Christa Winsloe  

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-'''Christa Winsloe''' ([[December 23]] [[1888]] in [[Darmstadt]] - [[June 10]] [[1944]] bei [[Cluny]], [[Frankreich]]) was a [[20th century]] [[Hungary|Hungarian]] [[novelist]], [[playwright]] and sculptor. She moved to [[Vienna]] in the [[1920s]] and there achieved success in [[1930]] with her play ''Yesterday & Today'' which deals with [[Gustav Wyneken|pedagogical eros]]. On the strength of the play's acclaim, she moved to [[Weimar Republic|Weimar]] [[Berlin]] where a [[lesbian]] culture thrived. She was wealthy since she had married very young in a marriage that lasted only weeks, and thereafter her estranged husband paid her a generous allowance. She worked as an animal sculptor and had a wide circle of friends. She was a member of the SPD (German Socialist Party), and was openly bisexual. She moved to [[France]] in the late [[1930s]], fleeing the [[Nazism|Nazis]], and joined the [[French Resistance]]. The Nazis captured and executed her in [[1944]]. Her [[novel]] ''The Child Manuela'' was the basis of a play and then the film ''[[Mädchen in Uniform]]'' ([[1931]]), for which she was the screenwriter.+'''Christa Winsloe''' ([[December 23]] [[1888]] in [[Darmstadt]] - [[June 10]] [[1944]] bei [[Cluny]], [[Frankreich]]) was a [[20th century]] [[Hungary|Hungarian]] [[novelist]], [[playwright]] and sculptor. She moved to [[Vienna]] in the [[1920s]] and there achieved success in [[1930]] with her play ''Yesterday & Today'' which deals with [[Gustav Wyneken|pedagogical eros]]. On the strength of the play's acclaim, she moved to [[Weimar Republic|Weimar]] [[Berlin]] where a [[lesbian]] culture thrived. She was wealthy since she had married very young in a marriage that lasted only weeks, and thereafter her estranged husband paid her a generous allowance. She worked as an animal sculptor and had a wide circle of friends. She was a member of the SPD (German Socialist Party), and was openly bisexual. She moved to [[France]] in the late [[1930s]], fleeing the [[Nazism|Nazis]], and joined the [[French Resistance]]. The Nazis captured and [[executed]] her in [[1944]]. Her [[novel]] ''The Child Manuela'' was the basis of a play and then the film ''[[Mädchen in Uniform]]'' ([[1931]]), for which she was the screenwriter.
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Christa Winsloe (December 23 1888 in Darmstadt - June 10 1944 bei Cluny, Frankreich) was a 20th century Hungarian novelist, playwright and sculptor. She moved to Vienna in the 1920s and there achieved success in 1930 with her play Yesterday & Today which deals with pedagogical eros. On the strength of the play's acclaim, she moved to Weimar Berlin where a lesbian culture thrived. She was wealthy since she had married very young in a marriage that lasted only weeks, and thereafter her estranged husband paid her a generous allowance. She worked as an animal sculptor and had a wide circle of friends. She was a member of the SPD (German Socialist Party), and was openly bisexual. She moved to France in the late 1930s, fleeing the Nazis, and joined the French Resistance. The Nazis captured and executed her in 1944. Her novel The Child Manuela was the basis of a play and then the film Mädchen in Uniform (1931), for which she was the screenwriter.




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