Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q79102> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 55 of
55
with 100 triples per page.
- Q79102 subject Q6615329.
- Q79102 subject Q6646663.
- Q79102 subject Q6796046.
- Q79102 subject Q7180385.
- Q79102 subject Q7218773.
- Q79102 subject Q7722308.
- Q79102 subject Q7773467.
- Q79102 subject Q8247087.
- Q79102 subject Q8279296.
- Q79102 subject Q8279439.
- Q79102 subject Q8279496.
- Q79102 subject Q8566237.
- Q79102 subject Q8654901.
- Q79102 subject Q8701993.
- Q79102 subject Q8757282.
- Q79102 abstract "Fritzi Massary (31 March 1882, in Vienna, Austria – 30 January 1969, in Los Angeles, California) was an Austrian-American actress and soprano singer.Born as Friederike Massaryk, she was one of the leading operetta singers in Berlin and Vienna. She was closely associated with Oscar Straus, creating roles in six of his operettas, including Der letzte Walzer in 1920.Despite her 1903 conversion to Protestantism, Massary fled Germany in late 1932 because of her Jewish heritage. She traveled through Austria and Switzerland to London, where she was befriended by Sir Noël Coward and starred in his Operette in 1938. Shortly thereafter, in February 1939, she moved to Beverly Hills, California, where she lived until her death in 1969. Beginning in 1952, she regularly spent summers in Germany.Massary was married twice, first to an eye doctor Bernhard Pollack. With Karl-Kuno Rollo Graf von Coudenhove (1887–1940), she had her only child, Elisabeth Maria Karl (called Liesl) (1903–1979). Liesl later married the author Bruno Frank. Though Coudenhove was Liesl's father, Massary was never married to him. Massary's second marriage, in 1917, was to the Austrian actor Max Pallenberg (1877–1934), who died in a plane crash in Karlsbad in 1934.".
- Q79102 imdbId "0557188".
- Q79102 thumbnail Bundesarchiv_Bild_183-R93054,_Fritzi_Massary.jpg?width=300.
- Q79102 wikiPageWikiLink Q1199410.
- Q79102 wikiPageWikiLink Q127856.
- Q79102 wikiPageWikiLink Q15134928.
- Q79102 wikiPageWikiLink Q170384.
- Q79102 wikiPageWikiLink Q1741.
- Q79102 wikiPageWikiLink Q206667.
- Q79102 wikiPageWikiLink Q298388.
- Q79102 wikiPageWikiLink Q30903.
- Q79102 wikiPageWikiLink Q35954.
- Q79102 wikiPageWikiLink Q40.
- Q79102 wikiPageWikiLink Q4894216.
- Q79102 wikiPageWikiLink Q62133.
- Q79102 wikiPageWikiLink Q64.
- Q79102 wikiPageWikiLink Q65.
- Q79102 wikiPageWikiLink Q6615329.
- Q79102 wikiPageWikiLink Q6646663.
- Q79102 wikiPageWikiLink Q6796046.
- Q79102 wikiPageWikiLink Q7180385.
- Q79102 wikiPageWikiLink Q7218773.
- Q79102 wikiPageWikiLink Q7722308.
- Q79102 wikiPageWikiLink Q7773467.
- Q79102 wikiPageWikiLink Q8247087.
- Q79102 wikiPageWikiLink Q8279296.
- Q79102 wikiPageWikiLink Q8279439.
- Q79102 wikiPageWikiLink Q8279496.
- Q79102 wikiPageWikiLink Q84.
- Q79102 wikiPageWikiLink Q8566237.
- Q79102 wikiPageWikiLink Q85865.
- Q79102 wikiPageWikiLink Q8654901.
- Q79102 wikiPageWikiLink Q8701993.
- Q79102 wikiPageWikiLink Q8757282.
- Q79102 wikiPageWikiLink Q99.
- Q79102 id "557188".
- Q79102 type Thing.
- Q79102 comment "Fritzi Massary (31 March 1882, in Vienna, Austria – 30 January 1969, in Los Angeles, California) was an Austrian-American actress and soprano singer.Born as Friederike Massaryk, she was one of the leading operetta singers in Berlin and Vienna. She was closely associated with Oscar Straus, creating roles in six of his operettas, including Der letzte Walzer in 1920.Despite her 1903 conversion to Protestantism, Massary fled Germany in late 1932 because of her Jewish heritage.".
- Q79102 label "Fritzi Massary".
- Q79102 depiction Bundesarchiv_Bild_183-R93054,_Fritzi_Massary.jpg.