MOMO
Seite 1 Seite 2 Seite 3 Ende-Bio
The Story Time Michael
Ende
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Michael Ende |
Photo
taken by Jerry Bauer and is located on the inside back cover of
the Momo version shown below.
News:
DIED. MICHAEL ENDE, 65, German novelist who enchanted millions of children around the world with such beguiling fantasies as The Neverending Story; of stomach cancer; in Stuttgart. The son of a surrealist painter, Ende began writing cabaret scripts in the 1950s. He wrote his first children's tales in the early 1960s--the award-winning Jim Button and Luke the Engine Driver and Jim Button and the Wild 13, about a black child's discovery that he is really a prince. His most successful book was The Neverending Story, published in 1979; it described a lonely, chubby youngster who finds inner direction in his struggle to save a magical land from an evil called Nothing. The novel was translated into more than 30 languages, became an international best seller and spawned a 1984 hit movie and two sequels.
Source: TIME Magazine
Biography...
Born 1929 in Germany as son of a surrealist painter who was banned by the Nazis in 1936. Went to Waldorf-school and deserted when he was called to the army at age of 16 in 1945. After the war he became an actor, critic and finally writer. His first big success was the children's book "Jim Knopf und Lukas der Lokomotivfuehrer" (Jim Knopf and Lukas the Engine-driver). Although he got much praise and many awards he remained modest, almost shy, preferring his fantasy world but still keeping an eye on the real world in his stories.
Born: 12
November 1929, Garmisch-Partenkirchen, Germany
Died: 29 August 1995, Stuttgart, Germany,
Stomach Cancer
Biography written by: Tom Zoerner (Tom.Zoerner@informatik.uni-erlangen.de)
The following is quoted from the beginning of the Penguin Books version of the novel:
Michael Ende was born in Garmisch-Partenkirchen, Germany, in 1929. After attending drama school from 1948 to 1950, he worked variously as an actor, a writer of sketches and plays, a director of the Volkstheater in Munich, and a film critic for the Bavarian broadcasting company. His first novel for children, Jim Knopf and Lukas the Engine Driver, was published in Germany in 1960 to great popular and critical acclaim, and both radio and television series based on the Jim Knopf books were soon produced. In 1973 he published another award-winning children's novel, Momo. When The Neverending Story was first published in Germany, in 1979, it immediately became the number-one bestseller and remained in that position for three years. It has since been published in many different languages all over the world, including Japanese, and has enchanted readers in each country in which it has appeared.
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