Anneliese Friedmann

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Anneliese Friedmann (born May 30, 1927 in Kirchseeon as Anneliese Schuller ; † November 7, 2020 in Munich ) was the editor of the Abendzeitung and partner of the Süddeutscher Verlag .

Live and act

Anneliese Friedmann grew up in Freising . Even as a schoolgirl, she wrote for the Freisinger Tagblatt during the war . After graduating from high school , she studied art history and theater criticism (without a degree) at the University of Munich . In 1947 she attended Otto Groth's journalism course , where her future husband Werner Friedmann taught local journalism. After a year of training, she was the only woman to work for the Süddeutsche Zeitung after completing her traineeshipaccepted. In her application, she only gave her first name as an initial. She was part of the editorial team until 1960, where she headed the fashion journal and wrote a column under the pseudonym "Sibylle". From 1960 to 1970 she was under the same pseudonym a column in the magazine Stern of Henri Nannen , she wrote it about politics, society, fashion and style. Repeatedly she also wrote critical contributions, e.g. B. for the right to abortion and against Franz Josef Strauss .

Anneliese Friedmann was the widow of the newspaper founder Werner Friedmann, whom she married in 1951. After his death in 1969 she joined the group of shareholders of the Süddeutscher Verlag es and was the editor of the Münchner Abendzeitung for years . In this role she is considered a role model for the figure of Friederike von Unruh in Helmut Dietl's television series Kir Royal .

Friedmann's son Johannes is co-editor of the Süddeutsche Zeitung and was co-editor of the evening newspaper from 1986 .

Anneliese Friedmann was in a relationship with Eberhard Ebner, the publisher of Ulmer Südwest Presse .

Awards

Novels (selection)

  • Come back, Martina (= Eva; 77). Marken, Cologne, 1965, DNB 363759018 .
  • Don't take my Peterle: women's novel. Borgsmüller, Münster / Westphalia, 1960, DNB 573141444 .
  • Georgia's victory (= Britta-Roman; 328). Hessel, Feucht, 1965, DNB 363759026 .
    • Georgia's victory (= the blue novel; 768). Arndt, Feucht, 1966, DNB 363759034 .
  • I came to the castle as an orphan (= Sabine; special volume 330). Marken, Cologne, 1966, DNB 36375900X .

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Anneliese Friedmann is dead. In: sueddeutsche.de . November 9, 2020, accessed November 9, 2020 .
  2. ^ A b SZ partner: Anneliese Friedmann has died. In: horizon. November 10, 2020, accessed November 10, 2020 .
  3. Short biography in the book Year 1926/27 - Memories of the Years Under the Swastika (2007)
  4. ^ Paul Hoser : Evening newspaper. In: Historical Lexicon of Bavaria . August 21, 2012, accessed November 9, 2020 .
  5. ^ Publisher Anneliese Friedmann, 75th birthday. In: bdzv.de . June 3, 2002, accessed November 9, 2020 .
  6. a b Anneliese Friedmann is dead. In: Zeit Online. November 9, 2020, accessed November 10, 2020 .
  7. The Henri Nannen Prize 2013 for a life's work in journalism goes to Anneliese Friedmann. In: henri-nannen-preis.de. April 11, 2013, archived from the original on March 6, 2014 ; accessed on November 9, 2020 .