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Vicki Baum

 

Baum, Vicki (Vienna, 1888-1960, Hollywood), studied music in Vienna, was an orchestral player in Darmstadt, and after marrying the conductor L. Lert entered the editorial office of the publishing firm Ullstein in 1926. She began in 1919 a series of light novels which combined dramatic events, erotic complications, a vivid and up-to-date contemporary social background, and a discreet dose of sentiment. Published under her maiden name, they include Frühe Schatten (1919), Der Eingang zur Bühne (1920), Die Tänze der Ina Raffay (1921), Welt ohne Sünde (sub-titled Roman einer Minute and an interesting essay in interior monologue, 1922), Ulle, der Zwerg (1924), Ferne (1926), Hell in Frauensee (1927), Stud. chem. Helene Willfüer (1929), and Zwischenfall in Lohwinkel (1930). Her outstanding international success was Menschen im Hotel (1929), which was equally successful as the American film Grand Hotel. She went to America to supervise the filming of this work, remained there, and acquired American nationality. She continued until 1937 to write novels in German. From then until shortly before her death she wrote in English. These later novels were also published in German translation. She is also the author of Novellen (Die andern Tage, 1922) and several separate stories. Her autobiography was published as Es war alles ganz anders (1962).

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Quotes By: Vicki Baum
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Quotes:

"Fame always brings loneliness. Success is as ice cold and lonely as the North Pole."

"Marriage always demands the greatest understanding of the art of insincerity possible between two human beings."

"You don't get ulcers from what you eat. You get them from what's eating you."

"Success is as ice cold and lonely as the North Pole."

Writer: Vicki Baum
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  • Born: Jan 24, 1888
  • Died: Aug 29, 1960
  • Occupation: Writer
  • Active: '30s-'50s
  • Major Genres: Drama, Comedy Drama
  • Career Highlights: Grand Hotel, Dance, Girl, Dance, Lac Aux Dames
  • First Major Screen Credit: Grand Hotel (1932)

Biography

Vicki Baum was one of the most popular émigré authors in America from the 1930s through the '50s, although she was never taken very seriously as a novelist, referring to herself for most of her career as "a first-class writer of the second rank." Born to a middle-class Jewish family in Vienna in 1888, she knew a fair degree of hardship as a child following her mother's mental illness and subsequent death from cancer. Amid this trauma and her father's harsh efforts to control her life, literature -- both reading and writing -- became her vehicle for escape and survival. She was good enough to get a story published (in a Vienna humor journal) while still a teenager, but, rather than pursue a writing career, Baum took up music, studying the harp at the Vienna Conservatory and later playing professionally in different orchestras. Her first marriage ended in divorce in 1912 and she remarried four years later. Establishing herself as a writer during the period in between, she publishing her first novel, Fruhe Schatten (Early Shadows) in 1914.

Discovering she was capable of earning more as an author than a musician, Baum gave up music and turned to writing full-time. Beginning in 1920, her books became enormously popular in the German-speaking world, and were published by Ullstein, one of the biggest houses in Vienna. Baum was never entirely comfortable, however, with the kind of potboiler-type books that the publisher wanted from her, preferring to pursue more serious fiction. It was only in 1926, faced with the growing financial need of her family, that she succumbed to the company's offer of a lucrative exclusive contract; from then on, her fate was sealed. Her works followed a pattern, appearing in serialized form in popular magazines accompanied by their publication as books. The public in Austria and Germany devoured Baum's writing, in which she managed to work some interesting elements. Stud.chem.Helene Willfuer (1928, aka Helene) was built around a modern, liberated, young female college student, complete with sexual involvements and a focus on its characters' careers. This helped make Baum a controversial author at the time, running afoul of the conservative sensibilities of many German and Austrian social critics. Her next book, Menschen im Hotel (1929, later known as Grand Hotel), was even more successful. Adapted into a Broadway play in 1930, its film rights were purchased by MGM. Baum visited Hollywood before production of the movie, although she didn't contribute to the screenplay. But she did find a much safer and more hospitable place for a Jewish woman writer in 1931 -- especially compared to that of Germany and Austria. By the following year, she and her family had emigrated to the U.S., where the success of the film Grand Hotel ensured her of a positive reception from publishers and film studios alike. Baum became the model potboiler writer, establishing a formula in which diverse characters -- largely or entirely unaware of each other -- come together to interact for a single day or short series of events amid a grand canvas. Novelist Arthur Hailey, among many others, would re-use that formula over and over again in the 1960s and '70s. Disaster movies would utilize it, as well, but, in terms of modern popular culture, it all began with Baum and Grand Hotel.

Baum wrote plays and scripts for various studios, including MGM and Paramount, and was -- along with Marlene Dietrich -- one of the most celebrated German expatriates of the 1930s and '40s, also playing an active role in selling war bonds during World War II. And she continued to publish fiction. Tale of Bali and The Weeping Wood were successful in book form, and Warner Bros. made a movie of Hotel Berlin '43 in 1944. The latter work was noteworthy for its time as a relatively knowing drama -- albeit written by someone out of the country for 11 years -- about life in the Nazi capital amid the collapsing German war effort, and was one of the few high-profile, big-studio movies of the middle war years to specifically mention the plight of Jews under the Nazi regime. But though her books remained popular, they were never taken as seriously by the critics as she had wished. Baum finally made what she felt was a contribution to serious literature, however, with her 1953 book The Mustard Seed, a complex critique of American life and mores; nevertheless, it was received no differently than her earlier work had been.

Baum died in Hollywood in 1960 at the age of 72. In 1997, Austrian director Peter Patzak made a film adaptation of her novel Hotel Shanghai, a fictionalized account of an event that led to the Sino-Japanese War in 1937. ~ Bruce Eder, All Movie Guide
Wikipedia: Vicki Baum
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Hedwig (Vicki) Baum (January 24, 1888August 29, 1960) was an Austrian writer. She is known for Menschen im Hotel ("People at a Hotel", 1929), one of her first international successes.

Baum was born in Vienna into a Jewish family. She began her artistic career as a musician playing the harp. She studied at the Vienna Conservatory and played in an orchestra in Germany for three years. She later worked as a journalist for the magazine Berliner Illustrirte Zeitung, published by Ullstein-Verlag in Berlin. She was married twice: first, from 1914, to Max Prels, an Austrian journalist who introduced her to the Viennese cultural scene; and, from 1916, to Richard Lert, a conductor and her best friend since their childhood days. During World War I she worked for a short time as a nurse.

Baum began writing in her teens. Her first book, Frühe Schatten, was published when she was 31. She is most famous for her 1929 novel Menschen im Hotel which was made into an Academy Award winning film, Grand Hotel. She emigrated to the United States with her family after being invited to write the screenplay for the film. Her memoir, It Was All Quite Different, was published posthumously in 1964. She wrote more than 50 novels, and at least ten were adapted as motion pictures in Hollywood. Her post-World War II works were written in English, rather than in German.

Baum visited Bali in 1935 - and as a conseqeunce she wrote Liebe und Tod auf Bali (A Tale from Bali) which was published in (1937). The book was about a family that was caught in the massacre in Bali in 1906.

Vicki Baum died of leukemia in Hollywood, California, in 1960.

Vicki Baum is considered one of the first modern best sellers authors, and her books are reputed to be among the first examples of contemporary mainstream literature.

Dicta

  • "A woman who is loved always has success".
  • "Fame always brings loneliness. Success is as ice cold and lonely as the North Pole".
  • "Marriage always demands the greatest understanding of the art of insincerity possible between two human beings".
  • "Pity is the deadliest feeling that can be offered to a woman".
  • "To be a Jew is a destiny".
  • "There are shortcuts to happiness and dancing is one of them".

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Copyrights:

German Literature Companion. The Oxford Companion to German Literature. Copyright © 1976, 1986, 1997, 2005 by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.  Read more
Quotes By. Copyright © 2008 QuotationsBook.com. All rights reserved.  Read more
Writer. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Vicki Baum" Read more

 

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