persons Wilder, Thornton

General Info | TEI

Name Wilder, Thornton
Alternative Names
ID 672
Gender male
Lifespan 1897-04-17 - 1975-12-07
Professions writer (Q36180), lecturer (Q1569495), university teacher (Q1622272), novelist (Q6625963), librettist (Q8178443), translator, dramatist
Collection(s)
  • Default import collection
  • Transatlantic Networks
  • webclient
  • Uri(s) https://id.acdh.oeaw.ac.at/ica/persons/1_163
    https://ica.acdh.oeaw.ac.at/apis/api2/entity/672/
    https://d-nb.info/gnd/118632817
    Notes Wilder came to know Vienna and Austria in 1928, established a close friendship with his translator Herbert Egon Herlitschka and repeatedly returned to Vienna. He was an admirer of the Salzburg Festival and he benefited greatly from the theatre tradition in Austria. He was inspired by his reading of Nestroy and visits to the Wiener Volkstheater. His 1938 play “The Merchant of Yonkers” was an adaptation of Nestroy’s play “Einen Jux will er sich machen” (1842). Under the direction of Max Reinhardt, the play premiered on Brodway in 1938 but was not met with much commercial success, unlike Wilder’s rewriting of it, which was published under the title “The Matchmaker” in 1954. During WWII, Wilder helped (or, in some cases, tried to help) many of his friends and acquaintance to emigrate. (see Zacharasiewicz, Waldemar. Transatlantic Networks and the Perception and Representation of Vienna and Austria Between the 1920s and 1950s. Vienna: Austrian Academy of Science Press, 2018). Wilder was eager to explain his duties to other friends and aquaintances and he mentioned a number of people whom he had met socially during his sojourns in Vienna or Salzburg and who had been ostracized in Austria after the Nazi takeover, reduced to indigence, and had fled. The ties of friendship that had developed pompted Wilder’s characteristic generosity in helping those in need. He listened to their appeals. In a letter to his friend Herbert Herlitschka he mentioned his own efforts on behalf of "a number of Viennese ... trying to help them find work." He listed Dr. Bermann, Dr. Franz Lehner, Hertha Schweiger, Dr. Ernst Waldinger and others. Wilder had established a close relationship with the Jewish (Austrian) dramatist and poet Richard Beer-Hofmann, whose precarious existence in his American exile is reflected in Beer-Hofmann’s letters to Wilder in German. Notes of thanks bear witness not only to Wilder’s generous support of exiled friends but also to his sharing news about the progress of Wilder’s adaptation of the material from the "Wiener Volkskomödie" for the stage with the exiled writer, who had lost his audience. Wilder supported not only the publication of a translation of Beer-Hofmann’s complex play "Jaakobs Traum", for which he composed an introduction, but also tried to promote its staging with prominent actors. Furthermore, Wilder had a very personal correspondence with Beer-Hofmann’s daughters in the 1950s which reflects his loyalty and ongoing support for the family of his exiled peer and his legacy, as well as his interest in their efforts to reclaim confiscated property in Austria.
    References Niven, Penelope. Thornton Wilder: A Life, New York: Harper Collins, 2012 [Foreword by Edward Albee] Thornton Wilder Papers. Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library. Yale University Library. Yale U, New Haven. Donald Gallup, The Journals of Thornton Wilder 1939-1961, New Haven: Yale UP, 1985. Horst Oppel, Thornton Wilder in Deutschland: Wirkung und Wertung seines Werkes im deutschen Sprachraum, Akademie der Wissenschaften und der Literatur Mainz (1976 /77) and the relevant articles in Horst Frenz and Hans-Joachim Lang, eds., Nordamerikanische Literatur im deutschen Sprachraum seit 1945, München: Winkler, 1973, 80-4, 185-6, 225-40. Discussions of individual plays, for instance, by Rudolf Haas and Franz Link, in Hans Itschert, ed., Das amerikanische Drama, Darmstadt: Wiss. Buchgesellschaft, 1972, 209-19, and 177-94, by Rudolf Germer in Paul Goetsch, ed., Das amerikanische Drama, Düsseldorf: Bagel, 1974, 170-82, and a review of research by Heinz Kosok in Jahrbuch für Amerikastudien 9 (1964), 196-227

    Relations

    Institution

    Start End Other relation type Related Institution
    1934-04-02 related >> worked for/at >> taught at University of Chicago
    1935 related >> attended Salzburg Festival
    1935-08 related >> visited Schloss Leopoldskron
    1935-09-17 1935-09 related >> visited >> stayed at Hotel Bristol, Vienna
    1935-09 1935-10-26 related >> visited >> stayed at Schloss Cobenzl
    1937-08 related >> attended Salzburg Festival
    1915 1917 related >> studied at Oberlin College
    1920 1921-06 related >> studied at American Academy in Rome
    1943 related >> won Pulitzer Prize
    1917 1920 related >> studied at Yale University

    Person

    Start End Other relation type Related Person
    1928-11 1970 related >> friendship with >> close friendship with Herlitschka, Herberth Egon
    related >> translated by Herlitschka, Herberth Egon
    1951-11 related >> friendship with Mahler-Werfel, Alma Maria
    related >> acquainted with >> had contacts with >> mentor of Davis, Robert
    1935 related >> friendship with >> close friendship with Stein, Gertrude
    related >> friendship with Luhan, Mabel Dodge
    related >> acquainted with Mann, Thomas
    related >> collaborated with Reinhardt, Max
    1928 related >> acquainted with >> correspondence with Herlitschka, Herberth Egon
    related >> related to >> sibling of Wilder, Isabel

    Place

    Start End Other relation type Related Place
    1897-04-17 related >> born in Madison, WI
    1975-12-07 related >> died in Hamden, Conn.
    1928-11 1928-12 related >> visited Vienna
    1928 related >> visited >> was invited at Wiedner Gürtel 6, 1040 Vienna
    1935-09-17 1935-10-26 related >> visited Vienna
    1931 1931 related >> visited Vienna
    1931-06 related >> visited Berlin
    1935-08 1935-08 related >> visited Tyrol
    1920 1921-06 related >> stayed in Rome
    1910 1912 related >> lived in China

    Work

    Start End Other relation type Related Work
    related >> wrote introduction to Jaákobs Traum
    related >> appears/appeared in >> as fictionalized character Theophilus North

    Label

    Label Start End Label type ISO Code
    Wilder, Thornton Legacy name (merge) deu

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