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not only members of Albert Hirsch’s company but were also engaged by the S.
Fischer Society for a temporary stint in June 1903.92 Armin Berg (1883–1956)
also worked for Fischer, as well as the Budapest Orpheum Society, th
e Budapest
Variété (a spin-off of the Budapest Orpheum Society), and other Jewish groups.93
Th
e Jewish Volkssänger and the groups they worked for were all closely linked
with one another and thus created an environment that did not exclude non-Jews
but could nonetheless be viewed at least to some extent as independent. We see
this interconnectedness also in celebrations that were sometimes held to honor
one of these actors. Most of the actors who took part in such events were Jewish
and had previously performed in various Jewish groups alongside their colleague
being celebrated. Non-Jews tended to be absent from such events, just as Jews
often did not attend other festivities.94
Nevertheless, it would be incorrect to assume that there was a sharp contrast
between Jews and non-Jews in the Viennese Volkssänger scene, as there was a fair
amount of overlap between Jewish and non-Jewish groups. Th
e composition of
these groups frequently shifted; non-Jewish groups might have a Jewish director
or Jewish members from one day to the next. Th
e Gartenbau Restaurant, with its
vaudeville performances, provides us an example of this variability. At the begin-
ning of 1901, Käthe and Josef Armin both performed there. Martin Schenk, who
was not Jewish but had previously performed with the Budapest Orpheum Soci-
ety, was also engaged there.95 Josef Müller, who was famous for his jargon songs,
earned his living for a time at the Gartenbau.96 Th
is venue exemplifi es the close
cooperation that existed between Jews and non-Jews in Viennese popular culture.
We see a similar amalgamation between Jewish and non-Jewish groups in the
performances that they off ered the public. Troupes that had few if any Jewish
actors in their ranks frequently staged so-called Jewish plays. Th
ese ensembles
sometimes replaced their Alpine popular folk pieces with Jewish burlesques or
simply added them to their lineup. In addition to other groups, the Mannsfeld
Singspiel Group, located at the Wi edener Variété in the fourth district, did just
this. In May 1904, the Blümel Co medy Ensemble was still the big attraction at
the Wiedener Variété.97 At the beginning of October, the group performed Josef
Armin’s Illustrated Pages.98 Armin’s play is a Jewish farce that the S. Fischer Society
and the Folies Caprice also staged.99 Two years prior, the Wiedener Variété had
performed a play that it had borrowed from the Budapest Orpheum Society.100 In
mid-October 1904, Louis Taufstein’s A Fine Society was performed.101 Taufstein’s
pieces were also incorporated into the repertoire of the aforementioned Garten-
bau Restaurant, which frequently off ered farces and singspiel performances with
Jewish themes. In this context, I would be remiss if I did not mention the heavily
advertised performance of Adolf Wollner, wh
o sang the hit song “Worüm war
der klane Kohn nix zu fi
nden?” (“Why was Little Kohn nowhere to be found?”),
written by Eugen Joessel.102 But none of these details that I have discussed here
mean that the Mannsfeld Singspiel, the Gartenbau Restaurant, or other outfi
ts
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Entangled Entertainers
Jews and Popular Culture in Fin-de-Siècle Vienna
- Titel
- Entangled Entertainers
- Untertitel
- Jews and Popular Culture in Fin-de-Siècle Vienna
- Autor
- Klaus Hödl
- Verlag
- Berghahn Books
- Datum
- 2019
- Sprache
- englisch
- Lizenz
- CC BY 4.0
- ISBN
- 978-1-78920-031-7
- Abmessungen
- 14.86 x 23.2 cm
- Seiten
- 196
- Kategorien
- Geschichte Vor 1918
- International
Inhaltsverzeichnis
- Introduction 1
- 1. Jews in Viennese Popular Culture around 1900 as Research Topic 13
- 2. Jewish Volkssänger and Musical Performers in Vienna around 1900 44
- 3. Jewishness and the Viennese Volkssänger 78
- 4. Jewish Spaces of Retreat at the Turn of the Twentieth Century 121
- 5. From Difference to Similarity 148
- Conclusion 163
- Bibliography 166
- Index 179