Fritz Muliar (1919–2009)
Auteur de Das Beste aus meiner jüdischen Witze- und Anekdotensammlung
A propos de l'auteur
Crédit image: (left) Image © ÖNB/Wien
Œuvres de Fritz Muliar
Erzählt Jüdische Witze 2 exemplaires
Die Reise nach Tripstrill und zurück 1 exemplaire
Fritz Muliar erzählt jüdische Witze : Aufgenommen im Herbst 1963; ...1960; im Frühjahr 1959 1 exemplaire
Fritz Muliar erzählt jüdische Witze: Damit ich nicht vergess', Ihnen zu erzählen!, 1 CD-Audio: Flg. 2 (1988) 1 exemplaire
Damit ich nicht vergesse, Ihnen zu erzählen: Jiddische Geschichterln und Lozelachs (2004) 1 exemplaire
Ins Kaffeehaus. CD 1 exemplaire
MULIAR, FRITZ / Damit ich nicht vergess´, Ihnen zu erzählen! / Fritz Muliar erzählt wieder… 1 exemplaire
MULIAR, FRITZ / neue jüdische witze und geschichten erzählt von Fritz Muliar live im Europa-Center / 1968 /… 1 exemplaire
Erzählt Jüdische Witze 2 1 exemplaire
Étiqueté
Partage des connaissances
- Nom canonique
- Muliar, Fritz
- Nom légal
- Stand, Friedrich Ludwig
- Autres noms
- Volksschauspieler
- Date de naissance
- 1919-12-12
- Date de décès
- 2009-05-04
- Sexe
- male
- Nationalité
- Austria
- Lieu de naissance
- Vienna, Austria
- Lieu du décès
- Vienna, Austria
- Lieux de résidence
- Vienna, Austria
- Études
- Vienna Conservatory
- Professions
- actor
humorist
cabaret artist
director - Courte biographie
- Fritz Muliar was born Friedrich Ludwig Stand in Vienna, Austria, to unmarried parents. His biological father, an army officer, later became a Nazi, while his mother, Leopoldine Stand, was a committed leftist. In 1924, she married Mischa Muliar, a Russian-born Jewish jeweler who gave Fritz his surname.
At age 16, Fritz finished high school and began to study acting at the Vienna Conservatory. His first cabaret performances took place in 1937. However, after the Nazi Anschluss (annexation) of Austria the following year, his career was restricted, and he went to work as a salesman for a baby products company to support himself. In 1940, near the start of World War II, he was drafted into the Germany Army. The authorities discovered his pro-Austrian freedom activities, and he was sentenced to death; however, the sentence was commuted into a five-year prison term, of which he served seven months and then was sent to a penal unit on the Eastern Front.
After the war, he returned to Austria to become a hugely popular radio, theater, and film actor and director, including as a humorist and interpreter of Jewish/Yiddish jokes for the German-speaking world.
Membres
Statistiques
- Œuvres
- 16
- Membres
- 19
- Popularité
- #609,294
- Évaluation
- 4.7
- ISBN
- 10
- Favoris
- 2