Zuckmayer, Carl

Zuckmayer, Carl

▪ German playwright
born December 27, 1896, Nackenheim, Germany
died January 18, 1977, Visp, Switzerland
 German playwright whose works deal critically with many of the problems engendered by two world wars.

      Zuckmayer served for four years in the German army in World War I and thereafter devoted himself to writing. In spite of his association in 1924 with the avant-garde playwright Bertolt Brecht (Brecht, Bertolt) and the innovative director Max Reinhardt (Reinhardt, Max), he remained faithful to the techniques of naturalism.

      Zuckmayer's first notable dramatic success was the earthy comedy Der fröhliche Weinberg (1925; “The Happy Vineyard”), for which he received the Kleist Prize. Der Hauptmann von Köpenick (1931; The Captain of Köpenick), one of his most highly regarded works, is a satire on Prussian militarism. In 1933 political pressure forced him to immigrate to Austria, where he wrote Der Schelm von Bergen (1934; “The Villain of Bergen”).

      After the German annexation of Austria in 1938, Zuckmayer escaped to Switzerland. In 1939 he fled to the United States. There he wrote one of his best-known dramas, Des Teufels General (1946; The Devil's General). With this play, which dramatizes the plight of men torn between loyalty to country and the demands of conscience, Zuckmayer's dramatic career entered a new phase. The zestful, life-affirming spirit of his earlier works was thereafter tempered with critical moral evaluation. In this spirit he wrote Barbara Blomberg (1949), Der Gesang im Feuerofen (1950; “The Song in the Fiery Furnace”), and Das kalte Licht (1955; “The Cold Light”), based on the treason case of the atomic scientist Klaus Fuchs (Fuchs, Klaus).

      Zuckmayer took up residence in Switzerland in 1946. In 1952 his collected works received the Goethe Prize. Zuckmayer's faith in human nature was never totally shaken, and his plays, though often critical, do not have the apocalyptic tone of those by many of his German contemporaries.

      Among his other works are essays, dramatic adaptations (as of Maxwell Anderson's What Price Glory?), motion-picture scenarios (as for The Blue Angel, 1930), novels (as Salwàre; oder, die Magdalena von Bozen, 1936; The Moons Ride Over), and two autobiographical works, Second Wind (1940; only the English version published) and Als wär's ein Stück von mir (1966; abridged English version, A Part of Myself). His collected works, in four volumes, were published in 1961.

Additional Reading
Siegfried Mews, Carl Zuckmayer (1981).

* * *


Universalium. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужно сделать НИР?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • ZUCKMAYER, CARL — (1896–1977), German playwright. Though born of a Jewish mother, Zuckmayer was raised as a Catholic in the Rhineland town of Nackenheim. During World War I he served as an officer on the Western Front and from 1919 worked in the theater and as a… …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • Zuckmayer, Carl — (1896 1977)    dramatist; best known for the satire Der Hauptmann von Kopenick (The Captain of Kopenick). He was born in the Rhineland village of Nackenheim; his well established family (his father ran a factory that produced the tin sheathing… …   Historical dictionary of Weimar Republik

  • Zuckmayer, Carl — (1896 1977)    Playwright. Zuckmayer was the most popular comic playwright during the Weimar Republic, and in the seasons immediately after World War II his straight plays dominated repertoires in the Western occupation zones. During the 1950s… …   Historical dictionary of German Theatre

  • Zuckmayer, Carl — (1896 1977)    German playwright. He was born in Nackenheim. Although he had a Jewish mother, he was raised as a Catholic. From 1919 he worked in the theatre and as a freelance writer. In 1924 he joined Bertholt Brecht at Berlin s Deutsches… …   Dictionary of Jewish Biography

  • Zuckmayer, Carl — ► (1896 1977) Dramaturgo alemán. Autor de El capitán de Köpenick y El general del diablo …   Enciclopedia Universal

  • Zuckmayer — Zuckmayer, Carl …   Enciclopedia Universal

  • Carl Zuckmayer — (1920) Carl Zuckmayer (* 27. Dezember 1896 in Nackenheim, Rheinhessen; † 18. Januar 1977 in Visp, Schweiz, Grab in Saas Fee) war ein deutscher …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Carl Zuckmayer — Saltar a navegación, búsqueda Carl Zuckmayer Carl Zuckmayer Nombre real Carl Zuckmayer Nacimiento …   Wikipedia Español

  • Carl Zuckmayer — (December 27, 1896 ndash; January 18, 1977) was a German writer and playwright.Born in Nackenheim in Rheinhessen, he was four years old when his family moved to Mainz. With the outbreak of World War I, he (like many other high school students)… …   Wikipedia

  • Carl Michael Bellmann — Carl Michael Bellman. Gemälde von Per Krafft d. Ä. 1779 (Nationale Porträtgalerie, Schloss Gripsholm) Carl Michael Bellman (Aussprache) (* 4. Februarjul./ …   Deutsch Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”