- Born
- Died
- Birth nameFanny Kahane
- Fanny Carlsen was born on September 18, 1874 in Warsaw, Poland. She was a writer, known for The Beautiful Blue Danube (1926), The Gypsy Baron (1927) and Thérèse Raquin (1928). She died on December 18, 1944 in Paris, France.
- Carlsen screenplays served numerous genres, in addition to melodramas, costume films and historical dramas, above all adaptations of literary sources - from Leo Tolstoy to Henrik Ibsen and George Sand to Edgar Wallace.
- After her application for admission to the Reich Chamber of Literature was rejected on February 21, 1935, the writer emigrated to Paris.
- She quickly developed an interest in writing and, even before the outbreak of the First World War, began to publish novellas (e.g. Eva's Diary and A Letter), initially under the male pseudonym Frank Carlsen.
- It the literary environment Fanny Carlsen delivered her most important manuscripts in 1927/28: Zelnik's adaptation of Gerhart Hauptmann's Die Weber and Jacques Feyder's version of Émile Zola's Thérèse Raquin under the German title (Du sollst nicht ehebrechen!) " You shouldn't adulterate!". Almost at the same time, Carlsen delivered another Hauptmann adaptation, "Der Biberpelz", which was directed by Erich Schönfelder.
- With the rise of the sound film Fanny Carlsen only realised one more screenplay for the movie "Die Tänzerin von Sans Souci" (1932).
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