Before Grau and Murnau collaborated on Nosferatu, which was shot in 1921, Grau was planning to create several movies devoted 🏧 to the occult and supernatural through his studio, Prana Film. Since Nosferatu was a loose and unauthorized translation of Bram 🏧 Stoker's Dracula Prana had to declare bankruptcy in order to evade infringement lawsuits. This made Nosferatu its one and only 🏧 release.
The Weida Conference [ edit ]
Pacitius (Grau) gave up all his lodge titles, refusing the invitation to head the new 🏧 order, and left the Master's Chair of the Fraternitas Saturni, Orient Berlin, to Eugen Grosche, who would lead it as 🏧 Master Gregorius into the new Aquarian/Saturnian age. Grau contributed fascinating, if mathematically obscure, articles on sacred geometry to Saturn Gnosis, 🏧 the periodical of the Fraternitas Saturni (five issues between July 1928 and March 1930).[3]
Albin Grau was one of the main 🏧 characters in the fictionalized movie account of the filming of Nosferatu, titled Shadow of the Vampire (2000), directed by American 🏧 filmmaker E. Elias Merhige. He was played by Udo Kier.