Wolfgang Hildesheimer
Wolfgang Hildesheimer was a German author who incorporated the Theatre of the Absurd. He originally trained as an artist, before turning to writing.Biography
Hildesheimer was born of Jewish parents in Hamburg. His grandfather was Azriel Hildesheimer, the moderniser of Orthodox Judaism in Germany. He was educated at the Humanistisches Gymnasium in Mannheim from 1926 to 1930. He then attended Odenwaldschule until 1933, when he left Germany. He was then educated at Frensham Heights School in Surrey, England. He studied carpentry in Mandatory Palestine, where his parents had emigrated, and underwent psychoanalysis in Jerusalem. He studied painting and stage building in London.
In 1946 he worked as a translator and clerk at the Nuremberg trials. Afterward, he worked as a writer and was a member of Group 47. In 1980, he gave the inaugural address at the Salzburg Festival, "Was sagt Musik aus?". In addition to writing, Hildesheimer created collages which he collected in several volumes, an activity he shared with other late-20th century writers Peter Weiss and Ror Wolf. The municipality of Poschiavo in Switzerland made Hildesheimer an honorary citizen in 1982; he died there in 1991.Works
- 1952 , short stories
- 1953 Das Paradies der falschen Vögel
- 1954 An den Ufern der Plotinitza, radio play
- 1955 Der Drachenthron, comedy in three acts
- 1955 ', radio play
- 1954 Das Märchen von Prinzessin Turandot, radio play
- 1958 Pastorale oder Die Zeit für Kakao, play
- 1960 Herrn Walsers Raben, radio play
- 1961 Die Verspätung, play
- 1962 Vergebliche Aufzeichnungen
- 1965 ', a novel
- 1973 Masante, a novel
- 1977 ', a biography of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
- 1981 ', a fictional biography of Sir Andrew Marbot
- 1983 Mitteilungen an Max ''
Awards
- Hörspielpreis der Kriegsblinden 1955
- Georg Büchner Prize 1966
- Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany 1983