Ödön von Horváth  

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Ödön von Horváth, (December 9 1901 - June 1 1938) was a German writer. Among Horvath's most enduringly popular works was Youth Without God, which chronicles the coming of fascism from a young person's point of view. His work was banned during the Third Reich.

Contents

Biography

Horváth was born in Susak, a suburb of Fiume, Austria-Hungary (today called Rijeka, Croatia) as an illegitimate child of the Hungarian diplomat Dr. Edmund Horváth and Maria Hermine Prehnal. He was named after his father, but only ever called Ödön.

From 1908 on he attended elementary school in Budapest and later the Rákóczianum, where he was educated in Hungarian. In 1909 his father was ennobled (indicated by the "h" on the end of his last name) and sent to work in Munich, but Ödön did not accompany him. Later Ödön went to school in Vienna and Munich, where he also studied germanistics. After that, he lived in Berlin, Salzburg and Murnau am Staffelsee in Oberbayern. In 1931 he was awarded, along with Erik Reger, the Kleist Prize. In 1933, with the beginning of the Nazi regime in Germany, he relocated to Vienna. 1938, when Austria was annexed to Germany, he emigrated to Paris. There, Horváth, who lived in fear of being struck by lightning all his life, was hit by a falling branch and killed during a thunderstorm on the Champs Élysées, opposite the Théâtre Marigny. Ödön von Horváth was buried in Saint-Ouen cemetery in northern Paris but his remains were transferred to Heiligenstädter Friedhof in Vienna in 1988 on the 50th anniversary of his death.

Important topics in Horváth's works were popular culture, politics and history. He especially tried to warn of the dawn of fascism and its dangers. Christopher Hampton's play Tales from Hollywood (adapted into a 1992 teleplay of the same title with Jeremy Irons) portrays a fictional Horvath, who survives the falling branch and moves to America, where expatriate Germans like Bertolt Brecht and Thomas Mann ply their craft for the motion picture industry. Among Horvath's most enduringly popular works, Jugend ohne Gott chronicles the coming of fascism from a young person's point of view.

He was killed by a falling tree branch June 1 1938 in Paris.

Works

The following of Horváth's works (out of a total of 25) are available in English:

Plays

  • das Buch der Tänze. 1920
  • Mord in der Mohrengasse. 1923
  • Zur schönen Aussicht. 1926
  • Die Bergbahn. 1926, originally Revolte auf Côte 3018
  • Sladek der schwarze Reichswehrmann. 1929, originally Sladek oder Die schwarze Armee
  • Rund um den Kongreß. 1929
  • Italienische Nacht. 1930
  • Geschichten aus dem Wienerwald (Tales from the Vienna Wood). 1931, winner of the Kleist-Preis the same year
  • Glaube, Liebe, Hoffnung. 1932
  • Kasimir und Karoline. 1932
  • Glaube Liebe Hoffnung. 1932
  • Die Unbekannte aus der Seine. 1933
  • Hin und her. 1934
  • Don Juan kommt aus dem Krieg. 1936
  • Figaro läßt sich scheiden. 1936
  • Pompeji. Komödie eines Erdbebens. 1937
  • Ein Dorf ohne Männer. 1937
  • Himmelwärts. 1937
  • Der jüngste Tag. 1937

Novels

  • Der ewige Spießer. 1930
  • Jugend ohne Gott. 1938
  • Ein Kind unserer Zeit. 1938

Other prose

Quotes

"Nothing conveys the feeling of infinity as much as stupidity does." (Motto of Geschichten aus dem Wienerwald)

"Eigentlich bin ich ganz anders, nur komme ich so selten dazu."

Ödön von Horváth was once walking in the Bavarian Alps when he discovered the skeleton of a long dead man with his knapsack still intact. Von Horváth opened the knapsack and found a postcard reading "Having a wonderful time". Asked by friends what he did with it, von Horváth replied "I posted it".




Unless indicated otherwise, the text in this article is either based on Wikipedia article "Ödön von Horváth" or another language Wikipedia page thereof used under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License; or on research by Jahsonic and friends. See Art and Popular Culture's copyright notice.

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