Leontine sagan biography
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Leontine Sagan
Austrian-Hungarian theatre director and actress (1889–1974)
Leontine Sagan (born Leontine Schlesinger; 13 February 1889 – 20 May 1974) was a theatre director and actress of Jewish descent, whose life and career took her from the Austro-Hungarian Empire to South Africa, Britain and the United States.[1] She is, however, best known for directing a film, Mädchen in Uniform (1931), which has been celebrated for its scathing indictment of Prussian military-style schooling, as well as its sensitive portrayal of same-sex intimacy between a teacher and a student at a girls' school, in the waning years of Germany's Weimar Republic,[2][3]
Sagan was born in Budapest but grew up in South Africa.[4] After returning to Vienna to attend Max Reinhardt's Theatre School in Vienna, she acted on Austrian provincial stages, and moved on to major roles in Dresden, Frankfurt and Berlin, where she also directed theatre, first in German
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Sagan, Leontine (1889–1974)
Jewish actress and spelfilm director who achieved critical acclaim before being forced to flee Nazi Germany for South Africa in 1933 and went on to co-found the National Theatre in Johannesburg. Name variations: Leontine Fleischer; Leontine Sagan-Fleischer; Leontine Fleischer-Sagan; Leontine Schlesinger. Pronunciation: Leon-teen-AH ZAH-gahn. Born Leontine Schlesinger on February 13, 1889, in Budapest, Hungary;died in Pretoria, South Africa, of cerebral thrombosis on May 20, 1974; daughter of Josef Schlesinger and Emma (Fasal) Schlesinger; attended elementary school in Vienna, Austria, and elementary and secondary school in Johannesburg, South Africa; attended the Acting School of the German Theater (Reinhardt School) in Berlin for the two-year course (1910–12); married Dr. Victor Fleischer (an archivist, dramatist, and novelist); children: not known.
Awards:
Lion of San Marco at the Venice rulle Festival (1932) for Mädchen in Uniform (variously tr
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Leontine Sagan
Leontine Sagan (1889-1974) was an actress and director of theatre and film.
Biography
Born in Budapest on 13 February 1889, she was raised in South Africa and Austria, and trained in theatre with with Max Reinhardt ()[]. An illustrious ccareer in the stage and film industry followed, in Germany, England and South Africa. In her later years, Sagan married publisher and writer Dr. Victor Fleischer, and in May 1947 she returned to South Africa permanently with her husband. He passed away in 1950 and she died in 1974.
Her autobiography (Light and Shadows), edited by Loren Kruger, was published by University of the Witwatersrand Press in 1996.
Youth
Born as Leontine Schlesinger, she came to South Africa in 1899 with her family to join her father and was initially educated at the German School in Johannesburg. In August 1902 she travelled to Europe with her mother. They settled in Vienna with relatives, where Leontine was educated further. Two years later they re