Adolf Müller-Palm

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Adolf Müller-Palm

Adolf Müller-Palm , also just Adolf Palm , (born March 10, 1840 in Stuttgart , † May 21, 1904 ) was a German journalist , writer and newspaper publisher .

Life

His father was the printer Friedrich Müller, who founded the Stuttgarter Neues Tagblatt in 1843 and died in 1857. Adolf Müller-Palm attended high school, completed a commercial apprenticeship, and from 1860 worked for an Amsterdam shipping company. Extensive trips followed in northern Germany, Denmark, England, Italy and France. Then he was in Berlin for a while, writing for newspapers. From 1867 he took over the review of music and theater events at the Neue Tagblatt . He himself published the weekly Der Freischütz and was hired by the bookseller Schönlein to publish four other magazines. In 1875 he joined the editorial team of the Neue Tagblatt. When the newspaper was transferred to the Deutsche Verlagsanstalt , Müller-Palm took a seat on the board of directors, which he held until his death. His long-term struggle against the artistic director of the Stuttgart court theater Feodor von Wehl , which is particularly fought in Müller-Palm's book Letters from the World of Boards (1881), is remarkable .

Works (selection)

  • In the labyrinth of the soul . Two novels. Günther, Leipzig 1872
  • Letters from the world of boards. Serious and cheerful from the history of the Stuttgart court theater . Bonz, Stuttgart 1881 ( digitized version )
  • Queen Pauline of Württemberg, wife of Wilhelm I. A picture of life. Bonz, Stuttgart 1891
  • In the Lindenhof . A Lake Constance novella. Stuttgart 1900 (German Novel Library 28.1)
  • From Uhland's workshop . A contribution to the newly opened Marbach Schiller Museum. Printed as a manuscript. Stuttgart 1903
  • (Ed.) For the 50th anniversary of the Neue Tagblatt in Stuttgart (December 24, 1843 - 1893.) A commemorative publication. New Tagblatt publisher, Stuttgart 1893

literature

  • Schulze-Fichte, Adolfine: Serious and cheerful about the laundress of the Stuttgart court theater, commonly known as Adolf Müller-Palm. An orthographical, grammatical and stylistic travel joke . Oßwald, Kirchheim u. T. 1882. (Parody of Müller-Palm's writing Letters from the world of boards .)

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Alfons Schiele: Stuttgart theater criticism in the 19th century. Berlin 1968, pp. 103-104