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Franz Werfel

Franz Werfel
Werfel.jpg
Werfel photographed by Van Vechten, 1940
Born Franz Viktor Werfel
(1890-09-10)10 September 1890
Prague, Austria-Hungary
Died 26 August 1945(1945-08-26) (aged 54)
Beverly Hills, California, United States
Occupation Novelist, playwright and poet
Partner(s) Alma Mahler (1929—1945; his death)
Relatives Hanna Fuchs-Robettin (1896–1964), Marianne Amalie Rieser (1899–1965) (sisters)
Signature
Franz Werfel (signature ca 1945).gif

Franz Viktor Werfel (10 September 1890 – 26 August 1945) was an Austrian-Bohemian novelist, playwright, and poet whose career spanned World War I, the Interwar period, and World War II. He is primarily known as the author of The Forty Days of Musa Dagh (1933, English tr. 1934, 2012), a novel based on events that took place during the Armenian Genocide of 1915, and The Song of Bernadette (1941), a novel about the life and visions of the French Catholic saint Bernadette Soubirous, which was made into a Hollywood film of the same name.

Born in Prague (then part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire), Werfel was the first of three children of a wealthy manufacturer of gloves and leather goods, Rudolf Werfel. His mother, Albine Kussi, was the daughter of a mill owner. His two sisters were Hanna (born 1896) and Marianne Amalie (born 1899). His family was Jewish. As a child, Werfel was raised by his Czech Catholic governess, Barbara Šimůnková, who often took him to mass in Prague’s main cathedral. Like the children of other progressive German-speaking Jews in Prague, Werfel was educated at a Catholic school run by the Piarists, a teaching order that allowed for a rabbi to instruct Jewish students for their Bar Mitzvahs. This, along with his governess’s influence, gave Werfel an early interest (and expertise) in Catholicism, which soon branched out to other faiths, including Theosophy and Islam, such that his fiction, as well as his nonfiction, provides some insight into comparative religion.


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