IN the years just before, during and after WWII, the flow of exiles and emigres from fascist Germany to Los Angeles became so strong that an injection of wit and decadence transformed parts of the city.
I wrote about this period -- and a present where German culture exists mostly in dispersed form -- in Sunday's LA Times.
Here is my piece, which looks at both the era where Marlene Dietrich, Thomas Mann and Bertold Brecht came here and the present. The story is pegged to the Los Angeles Opera's Ring Cycle, which concludes shortly.
This is a rich chapter of California history which I keep returning to. Speaking of returning, I hope to get back to Villa Aurora, Lion Feuchtwanger's old mansion in Pacific Palisades -- the mind boggles to think about what those parties must have been like.
Photo of Villa Aurora by Karin Appolonia Mueller
i enjoyed this.... and not sure if you're an Austrian enthusiast per se, but a dance performance is coming up and I can offer you a "press" reduction if it piques your interest :)
ReplyDeletelink: http:danceisdead.evenbrite.com or www.lacetheater.com