Anna Elisabet Weirauch: Difference between revisions
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*''[[Ruth Meyer: Almost an Everyday Story]]'' (1922) |
*''[[Ruth Meyer: Almost an Everyday Story]]'' (1922) |
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*''[[Lotte: A Berlin Novel]]'' (1932) |
*''[[Lotte: A Berlin Novel]]'' (1932) |
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*''[[The Scorpion]]'' (1932) |
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*''[[The Outcast (Anna Elisabet Weirauch novel)|The Outcast]]'' (1933) |
*''[[The Outcast (Anna Elisabet Weirauch novel)|The Outcast]]'' (1933) |
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*''[[Manuela, the Enigma]]'' (1939) |
*''[[Manuela, the Enigma]]'' (1939) |
Revision as of 20:58, 11 April 2018
Anna Elisabet Weirauch (7 August 1887, Galaţi – 21 December 1970, West Berlin) was a German author.
Biography
Anna Elisabet Weirauch lived in Romania with her German mother, who was a writer, and her father, the founder and director of the Bank of Romania until he died.[1] She moved to Thuringia with her mother, and by 1893 they moved again to Berlin.[1] In the capital, Weirauch went to a private school to learn how to act.[1] For a decade starting 1904, she worked at Berlin's German State Theatre,[1] where she was directed by Max Reinhardt.[2]
She started writing plays but later moved to novels.[1] In 1933 she moved to Gastag, Upper Bavaria,[1] where she lived with her life partner.[2] After the Second World War, she moved to Munich and later returned to Berlin,[2] one year before she died.[1]
Bibliography
- Little Dagmar (1918)
- The Day of Artemis (1919)
- Ruth Meyer: Almost an Everyday Story (1922)
- Lotte: A Berlin Novel (1932)
- The Scorpion (1932)
- The Outcast (1933)
- Manuela, the Enigma (1939)
- Mara Holm's Marriage (1949)