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Fred Raymond
Fred Raymond
from Wikipedia
Fred Raymond (1953)

Fred Raymond aka Raimund Friedrich Vesely (20 April 1900 – 10 January 1954) was an Austrian composer.

Raymond, born in Vienna, was the third child (after two daughters) of Vinzenz Vesely, an employee of the Austrian state railway system, and his wife Henriette, née Dluhos. Both parents were of Czech descent. They intended their son to study mining after high school, and pursure a career in the civil service. After the premature death of both his parents, Raymond studied at a commercial academy and trained as a banker.

Raymond composed operetta music as well as copious pieces for films and Schlager, which were very successful in the 1920s and 1930s and were commonly heard being sung and whistled in the streets. He became world-famous with his 1925 composition "Ich hab mein Herz in Heidelberg verloren" ("I Lost My Heart in Heidelberg"), and his pieces were considered to be very much in the typical style of the 1920s, especially "Ich hab' das Fräulein Helen baden seh'n" ("I Saw Miss Helen Bathing") or "Ich reiß' mir eine Wimper aus" ("I Lost An Eyelash").

Due to a weak heart, he spent his military service with a propaganda company which served the Belgrade military transmitter. After the war, he took a short break from the Salzburg Radio Orchestra to go to Hamburg, where he finished his last two operettas, Geliebte Manuela (Beloved Manuela) and Flieder aus Wien (Lilacs from Vienna).

In 1951, he moved to a new home in Überlingen, Baden-Württemberg, Germany, where he spent three years with his young wife Eva-Maria before dying of a heart failure shortly before the birth of their son, Thomas. His marble grave is located in Überlingen, on the shore of Lake Constance, and is decorated with a lyre. To commemorate the eightieth year of his birth, a street was named after him in the Donaustadt district of Vienna.

Operettas

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  • Lauf ins Glück (Run into Happiness) (1934)
  • Ball der Nationen (Ball of the Nations) (1935)
  • Fahrt ins Abenteuer (A Trip into Adventure) (1935)
  • Auf großer Fahrt (On a Great Voyage) (1936)
  • Marielu (1936)
  • Maske in Blau (Blue Mask), book by Heinz Hentschke, lyrics by Günther Schwenn (1937)
  • Saison in Salzburg (Salzburger Nockerln) (Season in Salzburg – Salzburg dumplings) (1938)
  • Die Perle von Tokaj (The Tokay Pearls) (1941)
  • Konfetti (Confetti) (1948)
  • Flieder aus Wien (Lilacs from Vienna) (1949)
  • Geliebte Manuela (Beloved Manuela) (1951)

Films Based on Raymond's Works

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With year and director:[1]

Notes

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Fred Raymond is an Austrian composer known for his popular operettas and light music that achieved widespread success in German-speaking countries during the 1930s and 1940s. His most enduring work, Maske in Blau, remains a staple in the operetta repertoire, with its 1951 film adaptation preserving notable performances. Other prominent operettas include Saison in Salzburg and Hochzeitsnacht im Paradies, which contributed to his reputation as one of the era's leading figures in the genre. Born Raimund Friedrich Vesely in Vienna on 20 April 1900, Raymond began his career composing Schlager songs and film scores before focusing on operetta, establishing himself through melodic and accessible works that appealed to broad audiences. His compositions were particularly prominent in Germany between 1933 and 1945, a period when he ranked among the most successful operetta creators. He later lived in Germany and continued writing until his death in Überlingen on 10 January 1954. Raymond's music continues to be performed and recorded, reflecting his lasting influence on light opera traditions.

Early life

Family and childhood

Raimund Friedrich Vesely, who later became known as Fred Raymond, was born on April 20, 1900, in Vienna, Austria-Hungary. He was the third child (after two older sisters) of Vinzenz Vesely, an employee of the Austrian state railway system, and his wife Henriette, née Dluhos, both of Czech descent. His parents intended him to study mining after high school and pursue a career in the civil service. However, following the premature death of both parents, Vesely was left orphaned as a teenager. This loss prompted him to shift away from the planned mining studies toward banking and music.

Education and entry into music

After the premature death of both his parents, Vesely abandoned his plans to become a miner and instead studied at a commercial academy and trained as a banker. His first performed work was the three-act operetta Madame Inkognito, written for the Viennese club “Thespis,” where he first adopted the stage name Fred Raymond. He then collaborated with Fritz Grünbaum on an early revue for the Kabarett “Die Hölle,” which premiered in 1924. This contact with Grünbaum led to his early hit songs.

Career

Early success and 1920s hits

Fred Raymond transitioned to full-time composing after leaving his banking career, enabling him to focus on creating popular songs and relocate first to Frankfurt am Main and then to Berlin, where he settled in 1928. His major breakthrough arrived with the sentimental hit "Ich hab mein Herz in Heidelberg verloren" in 1925, with lyrics by Ernst Neubach and Fritz Löhner-Beda. The song quickly became enormously popular and was expanded into a Singspiel of the same name in 1927. He produced several other notable hits during the decade, including the nonsense song "Ich hab das Fräulein Helen baden sehn" in 1926 with lyrics by Fritz Grünbaum. In 1928 came "Ich reiß mir eine Wimper aus" with lyrics by Charles Amberg, followed by "In einer kleinen Konditorei" in 1929 with lyrics by Ernst Neubach. These songs established ties to early cinema, as seen in 1926 and 1927 films connected to the Heidelberg song and a 1930 film adaptation involving "In einer kleinen Konditorei", foreshadowing his later work in stage-to-screen adaptations.

Operettas and 1930s–1940s works

In the 1930s, Fred Raymond shifted his creative focus to operettas, establishing himself as one of the most successful composers in this genre in German-speaking countries during the period. This phase began with Lauf ins Glück (1934), followed by Ball der Nationen (1935), Fahrt ins Abenteuer (1935), Auf großer Fahrt (1936), Marielu (1936), and the enduringly popular Maske in Blau (1937), whose melodic appeal has kept it in the repertoire for decades. He continued with Saison in Salzburg (1938), a work that highlighted his gift for light, tuneful entertainment. The early 1940s brought Die Perle von Tokay (1941) and Hochzeitsnacht im Paradies (1942), but the war years also produced one of his most widely known contributions, the 1942 song "Es geht alles vorüber, es geht alles vorbei," with lyrics by Kurt Feltz and Max Wallner, memorably recorded and performed by Lale Andersen and often interpreted as a poignant wartime sentiment despite its official context. Due to a weak heart, Raymond performed military service in a propaganda company at the Belgrade transmitter rather than frontline duty. In the later 1940s, he premiered Konfetti (1948) and Flieder aus Wien (1949), maintaining his productivity in the operetta form as the postwar period began. Many of his operettas from this era were subsequently adapted for film.

Post-war compositions

After World War II, Fred Raymond resumed his career in Austria, working for the radio in Salzburg and Vienna as part of post-war broadcasting reconstruction. In 1948, he relocated to Hamburg, where he focused on new stage works and saw several premieres at prominent venues. Notable among these was the operetta Konfetti, which premiered at the Flora-Theater on February 20, 1948, followed by Romanze im Schloß at the Deutsches Schauspielhaus in 1949. His final major composition was the operetta Geliebte Manuela, with a libretto by Just Scheu and Ernst Nebhut and lyrics also by Walter Rothenburg, which premiered at the Nationaltheater Mannheim on July 12, 1951. Later that year, Raymond settled in Überlingen on Lake Constance with his wife Eva-Maria, where he spent his remaining years.

Film and media work

Direct film compositions

Fred Raymond composed original music for several films throughout his career, particularly during the early sound film era and in his later years. He provided the score for the short film Variete Nummer 7 (1933) and the Italian production Una notte con te (1932). In addition to composing, he contributed songs to the British film There Goes the Bride (1932) and served as lyricist for Ich bleib bei Dir (1931). During the 1940s, Raymond received a writer credit for the libretto of the film …und die Musik spielt dazu (1943), which drew from his operetta Saison in Salzburg. In the 1950s, he composed the music for Staatsanwältin Corda (1953), also known as Prosecutor Corda. His final film credit was for the music in Ball der Nationen (1954), released posthumously following his death earlier that year. These direct composition credits highlight Raymond's occasional work in film beyond the adaptations of his stage operettas.

Stage-to-screen adaptations

Several of Fred Raymond's operettas and popular songs were adapted into feature films, primarily in German-speaking countries during the 1940s and 1950s, capitalizing on the enduring appeal of his melodic works. These adaptations often preserved the light-hearted, romantic character of the original stage productions while incorporating contemporary stars of German and Austrian cinema. The operetta Maske in Blau, which premiered on stage in 1937, was adapted into a film in 1953 directed by Georg Jacoby and starring Marianne Hold and Johannes Heesters. It was made in color. Similarly, Saison in Salzburg, first staged in 1932, received a film adaptation in 1952 directed by Ernst Marischka and starring Johanna Matz and Hans Holt, followed by a 1961 remake directed by Franz Josef Gottlieb featuring Vivi Bach and Peter Kraus. His famous song "Ich hab mein Herz in Heidelberg verloren" (I Lost My Heart in Heidelberg), composed in 1925, served as the basis for the 1952 film Ich hab mein Herz in Heidelberg verloren directed by Karl Hartl and starring Winnie Markus and Lutz Moik. His operetta Hochzeitsnacht im Paradies was adapted into a film in 1950 directed by Géza von Bolváry and starring Hans Holt. Earlier in his career, some of Raymond's songs appeared in films, including uses of "In einer kleinen Konditorei" in productions around 1930 and Heidelberg-themed films incorporating his early songs between 1926 and 1927. After Raymond's death in 1954, his compositions continued to appear in media, notably as soundtrack elements in the German television series Marilu (1994–1995) and various international films and television specials.

Personal life and death

Marriage and family

Fred Raymond married Eva-Maria, described as his young wife, with whom he shared his final years in Überlingen am Bodensee beginning in 1951. The couple's life together in this lakeside town marked the composer's late personal settlement after earlier moves to Hamburg and other locations. Eva-Maria Raymond outlived her husband by more than six decades, surviving until 2016. The marriage produced Fred Raymond's only child, son Thomas Raymond, who was born posthumously shortly after the composer's sudden death from heart failure on 10 January 1954. Thomas Raymond never knew his father personally due to this timing. In 2015, Thomas Raymond donated his father's complete artistic estate, including manuscripts, correspondence, and related materials, to the Paris-Lodron-Universität Salzburg, where it is preserved and accessible for scholarly study. This donation has ensured the long-term conservation of Raymond's legacy in a dedicated archival collection.

Death

Fred Raymond died unexpectedly on 10 January 1954 in his home in Überlingen, Baden-Württemberg, Germany, at the age of 53. The cause was heart failure, described in accounts as a sudden Herzschlag (cardiac arrest) while he was resting peacefully in bed following a strenuous journey, despite his known history of a weak heart. This occurred in the midst of work on a new stage piece and shortly before the birth of his only son, Thomas, whom he never saw. He was buried in the Überlingen cemetery, far from his native Vienna, where his widow Eva-Maria chose to keep the grave rather than accept an honorary burial offer from the Austrian capital. The gravesite features a headstone decorated with a lyre, symbolizing his musical legacy.

Legacy

Honors and influence

Fred Raymond's contributions to light entertainment music and operetta earned him a lasting place in German-speaking popular culture, where many of his compositions achieved the status of evergreens that continue to be performed and recorded. Described as one of the most successful and popular composers of Unterhaltungsmusik in the German-speaking region during the 1920s to 1950s, his international breakthrough came with "Ich hab mein Herz in Heidelberg verloren" (1925), while other Schlager such as "In einer kleinen Konditorei" and his operettas including Maske in Blau and Saison in Salzburg have maintained enduring appeal. Posthumous honors reflect this ongoing legacy. In 2015, his son Thomas Raymond donated the composer's artistic estate to the Paris-Lodron-Universität Salzburg, where it is archived and accessible for musicological research, underscoring his significance in the history of Austrian and German light music. In Vienna, the Fred-Raymond-Gasse in the Donaustadt district was named in his honor, originally designated Raymondgasse in 1984 and renamed in 1986. Additionally, a commemorative plaque in Heidelberg's Hauptstraße celebrates his song "Ich hab mein Herz in Heidelberg verloren," with a renewed tablet installed to mark its centennial.

References

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