Hermann Leopoldi (born ''Hersch Kohn''; 15 August 1888 – 28 June 1959) was an Austrian
composer
A composer is a person who writes music. The term is especially used to indicate composers of Western classical music, or those who are composers by occupation. Many composers are, or were, also skilled performers of music.
Etymology and Defi ...
and
cabaret star who survived Dachau and
Buchenwald.
Einzi Stolz, wife of composer
Robert Stolz, remembered him thus:
:"Leopoldi was for us all some sort of creature from a different planet. Through a salvation bordering on a wonder he had survived the horrors of concentration camps Buchenwald and Dachau. He maintained his belief in the good in humanity and remained an optimist, who gave courage and confidence to many in times of difficulty."
Life
Hermann Leopoldi was born in
Vienna and was taught the piano by his father, a musician Leopold Leopoldi (born Kohn; the family officially changed its name to Leopoldi in 1911) who also sought employment for him: Leopoldi's first jobs were as an accompanist and bar pianist. He married Eugenie Kraus 1911 and served in the First World War, establishing himself as a forces entertainer. His son Norbert was born 1912 and his daughter Gertrude was born 1915. His first major appearance was in the Viennese cabaret in 1916. By 1922 he and his brother were well enough known to open their own cabaret, ''Kabarett Leopoldi-Wiesenthal'', which developed a reputation as a centre for such later celebrated performers as
Hans Moser,
Szöke Szakall
Szőke Szakáll (born Jakab Grünwald, akas: Gärtner Sándor and Gerő Jenő; February 2, 1883 February 12, 1955), known in the English-speaking world as S. Z. Sakall, was a Hungarian-American stage and film character actor. He appeared in m ...
,
Max Hansen,
Fritz Grünbaum
Franz Friedrich 'Fritz' Grünbaum (7 April 1880 in Brünn (Brno), Moravia – 14 January 1941 at the Dachau concentration camp, Germany) was an Austrian Jewish cabaret artist, operetta and popular song writer, actor, and master of ceremonies ...
,
Karl Valentin,
Raoul Aslan and
Otto Tressler
Otto is a masculine German given name and a Otto (surname), surname. It originates as an Old High German short form (variants ''Audo'', ''Odo'', ''Udo'') of Germanic names beginning in ''aud-'', an element meaning "wealth, prosperity".
The name ...
. After its closure in 1925 Leopoldi toured with his first singing partner Betja Milskaja appearing in Berlin, Paris, Budapest, Bukarest, Prague and Switzerland as well as Vienna.
Leopoldi wrote the music for some of the most famous ‘’
Wienerlieder’’ (songs about Vienna), setting words by
Peter Herz and
Fritz Löhner-Beda among others. Following the arrival of the
Nazis
Nazism ( ; german: Nazismus), the common name in English for National Socialism (german: Nationalsozialismus, ), is the far-right totalitarian political ideology and practices associated with Adolf Hitler and the Nazi Party (NSDAP) in Na ...
in Austria on 11 March 1938 – the so-called
Anschluss – Leopoldi, his wife, son and daughter attempted to flee from Vienna by train but the border to
Czechoslovakia had already been closed. When the train returned to Vienna, the SS were waiting to sort passengers into two groups; Non-Jewish and Jewish. While Leopoldi waited with the other Jewish passengers, a train conductor who was a huge fan, snuck Leopoldi and his family out a side door. On 26 April 1938 Leopoldi, by now already set to travel to appear in the United States, was arrested and transported first to
Dachau
,
, commandant = List of commandants
, known for =
, location = Upper Bavaria, Southern Germany
, built by = Germany
, operated by = ''Schutzstaffel'' (SS)
, original use = Political prison
, construction ...
and then
Buchenwald.
In Buchenwald he performed his own songs for other prisoners, and most famously, in response to a contest initiated by the camp commander, composed the
Buchenwaldlied (Buchenwald song) to words by
Löhner-Beda. Entered by a non-Jewish Kapo, the song was selected as the winner, although the promised prize was never distributed. Despite its optimistic mood and text, the song was popular with the camp personnel as well as with the prisoners. Years later Leopoldi remembered that the song
::’’pleased the camp commander intensely; in his stupidity he did not see how revolutionary the song actually was. From this day on we had to sing the march morning, noon and night …. Rödl
he camp commanderliked to dance to the melody, while the camp music played on one side, and on the other side people were being whipped … Through our work colony the song was brought to surrounding villages, and soon it was known throughout the land.’’
Meanwhile his wife had managed to travel to the US, from where she “bought” Leopoldi’s freedom with a large bribe. He travelled to
New York City where he was greeted by reporters: photographs of him kissing American soil on arrival went around the world. Rare among cabaret artist émigrés, Leopoldi quickly established a successful career in New York, performing both German and English language versions of his ‘Wiener Lieder’, and even running a musical café called
Viennese Lantern Viennese may refer to:
* Vienna, the capital of Austria
* Viennese people, List of people from Vienna
* Viennese German, the German dialect spoken in Vienna
* Music of Vienna, musical styles in the city
* Viennese Waltz, genre of ballroom dance
...
. This café, popular with Americans but especially catering to the community of artists who had fled the Nazi regime, was according to Einzi Stolz (wife of the Austrian composer
Robert Stolz) ‘’an oasis of authentic Vienna in the middle of New York, where for a few hours you could dream of a Vienna that was so far away and unattainable, yet lived on in your heart”.
Leopoldi and his new partner
Helly Möslein
Eduard Helly (June 1, 1884 in Vienna – 28 November 1943 in Chicago) was a mathematician after whom Helly's theorem, Helly families, Helly's selection theorem, Helly metric, and the Helly–Bray theorem were named.
Life
Helly earned his doct ...
returned to Vienna in 1947, where he resumed the career cut short in 1938, performing and touring all over post-war Germany, Austria and Switzerland. His son Ronald was born 1955. In a powerful sign of the transformative impact he had on the reconstruction of Austria, in 1958 Leopoldi was awarded the Golden Medal of
Decoration of Honour for Services to the Republic of Austria. He died in Vienna of a heart attack in June 1959, at the age of 70.
In June 1984 a park was named in his honour in
Meidling, a Viennese district.
Hermann Leopoldi-Park
Vienna City Hall archives, 11 November 2002
Works
He wrote hundreds of songs including
* ''I Am a Quiet Drinker''
* ''A Little Café Down the Street'', or ''In einem kleinen Café in Hernals'' (words: Peter Herz)
* ''Schnucki, ach Schnucki'' (words: Rudolf Skutajan)
* ''Schön ist so ein Ringelspiel'' (words: Peter Herz)
* ''Powidltatschkerln'' (words: Rudolf Skutajan)
Sources
* Kuna, M., 1993. Musik an der Grenze des Lebens: Musikerinnen und Musiker aus Böhmischen Ländern in Nationalsozialistischen Konzentrationslagern und Gefängnissen, Frankfurt/M.: Zweitausendeins.
* Silverman, J., 2002. The Undying Flame: Ballads and Songs of the Holocaust, Syracuse University Press.
* Stompor, S., 2001. Judisches Musik- und Theaterleben unter dem NS-Staat, Hannover: Europaisches Zentrum fur Judische Musik.
* Hans Weiss, Ronald Leopoldi: ''Hermann Leopoldi und Helly Möslein. „In einem kleinen Café in Hernals …“. Eine Bildbiographie''. Edition Trend S, Wien o. J. (1992), .
* Franziska Ernst: ''Hermann Leopoldi: Biographie eines jüdisch-österreichischen Unterhaltungskünstlers und Komponisten''. Diplomarbeit an der Historisch-Kulturwissenschaftlichen Fakultät der Universität Wien, 2010
Online-version
* Felix Czeike: ''Historisches Lexikon Wien''. Volume 4. Kremayr & Scheriau, Vienna 1995, , .
* Rudolf Flotzinger: '' Oesterreichisches Musiklexikon''. Volume 3. Österreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften, Vienna 2004, , .
* Christian Klösch, Regine Thumser: '' From Vienna. Exilkabarett in New York 1938 bis 1950''. Picus, Wien 2002, , .
* Ronald Leopoldi: ''Leopoldiana''. Gesammelte Werke von Hermann Leopoldi und 11 Lieder von Ferdinand Leopoldi in two volumes. Doblinger, Vienna 2011,
*Elisabeth Leopoldi: Hermann Leopoldi. Composer, Viennese Cabaret Pianis and Incurable Optimist. Hentrich & Hentrich Verlag, Berlin Leipzig, 2019, .
References
External links
* http://museum.highway.co.at/meidling/page.asp/656.htm The Hermann Leopoldi Archive in the local museum in Meidling
Hermann Leopoldi and Helly Möslein (German language)
The Austrian cabaret archive.
*
* Peter Herz
''Der Leopoldi singt nicht mehr. Zu seinem Ableben, von einem Freund und Mitarbeiter''
In: ''Arbeiter-Zeitung'', 30. Juni 1959, S. 6.
Evelyn Steinthaler: ''Zwischen Hernals und Broadway''. Zum 120. Geburtstag von Hermann Leopoldi. In: ''Wiener Zeitung'', 16. August 2008; online in ''Wiener Zeitung Extra Lexikon''
Photo of Hermann Leopoldi
{{DEFAULTSORT:Leopoldi, Hermann
Austrian male composers
Austrian composers
1888 births
1959 deaths
Musicians from Vienna
Austrian Jews
Jewish composers
Recipients of the Decoration for Services to the Republic of Austria
Kabarettists
20th-century male musicians