Fritz Löhner-Beda (24 June 1883 – 4 December 1942), born Bedřich Löwy, was an
Austrianlibrettist,
lyricist and
writer. Once nearly forgotten, many of his songs and tunes remain popular today. He was murdered in
Auschwitz III Monowitz concentration camp.
Life
Löhner-Beda was born Bedřich Löwy in
Wildenschwert,
Bohemia (present-day Ústí nad Orlicí,
Czech Republic) in 1883. In 1888, his family moved to
Vienna, and in 1896 changed their surname to the less
Jewish surname Löhner. Having passed his
Matura exams, he began the study of law at the
University of Vienna, where he became a member of the Jewish
Kadimah student association. After he had obtained his doctorate, he worked as a lawyer from 1908 onwards. A dedicated
football player, he was among the founders of the
Hakoah Vienna sports club in 1909.
In 1910, Löhner-Beda decided upon a career as an author. He wrote numerous light satires, sketches, poems, and lyrics but also contributed to several newspapers, often under the
pen name "Beda", a shortened version of his
Czech first name, Bedřich (Frederick). In 1913, he met
Franz Lehár, for whom he wrote the libretto of the 1916 operetta Der Sterngucker (The Stargazer). Two years later, in 1918, Löhner-Beda was called up for military service in
World War I, which he left as an officer and a convinced antimilitarist.
In the 1920s, Löhner-Beda became one of the most sought-after librettists and lyricists in Vienna. Together with Lehár as composer,
Ludwig Herzer [
de] as co-author, and
Richard Tauber as singer, Löhner-Beda produced the operettas Friederike (Frederica, 1928), Das Land des Lächelns (The Land of Smiles, 1929), and, with
Paul Knepler [
de] as co-author, Giuditta (1934). Together with his friend
Alfred Grünwald as co-author and
Paul Abraham as composer, Löhner-Beda produced Viktoria und ihr Husar (Victoria and Her Hussar, 1930), Die Blume von Hawaii (The Flower of Hawaii, 1931), and Ball im Savoy (Ball at the Savoy, 1932).
On 1 April 1938, almost immediately after the Anschluss (the annexation of Austria by
Nazi Germany, in mid-March 1938), Fritz Löhner-Beda was arrested and deported to the
Dachau concentration camp. On 23 September 1938 he was transferred to the
Buchenwald concentration camp. There, together with his fellow prisoner
Hermann Leopoldi at the end of 1938, he composed the famous anthem of the
concentration camp, Das Buchenwaldlied ("The Buchenwald Song"):
O Buchenwald, ich kann dich nicht vergessen, weil du mein Schicksal bist. Wer dich verließ, der kann es erst ermessen, wie wundervoll die Freiheit ist! O Buchenwald, wir jammern nicht und klagen, und was auch unser Schicksal sei, wir wollen trotzdem Ja zum Leben sagen, denn einmal kommt der Tag, dann sind wir frei!
O Buchenwald, I cannot forget you, because you are my fate. Only he who leaves you can appreciate how wonderful freedom is! O Buchenwald, we don’t cry and complain; and whatever our destiny may be, we nevertheless shall say "yes" to life: for once the day comes, we shall be free!
The line wir wollen trotzdem Ja zum Leben sagen was adopted by the Holocaust survivor
Viktor Frankl for the German title of his 1946 book Man's Search for Meaning.
Even though Löhner-Beda's name appeared in the Nazi Encyclopedia of Jews in Music in 1940, his songs and the Lehár operettas were still performed (but with no mention of their librettist). The circumstances surrounding Franz Lehár possibly attempting to intercede with the Nazis on Löhner-Beda's behalf are clouded. Supposedly, after
World War II, Lehár denied any cognizance of Löhner-Beda's concentration-camp imprisonment, but one source states that Lehár may have tried personally to secure Hitler's guarantee of Löhner-Beda's safety.[1]
Er und sein Diener, directed by
Steve Sekely (1931, German adaptation of a Hungarian screenplay)
Further reading
Günther Schwarberg: Dein ist mein ganzes Herz. Die Geschichte von Fritz Löhner-Beda, der die schönsten Lieder der Welt schrieb, und warum Hitler ihn ermorden ließ, Steidl, Göttingen, 2000 (German),
ISBN978-3-88243-715-7 (hardback)
ISBN978-3-88243-892-5 (paperback)
Barbara Denscher, Helmut Peschina: Kein Land des Lächelns. Fritz Löhner-Beda 1883–1942, Residenz, Salzburg, 2002 (German),
ISBN978-3-7017-1302-8
References
^Peter Herz: "Der Fall Franz Lehár. Eine authentische Darlegung von Peter Herz". In: Die Gemeinde 24 April 1968.