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Regina (Gina) Kranz Frischauer (Wiener)

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Vienna, Vienna, Austria
Death: December 23, 1985 (92)
Los Angeles, Los Angeles, California, United States
Immediate Family:

Daughter of Max Emanuel Wiener and Ida Wiener
Wife of Josef Zirner and Eduard (Edi) Max Frischauer
Ex-wife of Otto Kaus
Partner of Dr.jur. Josef Kranz
Mother of Otto MIchael Kaus and Private
Sister of Paul Josef Wiener

Occupation: writer
Managed by: Private User
Last Updated:
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Immediate Family

About Gina Kaus

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gina_Kaus

Gina Kaus, née Regina Wiener (21 October 1893, Vienna, Austria – 23 December 1985, Los Angeles, California) was an Austrian-American novelist and screenwriter. Contents [show] [edit]Biography

Regina Wiener, the daughter of money broker Max Wiener, attended an all-girl's school. Regina married the Viennese musician Josef Zirner in 1913, but he died in 1915 on the battlefield in World War I. She was the mistress and common law wife of the banker Josef Kranz and used the last name Zirner-Kaus. Four years later, 1920, she married the writer Otto Kaus, but the couple divorced in 1926, after the birth of two sons, Otto and Peter. In the twenties, Gina Kaus published her first novel The Rise, which won the Theodor Fontane Prize. And was very active in the circle of literary intellectuals in Berlin and Vienna. She had friendships with both Austrian writers Karl Kraus and a romance with Otto Soyka; in her autobiography she would write "... I had a lover, I am not loved." in 1933 she would watch both their books fall victim to the Nazi Bücherverbrennung or book burnings. Kaus had visited America in 1936. And in March 1938 she moved from Vienna via Zurich to Paris. In Paris she wrote two screenplays from her novels "Gefangnis ohne Gitter" and "Die Schwestern Kleeh", which became the popular movies "Prison sans barreaux" and "Conflict", before coming to the United states in 1939. After a few months in New York, she settled in Hollywood in November 1939. Her 1940 novel written Devil Next Door was filmed by director Rolf Hansen in 1956, with Lilli Palmer and Curt Jürgens as Teufel in Seide or the Devil in Silk. Gina Kaus wrote many scripts in Hollywood, and would not return to Vienna until 1948 and visit Berlin until 1951. In 1979 Kaus wrote an autobiography published in Germany as : Und was für ein Leben...mit Liebe und Literatur, Theater und Film. She died in Los Angeles in 1985. [edit]Works

[edit]Stageplays Diebe im Haus, Thieves in the house [edit]Fiction Gina Kaus wrote some of their works under the pseudonym, "Andreas Eckbrecht". Der Aufstieg (The Rise) (1920) Der lächerliche Dritte (the Third Ridiculous) (1926) Die Verliebten (the Lovers) (1928) Toni: Eine Schulmächen-Komödie in zehn Bildern. (Toni: a schoolgirl comedy in ten pictures) (1927) Luxusdampfer' (Luxury Ship) (1932) Die Überfahrt (the Crossing) (1932) Die Schwestern Kleh (The sisters Kleh) (1933) Dark Angel (1934) Katharina die Große (Catherine the Great) (1935) Whisky and Soda (1937) [edit]Non Fiction Und was für ein Leben...mit Liebe und Literatur, Theater und Film, (And what a life ... with love and literature, theatre and film) (1979) - autobiography [edit]Film credits Luxury Liner (1933), novel Prison sans barreaux (1938), story Prison Without Bars (1938), play Prison sans barreaux Conflict (1938) (novel "Les soeurs Kleh") Prison Without Bars (1939), play Prison sans Barreaux Charlie Chan in City in Darkness (1939), play Western Mail (1942), story The Night Before the Divorce (1942), play The Wife Takes a Flyer (1942), screenplay, story They All Kissed the Bride (1942), story Isle of Missing Men (1942), play White Lady Blazing Guns (1943), story Camino del infierno (1946), writer Her Sister's Secret (1946), novel Dark Angel Whispering City (1947), additional dialogue Julia Misbehaves (1948), adaptation The Red Danube (1949), screenplay Three Secrets (1950), story "Rock Bottom", uncredited We're Not Married! (1952) , story All I Desire (1953), writer The Robe (1953), adaptation Teufel in Seide (1956), novel Der Teufel nebenan Alfred Hitchcock Presents (1956), 1 episode Wie ein Sturmwind (1957), writer Schloß in Tirol, Das (1957), writer Schlitz Playhouse of Stars (1957), 1 episode Geu yeojaui joiga anida (It's Not Her Sin) (1959), novel Verbotenes Land (1967), German TV version [edit]References

[edit]Notes [edit]Bibliography David H. Malone: Gina Kaus. : John M. Spalek, Joseph Strelka (ed.): German literature in exile since 1933. Volume 1 California. Francke, Bern and Munich 1976, S.751-761. ISBN 3-7720-1158-6 Sibylle Mulot: Last word on Gina Kaus. : Gina Kaus from Vienna to Hollywood. Memories of Gina Kaus. TB 1757. Suhrkamp, Frankfurt am Main, 1990, S.239-251. ISBN 3-518-38257-8 Hartmut Vollmer: Gina Kaus. In: Richard B. Kilcher (ed.): Metzlers lexicon of German-Jewish literature. J.B. Metzler, Stuttgart and Weimar 2000, S.301-303. ISBN 3-476-01682-X

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Gina Kaus's Timeline

1893
October 21, 1893
Vienna, Vienna, Austria
1920
January 7, 1920
Vienna, Austria
1985
December 23, 1985
Age 92
Los Angeles, Los Angeles, California, United States