Arnolt Bronnen | |
---|---|
Born |
Vienna |
19 August 1895
Died | 12 October 1959 East Berlin |
(aged 64)
Occupation |
Playwright Theatre director |
Nationality | Austrian |
Literary movement | Expressionism |
Notable works | Parricide (1922) |
Arnolt Bronnen (19 August 1895 – 12 October 1959) was an Austrian playwright and director.
Bronnen was born in Vienna, Austria. His father was Jewish and his mother was Christian. Bronnen's most famous play is the Expressionist drama Parricide (Vatermord, 1922); its première production is notable, among other things, for being that from which Bronnen's friend, the young Bertolt Brecht in an early stage of his directing career, withdrew, after being taken to hospital with malnutrition and the actors of the cast, led by Heinrich George, walked out on him. According to The Cambridge Guide to Theatre, the "erotic, anti-bourgeois, black expressionism" of the play "caused a sensation" when it was eventually performed.
Bronnen also wrote Birth of Youth (Geburt der Jugend, 1922) and Die Excesse (1923). After having collaborated on film treatments and various theatrical projects together, in 1923 Bronnen and Brecht co-directed a condensed version of Pastor Ephraim Magnus (a nihilistic, Expressionist play, according to The Cambridge Guide, "stuffed with perversities and sado-masochistic motifs") by Hans Henny Jahnn. Later in his life he wrote reportage plays.
Bronnen signed the Gelöbnis treuester Gefolgschaft, a "vow of most faithful allegiance" to Adolf Hitler in 1933; after the Second World War he became a communist.
Bronnen died in East Berlin and is buried in the Dorotheenstadt cemetery.