Josef B. Malina

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Josef Julius Martin Bonifacius Malina , also known as JB Malina (born March 7, 1893 in Fiume , Kingdom of Hungary , † December 28, 1960 in Höllriegelskreuth ), was an Austrian writer and screenwriter .

Life

Josef Malina grew up in Vienna .

In 1919 he lived in Charlottenburg near Berlin ; in April he married the actress Minna, geb. Karbaum (* 1892).

From 1920 until the first years of the war , he wrote some movie scripts and published several books with gravure printing . He was u. a. known as the author of the illustrated book Orbis Catholicus: Pictures of Believing People and Sacred Forms, which was published in Berlin in 1933 and also translated into French. In June of the same year, his anti-war play Am Himmel Europa , composed with Per Schwenzen , premiered at the Berlin Theater on Schiffbauerdamm and played for months at the Lustspielhaus Berlin from the beginning of 1934 .

In April 1946 he became editor-in-chief of the new Austrian magazine Film (subtitle: Die Österreichische Illustrierte Zeitschrift ), edited by Willi Forst , which appeared until 1949.

Filmography

Fonts

Image from Orbis Catholicus (1930)
  • In the sunny south (1932)
  • Immortal Germany (1933)
  • In the sky of Europe (1933, with Per Schwenzen )
  • Orbis Catholicus: Images of believing people and sacred forms (1930/33) (French: Orbis Catholicus. Images et scènes de la vie catholique )
  • The Germanic north and us. Denmark, Norway and Sweden (1934)
  • Germany Flies: The Development of German Aviation since 1933 (1935)

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ↑ Dates of birth and death according to entry no.345 from April 14, 1919 and a page note in the marriage register of the Berlin-Charlottenburg III registry office, accessed via ancestry.com on July 6, 2019
  2. a b Else Frobenius , Lora Wildenthal (ed.): Memories of a journalist: Between the German Empire and the Second World War . Böhlau, Cologne 2005, ISBN 978-3-412-19605-9 , pp. 185 .
  3. Entry No. 345 from April 14, 1919 in the marriage register, Standesamt Berlin-Charlottenburg III, accessed via ancestry.com on July 6, 2019
  4. ^ Gerhard Ebert : Becoming an actor in Berlin: from Max Reinhardt's drama school to the Ernst Busch Academy of Dramatic Art . Berlin-Information, 1987, p. 87 .
  5. ^ Walter Fritz: Kino in Österreich, 1945-1983: Film between commerce and avant-garde. Österreichischer Bundesverlag, 1984 ISBN 9783215049927 , p. 24