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Austrian journalist, writer and actress From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Hertha Ernestine Pauli (September 4, 1906 – February 9, 1973) was an Austrian journalist, writer and actress.
Hertha Pauli | |
---|---|
Born | Hertha Ernestine Pauli September 4, 1906 Vienna, Austria-Hungary |
Died | February 9, 1973 66) Bay Shore, New York, U.S. | (aged
Occupation | Journalist, writer, actress |
Nationality | Austria-Hungary American |
Spouse | Carl Behr E.B. Ashton |
Relatives | Wolfgang Pauli (brother) |
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Hertha Ernestine Pauli was born in Vienna, the daughter of feminist Bertha Schütz and chemist Wolfgang Pauli. Her brother was Wolfgang Pauli, who was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1945.
From 1927-33, she played different small roles at the Max Reinhardt Theatre in Berlin and was allied with Ödön von Horváth. From 1933-38, she lived in Vienna, edited the "Österreichische Korrespondenz" and published biographical novels, for example about the feminist Bertha von Suttner.[1]
After the Anschluss, she immigrated to France. In Paris, she belonged to the circle of Joseph Roth, knew the American journalist Eric Sevareid, and wrote for Resistance. In 1940, after the Nazis occupied France, she fled with writer Walter Mehring through Marseilles, the Pyrenees and Lisbon. With the aid of Varian Fry and the Emergency Rescue Committee, she made her way to the United States.[2]
After her arrival in the U.S., she described her flight in the journal Aufbau.[3][4][5]
In the following years she wrote books about Alfred Nobel and the Statue of Liberty. Her books for children, in particular, had some success. These books included Silent Night. The Story of a Song (1943), in which she explained the origin of the carol.
She married Ernst Basch (pen name, E.B. Ashton), with whom she had collaborated on I Lift My Lamp. Her last book was autobiographical and described the time after the Nazi's union with France.[6]
She died in Bay Shore, New York on February 9, 1973, aged 66.[7]
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