| Autor: | Farneth, David (Hg.) | Titel: | Lotte Lenya | Verlag: | Könemann | Ort: | Köln | Jahr: | 1999 | Auflage: | 1. | Signatur: | F 085 | Link: | | Reihe/Untertitel: | Eine Autobiographie in Bildern | Aufstellung: | Biographie | Biographie aufgestellt unter: | Lenya, Lotte | Suchgebiet: | (Auto-)Biographisches | Erstauflage: | 1998 | dt. Erstauflage: | | ISBN: | 3 8290 1437 6 | Bemerkungen: | | Originaltitel: | Lenya, the Legend | Verlagsangaben: | Sie "hatte Appetit aufs Leben und auf die Liebe" (Literaturhaus.at), sie war die Seeräuber-Jenny, die Mutter Courage. Sie verschickte mit James Bond "Liebesgrüße aus Moskau", Hollywood ehrte sie mit einem Oscar. Ihr "Mackie-Messer-Song" ist ein Klassiker. Lotte Lenya wurde als Karoline Blamauer in Wien geboren, ging nach Berlin und wurde mit ihrem unverwechselbaren Timbre ("eine Oktave unter der Kehlkopfentzündung", L.L.) zur Muse von Kurt Weill: "Sie kann keine Noten lesen, aber wenn sie singt, dann hören die Leute zu wie bei Caruso." Er schrieb ihr seine Songs quasi direkt in die Kehle. Sie ließ sich von ihm heiraten und wieder scheiden, entkam den Nazis und eroberte Hollywood. | Angaben zu Autorin/Autor: | | Rezensionen: | Actress and singer Lotte Lenya personified the decadence of '20s and '30s Berlin, with unforgettable roles created in collaboration with her composer husband Kurt Weill and the playwright Bertolt Brecht. Her performance as the prostitute Jenny in The Threepenny Opera (1928) became the stuff of legend.
Born Karoline Blamauer in Vienna in 1898, Lenya spent an impoverished childhood there before launching her career in Zurich and then Berlin, where she met and married Weill. The toast of the Berlin arts scene, Weill and Lenya left Germany in 1933 following the election of Hitler as chancellor. Weill was Jewish and an advocate of freedom of expression--his play Der Silbersee ("The Silver Lake"), which contained a caricature of Hitler, had already been banned by the authorities. The couple went to Paris, and then, when the threat of war in Europe became imminent, to the United States, where they both enjoyed highly successful careers on Broadway. Weill died suddenly in 1950, but Lenya carried on, tirelessly reinterpreting his and others' work; appearing onstage and onscreen (most memorably as Rosa Klebb in the 1963 James Bond film From Russia with Love), until well into later life. She died at the age of 83 in 1981.
Lenya the Legend: A Pictorial Autobiography is a fascinating book packed full of Lenya's own forthright reminiscences, interviews, and letters, lavishly illustrated with photographs of the star from her vampish Berlin cabaret days, through the glamour of her Broadway career. Published to coincide with the centenary of her birth, the book is a fitting tribute to a formidable legend. --Catherine Taylor | Ausleihdatum: | | "Series": | | "Volume": | | "Loan Type": | | "Loan Name": | | "Loan Start Date": | | "Loan Due Date": | | "Purchase From": | | "Purchase Price": | | "Purchase Date": | | "Description": | | "Date added": | | Feld38: | |
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