Moriz Seeler

Moriz Seeler (1 March 1896 after 15 August 1942) was a German poet, writer, film producer, and man of the theatre. He was also a victim of the Holocaust.

Seeler was born at the small, provincial town of Greifenberg in Pomerania, Germany (now Gryfice in northwestern Poland), to a Jewish family. He moved to Berlin at the age of 15. His first verses are said to have been published as early as 19171918; the first collection of poems, Dem Hirtenknaben, was issued in Berlin in 1919;[1] another one, entitled Die Flut, saw the light of day in Vienna in 1937.[2]

He is perhaps best known as the founding father of the Junge Bühne (‘Young Stage’), an avant‑garde matinee-theatre which came into being in Berlin in the spring of 1922. In 1927 he co‑authored the libretto to Friedrich Hollaender’s cabaret Bei uns um die Gedächtniskirche rum. In June 1929 he co‑founded (together with Robert Siodmak and Edgar G. Ulmer) Filmstudio 1929, a Berlin production house. In 19291930 he co‑produced, together with Heinrich Nebenzahl, the silent quasi-documentary film Menschen am Sonntag, directed by Robert Siodmak (19001973) and starring Brigitte Borchert and Erwin Splettstößer, which shows a candid picture of life in Weimar-era Germany that was soon to vanish for ever.

Having been imprisoned by the Nazis in November 1938, he is said to have been deported to Latvia, where he went missing in Riga, doubtless having fallen victim of the Nazis in one of that city’s three Jewish ghettos (according to another account, he was murdered at the Theresienstadt concentration camp in 1943 and this account, less well-known and less generally accepted, may well be the accurate one).

In 1998 a small book written about him by Günther Elbin, Am Sonntag in die Matinee, appeared in Germany.[3] Following this development, in November 2000, a memorial plaque was erected on the façade of the tenement at the Brandenburgische Straße 36 in what is now the Berlin borough of Charlottenburg-Wilmersdorf, identifying the house as the locale where Moriz Seeler lived from 1916 to the mid‑1920s: the inscription refers to him as a ‘Jewish poet’, not a German one. In September 2002 a street, previously known as Franz‑Ehrlich-Straße, in another of Berlin boroughs (that of Treptow-Köpenick), was renamed Moriz‑Seeler‑Straße in his honour. The capital of Austria has had a street named Moritz‑Seeler‑Gasse (sic: not Moriz) since 1969.

His name is commonly spelt ‘Moritz Seeler’.

See also

Notes

  1. The present writer is unable to find a single copy of this book.
  2. Moriz Seeler, Die Flut: Gedichte (Vienna, Buchhandlung Richard Lányi, 1937).
  3. Günther Elbin, Am Sonntag in die Matinee: Moriz Seeler und die Junge Bühne: Eine Spurensuche (Mannheim, Persona-Verlag, 1998).

The street that was given the name "Moriz Seeler Straße" is a new street in the media area Berlin-Adlershof, which belongs to Treptow-Köpenick. The street did not have a name before and is next to "Franz-Ehrlich-Straße", which is also a new street named after the Bauhaus architect that has designed the first buildings for the East German Television. Strangely these buildings are situated at the Moriz Seeler Straße.

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