Sara Adler (redirect from Sara Heine)
married Maurice Heine (born Haimovitz), the leader of a provincial Yiddish theater troupe. After the ban on Yiddish theater in Imperial Russia, Maurice and...
10 KB (1,144 words) - 19:20, 27 August 2024
committee that included André Breton, Marcel Duchamp, Paul Eluard, Maurice Heine, and Pierre Mabille [fr], giving it a heavy surrealist bias early on...
42 KB (4,687 words) - 21:50, 2 October 2024
first published versions of the novel, edited by Iwan Bloch (1904) and Maurice Heine (3 volumes, 1931-35), were limited editions intended as a compendium...
32 KB (4,031 words) - 10:46, 8 October 2024
during the nineteenth century. On 6 November 1920, it was bought by Maurice Heine at an auction at the Hôtel Drouot, Paris, and he oversaw its publication...
11 KB (1,451 words) - 09:33, 3 September 2024
committee that included André Breton, Marcel Duchamp, Paul Eluard, Maurice Heine, and Pierre Mabille, giving it a heavy surrealist prejudice from the...
5 KB (553 words) - 14:01, 27 September 2023
discovered that neither Mogulesko and Finkel at the Romanian Opera House nor Maurice Heine at the Oriental Theater had any use for them. They headed on to Chicago...
45 KB (6,435 words) - 19:19, 27 August 2024
1926 Paul Éluard wrote of Sade as a "fantastique" and "revolutionary". Maurice Heine pieced together Sade's manuscripts from libraries and museums in Europe...
13 KB (1,785 words) - 19:19, 5 July 2024
editorial committee with André Breton, Marcel Duchamp, Paul Eluard, Maurice Heine, and Pierre Mabille. Skira promoted the magazine as a "primary source...
39 KB (5,220 words) - 14:05, 23 July 2024
Abraham Furtado Cécile Charlotte Furtado-Heine (1821-1896), philanthropist and wife of Frankfurt banker Charles Heine Benoît Fould (1792–1858), banker and...
6 KB (570 words) - 20:34, 24 November 2023
generations. Lély took over the task of publishing Sade's works from Maurice Heine. The complete edition (1962–64) also includes previously unpublished...
2 KB (204 words) - 22:52, 29 May 2024