Hermann Leopoldi


Hermann Leopoldi was an Austrian composer and cabaret star who survived Buchenwald.
Einzi Stolz, wife of composer Robert Stolz, remembered him thus:

Life

Hermann Leopoldi was born in Vienna and was taught the piano by his father, a musician called Leopold Leopoldi who also sought employment for him: Leopoldi's first jobs were as an accompanist and bar pianist. He married in 1911 and served in the First World War, establishing himself as a forces entertainer. His first major appearance was in the Viennese cabaret in 1916. By 1922 he and his brother were well enough known to open their own cabaret, Kabarett Leopoldi-Wiesenthal, which developed a reputation as a centre for such later celebrated performers as Hans Moser, Szöke Szakall, Max Hansen, Fritz Grünbaum, Karl Valentin, Raoul Aslan and Otto Tressler. After its closure in 1925 Leopoldi toured, appearing in Berlin, Paris, Budapest, Bukarest, Prague and Switzerland as well as Vienna.
Leopoldi wrote the music for some of the most famous ‘’Wienerlieder’’, setting words by Peter Herz and Fritz Löhner-Beda among others. Following the arrival of the Nazis in Austria on 11 March 1938 – the so-called Anschluss – Leopoldi and his wife attempted to flee from Vienna by train but the border to Czechoslovakia had already been closed. On 26 April 1938 Leopoldi, by now already set to travel to appear in the United States, was arrested and transported first to Dachau and then Buchenwald.
In Buchenwald he performed his own songs for other prisoners, and most famously, in response to a contest initiated by the camp commander, composed the Buchenwaldlied to words by Löhner-Beda. Entered by a non-Jewish Kapo, the song was selected as the winner, although the promised prize was never distributed. Despite its optimistic mood and text, the song was popular with the camp personnel as well as with the prisoners. Years later Leopoldi remembered that the song
Meanwhile his wife had managed to travel to the US, from where she “bought” Leopoldi’s freedom with a large bribe. He travelled to New York City where he was greeted by reporters: photographs of him kissing American soil on arrival went around the world. Rare among cabaret artist émigrés, Leopoldi quickly established a successful career in New York, performing both German and English language versions of his ‘Wiener Lieder’, and even running a musical café called Viennese Lantern. This café, popular with Americans but especially catering to the community of artists who had fled the Nazi regime, was according to Einzi Stolz ‘’an oasis of authentic Vienna in the middle of New York, where for a few hours you could dream of a Vienna that was so far away and unattainable, yet lived on in your heart”.
Leopoldi and his new partner Helly Möslein returned to Vienna in 1947, where he resumed the career cut short in 1938, performing and touring all over post-war Germany, Austria and Switzerland. In a powerful sign of the transformative impact he had on the reconstruction of Austria, in 1958 Leopoldi was awarded the Golden Medal of Decoration of Honour for Services to the Republic of Austria. He died in Vienna of a heart attack in June 1959, at the age of 71.
In June 1984 a park was named in his honour in Meidling, a Viennese district.

Works

He wrote hundreds of songs including