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Felix Salten



         


An Austrian writer, Felix Salten (September 6, 1869 - October 8, 1945) was born Siegmund Salzmann in Budapest, Hungary. When he was three weeks old, his family moved to Vienna, Austria. Many Jews were immigrating into the city in the late 1800's because Vienna had finally granted full citizenship to Jews in 1867.

His family was poor and he didn't have much formal education. Because of his lack of schooling, he began his career working menial jobs. Siegmund was dissatisfied. He whiled away his hours at the insurance office by writing, and submitted his poems and stories to the newspapers. At first, he didn't get much recognition. But in 1902, Émile Zola died, and the papers were highly impressed by Salzmann's moving obituary. He became a member of the Young Vienna movement and received work first as an editor, then as a theatre critic. In 1910, he began writing novels.

His most famous work by far is Bambi, though most people don't know that he wrote it, or even that it was a novel before it became a film. He was inspired to write the book after a trip to the Alps, in 1923. It was published three years later. In 1933, he sold the rights, and he didn't see a cent from the movie.

Life in Austria became perilous for a prominent Jew in the 1930's. Hitler had Bambi banned in 1936. Two years later, he moved to Zurich, Switzerland.

He had a wife, Ottilie Metz, and two children: Paul and Anna-Katherina. His story "The Hound of Florence" inspired another Disney film: The Shaggy Dog.

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