General Info | TEI
Name | Fodor, Marcel |
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Alternative Names |
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ID | 387 |
Gender | male |
Lifespan | 1890-01-17 - 1977-07-01 |
Professions | correspondent (Q1155838), editor (Q1607826), foreign correspondent (Q18190897), radio presenter |
Collection(s) |
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Uri(s) |
https://id.acdh.oeaw.ac.at/ica/persons/1_47 |
Notes | Covering the interwar turmoil in Central Europe, Fodor was a friend or mentor to several renowned journalists who covered the same beat, including Dorothy Thompson, John Gunther, Frances Gunther, William Shirer, George Eric Rowe Gedye, H. R. Knickerbocker, Edgar Mowrer, Frederick Scheu, Robert Best and others who frequented the Stammtisch at the Café Louvre, the unofficial headquarters of foreign journalism in interwar Vienna. Best and Fodor presided at the Stammtisch, where journalists and regular visitors discussed the days news and exchanged information. Because of the relationships Fodor developed; his fluency in several languages spoken in Central Europe; and his encyclopedic knowledge of history, politics and personalities of the region, Fodor had a strong reputation among his fellow journalists. Following the Anschluss, Fodor found himself in considerable personal danger, especially because he had published details of Hitler’s ancestry, and was quickly taken across the Czech border to Bratislava by an American diplomat. |
Relations
Event
Start | End | Other relation type | Related Event |
---|---|---|---|
12-1932 | 01-1933 | related >> participated in >> was guest at | Thompson's and Lewis's Christmas Party |
Institution
Start | End | Other relation type | Related Institution |
---|---|---|---|
1920 | 1938 | related >> visited | Café Louvre |
1920 | 1938 | related >> worked for/at >> was a foreign correspondent in Central Europe for | The Manchester Guardian (since 1959 The Guardian) |
1920 | 1938 | related >> worked for/at >> was a foreign correspondent in Central Europe for | The Nation |
1920 | 1938 | related >> worked for/at >> was a foreign correspondent in Central Europe for | The New Republic |
1920 | 1938 | related >> worked for/at >> was a foreign correspondent in Central Europe for | The American Mercury |
— | — | related >> editor of | Die Neue Zeitung |
1955 | 1965 | related >> worked for/at >> policy director of | Voice of America |
1955 | 1965 | related >> worked for/at >> program evaluator at | Voice of America |
— | — | related >> was member of | the Stammtisch of foreign correspondents at the Café Louvre |
1930 | — | established >> co-founder of | Anglo-American Press Association |
Person
Start | End | Other relation type | Related Person |
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1923 | 1960 | related >> acquainted with >> correspondence with | Thompson, Dorothy |
— | — | related >> acquainted with | Shirer, William Lawrence |
— | — | related >> collaborated with >> colleague of | Duranty, Walter |
— | — | related >> acquainted with | Best, Robert |
— | — | related >> acquainted with | Mencken, Henry L. |
Place
Start | End | Other relation type | Related Place |
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1940 | 1944 | related >> emigrated to | United States of America |
— | — | related >> stayed in >> stayed in for work >> worked as journalist in | Budapest |
— | — | Place of Birth | Hungary |
— | — | related >> stayed in >> stayed in for work | England |
— | — | related >> lived at | Twin Farms, Barnard, VT |
1920 | 1938 | related >> lived in | Vienna |
1930 | 1938-03 | related >> lived at | Börsegasse 7, 1010 Vienna |
1926 | 1929 | related >> lived at | Eslarngasse 11, 1030 Vienna |
Work
Start | End | Other relation type | Related Work |
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1937 | — | author of | Plot and Counterplot |
1940 | — | author of | The Revolution is On |
— | — | as fictionalized character | The Lost City |
Label
Label | Start | End | Label type | ISO Code |
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Dr. Laszlo Sandor | — | — | fictional character | deu |