Christopher Isherwood (1904-1986)
Christopher Ishewood experienced the free and homosexual life of Berlin in the late 1920s. His books about the Berlin period becamHe experienced and enjoyed the free and homosexual life of Berlin in the late 1920s. His books about the Berlin period became world-famous as the musical and film “Cabaret” starring Liza Minelli. … more in the audio or in the text below
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Image gallery Christopher Isherwood
Related links & sources:
- Book “The Berlin Stories” by Christopher Isherwood including the 2 novels “Mr. Norris changes trains” and “Goodbye to Berlin”, The Berlin Stories – Isherwood, Christopher – Dussmann – Das Kulturkaufhaus
- Buch “Christopher and His Kind” von Christopher Isherwood, 1974, Los Angeles,
Christopher and His Kind – Isherwood, Christopher – Dussmann – Das Kulturkaufhaus - Movie “Christopher And His Kind”, BBC television film, 2011
https://youtu.be/9hjidIaTYiE?si=dEPOEMyQji2kX9Oy - Podcast-Episode “MGH & Studs Terkel: Christopher Isherwood” with an Interview with Isherwood from February 1977 from the dem Podcast „Making Gay History”
https://podcasts.apple.com/de/podcast/mgh-studs-terkel-christopher-isherwood/id1162447122?i=1000493235537
Christopher Isherwood came “because of the boys” from repressive England to the then promisingly sophisticated Berlin in 1929. “Berlin means boys. A dream for gays” – this is what the young Wystan Hugh Auden called out to his friend Christopher Isherwood at the end of the 1920s. Both are young, upper-class British writers and are able to live in Berlin without having to earn money as writers. Isherwood is financed by his gay uncle. Soon afterwards, the two move to Berlin. Together with friends, they are a group of young gay Englishmen in search of sexual freedom. They are fascinated by the city’s wild queer nightlife. It is very different from repressive London, so they throw themselves into the city’s homosexual clubs and bars.
Isherwood later immortalized his time in Berlin in the books “”Goodbye to Berlin“ and ‘Mr. Norris changing trains”, which later became the Broadway musical and the film Cabaret, starring Liza Minelli and decorated with 8 Oscars. The special thing about these books is how Isherwood describes the growing influence of the Nazis in the daily lives of Berliners. The fact that Isherwood writes from the perspective of a gay character can only be read between the lines.
Christopher Isherwood initially lived as a sub-tenant of Magnus Hirschfeld’s sister at the Institute for Sexual Science. He was therefore well known to Magnus Hirschfeld and the others at the institute. In 1930, he moved into the house at Nollendorfstraße 17. His roommate was Jean Ross, a cabaret singer who became the inspiration for the character of Sally Bowles and was played by Liza Minnelli in the musical “Cabaret”.
Isherwood’s favorite bar is the Cosy Corner. It was located at Zossener Straße 7, south of Hallesches Tor. A dingy hustler bar where “half a dozen boys were always hanging around drinking beer”. Between 1929 and 1933, Isherwood was almost obsessed with this pub and his visits to it. He raved about it in London and Paris, wrote about the Cosy Corner and made it the first port of call for his gay friends visiting Berlin, thus contributing to Berlin’s fame as the first world metropolis of gays and lesbians.
In March 1932, he met his partner, 17-year-old Heinz Neddermeyer. He left Berlin with him in 1933 after the Nazis seized power and traveled through many European countries, always with the intention of obtaining a visa for Heinz and preventing him from being drafted into the army. They live in Greece, London, Morocco, the Canary Islands, Portugal, Brussels, Amsterdam and Copenhagen. Eventually they have to give up on getting a visa and Heinz returns to Germany, is drafted, but survives the war. Isherwood migrates to California in 1939.
Wystan Hugh Auden married Erika Mann, Thomas Mann’s daughter, in 1935 to help her obtain an English passport and leave the country. Auden, Isherwood and the entire Mann family were good friends.
He wrote about his Berlin years in 1976 in the book “Christopher and His Kind”, an autobiographical account of his Berlin years in which, unlike in the previous books, he explicitly deals with his gay life. His book “A Single Man”, which was made into a Hollywood film in 2010 by Tom Ford with Colin Firth and Julian Moore in the leading roles, also became famous.
Isherwood died in 1986 at the age of 82 in California as one of the best-known English-language authors of his time.
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