- Adolphe Engers was born on June 20, 1884 in Gulpen, Limburg, Netherlands. He was an actor and writer, known for Terra nova (1932), Vienna, City of My Dreams (1928) and Fate's Plaything (1920). He died on December 8, 1945 in The Hague, Zuid-Holland, Netherlands.
- His creative cinematical power kept undiminished in the second part of the 20's till the end of the silent movie era.
- Engers last film was a curiosity he made while hiding for the nazis. Moord in het modehuis/Murder in the Fashion Store (1943, Alfred Mazure, Piet van der Ham), was a film version of Mazure's popular detective comic Dick Bos. The film would never be shown in the cinema. One of the reasons was that Mazure refused to make a nazi of his hero.
- In the 1930's he was also active as an author of stage plays and novels like Ardjoena - Indische roman (1936). He also gave acting classes at the Conservatory of The Hague.
- In the beginning of World War II he was a member of the stage company De Komedianten, but the Nazis gave the Jewish Engers a 'Berufsverbot' ('professional ban').
- The Dutch actor Adolphe Engers was born in Gulpen. He also made his film debut in Holland with "De Kroon der schande" (1918) before he appeared regularly in German productions from 1919.
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