Kurt Hirschfeld
Kurt Hirschfeld | |
---|---|
Kurt Hirschfeld | |
Born |
March 10, 1902 (age 111) Lehrte |
Died | November 08, 1964 (aged 62) |
Nationality | German, Swiss |
Occupation | Theater Director and Dramaturg |
Known for | Artistic leadership of Schauspielhaus Zürich |
Kurt Hirschfeld (born March 10, 1902 in Lehrte, Germany; died November 8, 1964 in Zurich) was a German theater director and dramaturg in Zurich.
Life and career
Kurt Hirschfeld was born on March 10, 1902 in Lehrte, Lower Saxony, Germany to the Jewish merchant Hermann Hirschfeld (1871–1941) and his wife Selma Zierl (1877–1926), the daughter of a rabbi.
After completing primary school in Lehrte, Hirschfeld transferred in 1914 to the Realgymnasium on Aegidientorplatz in Hannover, where he composed poetry and essays.
He studied philosophy, sociology, German, and art history in Heidelberg, Frankfurt am Main, and Göttingen. Beginning in 1930, he worked as a dramaturg at the Hessischen Landestheater Darmstadt. He made his directorial debut with Erich Kästners Leben in dieser Zeit.
He was dismissed from this post after the Nazis came to power in March, 1933. He received a job offer from Ferdinand Rieser, director of the Pfauenbühne in Zurich and emigrated to Switzerland, where he transformed the provincial stage into one of the most important German-language theaters outside Germany.
In 1934, he was dismissed from his post after differences with Rieser and spent time working in a publishing house. In 1935, he traveled to Moscow as a correspondent for the Neue Züricher Zeitung, where he also worked briefly as a directorial assistant for Vsevolod Meyerhold. After the dissolution of Meyerhold's theater, he returned to Zurich, where he helped to found the "Neues Schauspiel AG", which became the legal successor to the Schauspielhaus in Zurich. He served as the new company's first dramaturg and became its vice director in 1946. In 1961, he became the artistic and managing director of the Schauspielhaus Zurich.
Role in German-language Drama
Hirschfeld was one of the discoverers and early supporters of the Swiss playwrights Max Frisch and Friedrich Dürrenmatt. He had a special interest in the dramatic works of Bertolt Brecht. Thanks to his personal friendship with Brecht, he was responsible for three premieres of Brecht's work during World War II.
Personal life
In 1952, Hirschfeld married Tetta Scharff, daughter of the sculptor Edwin Scharff. A year later, his daughter Ruth was born. He died of lung cancer in a sanatorium on the Tegernsee in 1964 at the age of 62.[1]
References
- ↑ Rolf Badenhausen (1972) (in German). "Kurt Hirschfeld ". In Neue Deutsche Biographie (NDB). 9. Berlin: Duncker & Humblot. pp. 225 et seq.. (full text online)
Literature
- Hannes Heer; Sven Fritz; Heike Brummer; Jutta Zwilling: Verstummte Stimmen : die Vertreibung der "Juden" und "politisch Untragbaren" aus den hessischen Theatern 1933 bis 1945. Berlin : Metropol, 2011 ISBN 978-3-86331-013-4, S. 228-230
- Lexikon deutsch-jüdischer Autoren, Band 12, Saur, München 2005, S. 72–76
External links
- Kurt Hirschfeld Collection, AR 7066 Archival Collection at the Leo Baeck Institute, New York
Persondata
|