Hans Habe

Hans Habe

writer

Hans Habe was born on Feb 12, 1911 in Austria-Hungary. Hans Habe's big-screen debut came with The Cross of Lorraine directed by Tay Garnett in 1943.

Janos Bekessy was born in 1911 in Budapest as the son of two converted Hungarian Jews who moved to Vienna after World War I. His father Imre Bekessy was one of the most successful newspaper publishers in his day, and also one of the most controversial, since he was said to use his editorial powers for blackmailing people - this was one of the reasons why Janos Bekessy changed his name to Hans Habe. Habe finished school in Vienna and studied one semester in Heidelberg but after that became a journalist having major success after 20 years finding out that Hitler's real family name was 'Schicklgruber' and thus embarrassing the Nazis. Later he worked for a newspaper in Prague and started writing novels - a total of 25. When the Nazis came to Vienna in 1938 his novels were burnt in public and in 1939 Habe joint the French Foreign Legion in order to fight against Nazi Germany. Getting caught he hid his Jewish identity and escaped via Vichy-France and Spain to the United States. Being on Roosevelt's list of anti-Nazi authors he was given asylum and joined the US-army for D-Day as an anti-Nazi propaganda officer working with many Jewish, German authors like 'Stefan Heym' and 'Ernst Cramer'. After the fall of the Third Reich the Americans ordered Habe to found and organize democratic newspapers in Germany: At the top of his career he led 18 newspapers with a total of 8 million pieces being published (e.g. 'Neue Zeitung').

  • Birthday

    Feb 12, 1911
  • Place of Birth

    Budapest, Austria-Hungary

Movies & TV Shows

All
Movies