Hedda Zinner
Template:Short description Template:Refimprove Script error: No such module "Infobox".Template:Template otherScript error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Hedda Zinner, or Hedda Erpenbeck-Zinner (20 May 1904 – 1 July 1994), was a German political writer, actress, comedian, journalist and radio director.
Biography
Hedda Zinner was born in Lviv (then known as Lemberg) on 20 May 1904. She attended the Acting Academy there from 1923 to 1925. Zinner began working as an actress but her interest in the workers' movement led her to move to Berlin and, in 1929, join the Communist Party of Germany. She became a journalist for left-wing journals. When Hitler came to power, she moved to Vienna and then Prague, where she founded the cabaret Studio 34 in 1934. In 1935 she emigrated to Moscow. After the Second World War she settled in East Berlin.[1] In 1980, Zinner was awarded the Order of Karl Marx.[2]
Zinner also wrote under the pseudonym Elisabeth Frank. Her granddaughter is the writer Jenny Erpenbeck.
Works
- Nur eine Frau [Only a Woman] (1954). A novel about the life of Louise Otto-Peters.
- Ahnen und Erben [Ancestors and Inheritors] (1968). Vol. 1 of her autobiography.
- Die Schwestern [Sisters] (1970). Vol. 2 of her autobiography.
References
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- ↑ "Hedda Zinner" Template:Webarchive. Künstlerkolonie Berlin. Künstlerkolonie Berlin, n.d. Web. 25 Dec. 2013.
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External links
- Pages with script errors
- 1900s births
- 1994 deaths
- Journalists from Lviv
- Communist Party of Germany politicians
- Socialist Unity Party of Germany politicians
- Refugees from Nazi Germany in the Soviet Union
- Recipients of the Patriotic Order of Merit
- Recipients of the National Prize of East Germany
- Jewish German writers
- 20th-century German women writers
- 20th-century German writers
- Jews from Austria-Hungary
- Jews from Galicia (Eastern Europe)