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RESEARCHING
GERMAN EXILES
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European
Film Fund
The European Film
Fund (EFF) was organized in Hollywood before the war broke out by Charlotte
Dieterle, Liesl Frank, Ernst Lubitsch,
and film agent Paul Kohner. The EFF supported a large number of German
exiled writers living in dire conditions by collecting money to help
fund positions in the film industry. At the suggestion of Kohner, the
European Film Fund began a special operation in October 1939 to save
German writers stranded in France. Kohner arranged for Hollywood film
studios (Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer and Warner Brothers, in particular) to
hire exiles as screenwriters. When the emigres applied to enter the
United States, they could verify their employment in this country by
showing the studio contract.
The one-year contracts
provided a weekly salary of 100 dollars. Heinrich Mann, Leonhard Frank,
Alfred Döblin, Wilhelm Speyer and Hans G. Lustig were included
among those who were helped by these emergency contracts. In this way
Warner Brothers helped four and MGM six refugees. When the contracts
expired after a year, the film studios generally did not renew them.
Consequently only Lustig, who had previous film experience in Europe,
was given a permanent contract with MGM.
References
Thomas Mann. Tagebücher
1940-1943. Edited by Peter de Mendelssohn. Frankfurt: Fischer,
1982.
For
more information contact the Feuchtwanger
Librarian.