazis' cars were uanble to start in pursuit due to the sympathetic Catholic nuns' removal of car parts to assist the family in fleeing.