Biography
Johannes Mario Simmel (7 April 1924 – 1 January 2009), also known as J. M. Simmel, was an Austrian writer.
He was born in Vienna and grew up in Austria and England. He was trained as a chemical engineer and worked in research from 1943 to the end of World War II. After the end of the war, he worked as a translator for the American military government and published reviews and stories in the Vienna Welt am Abend. Starting in 1950, he worked as a reporter for the Munich illustrated Quick in Europe and America.
He wrote a number of screenplays and novels, which have sold tens of millions of copies. Many of his novels were successfully filmed in the 1960s and 1970s. He won numerous prizes, including the Award of Excellence of the Society of Writers of the UN. Important issues in his novels are a fervent pacifism as well as the relativity of good and bad. Several novels are said to have a true background, possibly autobiographic.
According to his Swiss lawyer, Simmel died on 1 January 2009 in Lucerne, at 84 years of age. This date was the 99th birthday of "Thomas Lieven", the main character of "It can't always be caviar."
Filmography
all 50
Movies 42
Writer 40
TV Shows 8
self 7
Spolužiak (1978)
Marili (1959)
Stefanie (1958)
Dunja (1955)
Hotel Adlon (1955)
The Witch (1954)
Information
Known ForWriting
GenderMale
Birthday1924-04-07
Deathday2009-01-01 (84 years old)
Birth PlaceVienna, Austria
FatherWalter Simmel
CitizenshipsAustria
AwardsGold Decoration for Services to the City of Vienna, Officer's Cross of the Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany, Hermann Kesten Prize, Great Silver Medal of Honour for Services to the Republic of Austria
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