Misplaced Pages

Oskar Jerschke

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
German playwright and collaborator of Arno Holz

Oskar Jerschke (July 17, 1861 – August 3, 1928) was a German playwright and collaborator of Arno Holz.

Jerschke was born in Lähn, the son of a military engineer and raised in the rectory of his Uncle until his father settled in Strassburg. He studied law in Strasbourg and Berlin, settling in Strasbourg as an attorney.

After the First World War, when Alsace and Strassburg came under French control, he was expelled to Berlin. There he published the tragicomedy Traumulus (The Dreamer) with his childhood friend Arno Holz in 1905. The work was a great success and a film version was made in 1936 directed by Carl Froelich and starring Emil Jannings.

Jerschke died in Berlin, aged 67.

Selected works

  • Deutsche Weisen (1884) with Arno Holz
  • Traumulus (1905) with Arno Holz
  • Gaudeamus! A festival play for the 350th jubilee of the University of Jena (1908), with Arno Holz
  • Die Perle der Antillen, Comedy (1909) with Arno Holz
  • Büxl, Comedy (1911) with Arno Holz
  • Mein deutsches Vaterland (1916)

External links


Stub icon

This article about a German dramatist or playwright is a stub. You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it.

  1. Wilhelm Kosch (2011). Deutsche Theater-Lexikon. Vol. 2. p. 908. ISBN 9783110954333.
Categories: