{"id":217,"date":"2008-12-02T08:09:20","date_gmt":"2008-12-02T13:09:20","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.pbs.org\/wnet\/cinemasexiles\/2008\/12\/02\/biography-werner-richard-heymann\/"},"modified":"2011-09-30T14:26:28","modified_gmt":"2011-09-30T18:26:28","slug":"biography-werner-richard-heymann","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.pbs.org\/wnet\/cinemasexiles\/biographies\/the-composers\/biography-werner-richard-heymann\/217\/","title":{"rendered":"Biography: Werner Richard Heymann"},"content":{"rendered":"<div class=\"captionRight\">\n<table border=\"0\">\n<tbody>\n<tr>\n<td><a href=\"https:\/\/www.pbs.org\/wnet\/cinemasexiles\/files\/2008\/12\/heymann_app_lg.jpg\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"alignnone size-full wp-image-102\" src=\"https:\/\/www.pbs.org\/wnet\/cinemasexiles\/files\/2008\/12\/heymann_app.jpg\" alt=\"Werner Richard Heymann citizenship application\" width=\"150\" height=\"150\" \/><\/a><\/p>\n<p><strong>Photo from Heymann\u2019s application for U.S. citizenship.<\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong><a href=\"https:\/\/www.pbs.org\/wnet\/cinemasexiles\/files\/2008\/12\/heymann_app_lg.jpg\">Click to see the application.<\/a><\/strong><\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<\/tbody>\n<\/table>\n<\/div>\n<p><strong>by <strong><span class=\"row-title\">Elisabeth Trautwein<\/span><\/strong><\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Werner Richard Heymann was the most famous film composer in Germany and France until 1933.<br \/>\nHis music was everywhere. You could hear it from the orchestra pits of the great theatre stages and on the battered pianos in the tiny cabaret cellars; they played it in magnificently decorated concert halls and in darkened cinemas. And then afterwards in the streets when the cinema-goers started humming the catchy tunes they had heard their idols sing on the screen: Lilian Harvey and Olga Tschechowa, Willy Fritsch, Heinz R\u00fchmann and Oskar Karlweis, Willi Forst and K\u00e4the von Nagy, Hans Albers, Paul H\u00f6rbiger and the Comedian Harmonists: Liebling, mein Herz l\u00e4sst dich gr\u00fc\u00dfen &#8211; Darling, my heart sends its love to you -, Das ist die Liebe der Matrosen &#8211; That\u2019s how sailors love you -, Du bist das s\u00fc\u00dfeste M\u00e4del der Welt &#8211; You are the sweetest girl in the world -, Hoppla, jetzt komm ich &#8211; Look out, here I come -, Irgendwo auf der Welt gibt\u2019s ein kleines bi\u00dfchen Gl\u00fcck &#8211; Somewhere in the world there is a tiny bit of happiness -, Einmal schafft\u2019s jeder &#8211; Everybody succeeds once -, Das mu\u00df ein St\u00fcck vom Himmel sein &#8211; This must be a piece of heaven &#8211; \u2026<\/p>\n<p>Werner Richard Heymann, the composer of all these melodies, was born into a turbulent era when, in 1896, he came into the world as the son of a Jewish corn merchant in K\u00f6nigsberg. His father was a man of artistic talent and his mother enjoyed the reputation of being an excellent pianist. The parental legacy soon became apparent: their son Walther began writing expressionistic poems that were soon appearing in Herwarth Walden\u2019s magazine \u201cDer Sturm\u201d, Walther\u2019s younger brother, Werner Richard, exhibited a musical talent from very early on. At the tender age of three he had already started to sit at the piano and was soon playing everything he heard; at the age of five he was tinkling out his own melodies; and when he was just six years old, he received violin lessons, writing his own first compositions at the age of eight. At twelve he became a member of the philharmonic orchestra, plunging eagerly into the study of music theory and counterpoint and presenting his first work for orchestra at the age of 16. Contemporaries could find no other words to describe him than \u201cchild prodigy\u201d.<\/p>\n<p>In 1916 Werner Richard Heymann\u2019s Fr\u00fchlings-Notturno f\u00fcr Orchester &#8211; Spring Nocturne for Orchestra -,which is based on one of his brother\u2019s texts, was performed in Berlin:<\/p>\n<p>Die wir wandern ohne Ruh<br \/>\nIrgendwo auf Erden<br \/>\nGlaubst Du nicht, dass ich und du<br \/>\nEinst sich finden werden?<br \/>\nTravellers in every clime,<br \/>\nWandering on restless feet,<br \/>\nDon\u2019t you think that some time,<br \/>\nOne day, you and I will meet?<\/p>\n<p>Two years later when his Rhapsodische Sinfonie f\u00fcr Bariton und Orchester &#8211; Rhapsodic Symphony for Baritone and Orchestra &#8211; was accepted by a renowned Viennese music publisher, he finally seemed to have achieved his breakthrough. This work was a tribute to his dead brother and had its premiere in November 1918, performed by the Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by Felix Weingartner. A short time later it was also performed in Berlin. Lovers of serious music noted the name of the young composer: Heymann. But the composer himself was already receiving a new impetus in Berlin, that restless and revolutionary city. His encounter with Johannes R. Becher turned him into a radical pacifist, he took sides, became interested in politics and got involved in the \u201cCouncil of Intellectual Workers\u201d. Among the Dadaists he met George Grosz and Walter Mehring.<\/p>\n<p>He was still working on the concept for his second symphony when he was asked whether he would like to write the stage music for Ernst Toller\u2019s first work Wandlung &#8211; Transformation -, which was on the programme at the Berlin \u201cTribune\u201d. The job appealed to him, especially since he recognised himself in the main character played by Fritz Kortner. The play is about a young Jew who hopes to finally find acceptance and a home through his enthusiastic dedication to the idea of the Great Patriotic War, but who is so shattered by his experiences at the front that he gives up the Fatherland, which has become a slave to the state, so that he can serve a humanitarian ideal as a revolutionary.<\/p>\n<p>Through Mehring Heymann learned of Max Reinhardt\u2019s plan to open a literary cabaret in the basement of the Grosse Schauspielhaus. It was to be called \u201cSchall und Rauch\u201d &#8211; \u201cSound and Smoke\u201d, just like Reinhardt\u2019s theatre of parodies at the turn of the century; the intention was to perform parodies again, if possible of the productions on the great theatre stage one floor above them. But the young authors Reinhardt had gathered around him, namely Kurt Tucholsky, Klabund and Walter Mehring, wanted more. Censorship had been lifted at the end of the war, the signs of the time were pointing to change. There was a general desire for a new beginning, to write politics and literature at the same time, to be unsentimental and aggressive, sarcastic and ironic, oppositional and critical of contemporary issues. On stage were the actors of the Reinhardt ensemble: Paul Graetz, Blandine Ebinger, Gussy Holl, Hubert von Meyerinck, \u00c4nn Heusinger, Gertrud Eysoldt. At the piano were Werner Richard Heymann and Friedrich Hollaender. \u201cSound and Smoke\u201d was the starting signal for a hitherto unknown German cabaret genre, namely one that was satirically critical of contemporary issues. \u201cSound and Smoke\u201d was soon to become the gathering place for all those talents who were to leave their mark on the cabaret of the twenties. Heymann and Hollaender also broke new ground in their field and were soon looked upon as the creators and founders of the literary chanson. Heymann mainly set texts by Mehring to music, for example, the song that Gussy Holl made famous with the \u201cblack boy\u201d and his \u201cniggers\u2019 paradise\u201d: \u201cIf the man in the moon were a coon und im Dunkeln liebten die Girls &#8211; schenkten alle weissen Ladies schwarze Babies schwarzen Kerls \u2026\u201d<\/p>\n<p>When \u201cSound and Smoke\u201d was no longer able to live up to the promise of the first programmes, Heymann and Hollaender had Mischa Spoliansky take over at the piano and looked for new jobs. Heymann composed the stage music for Georg Kaiser\u2019s play <em>Europa<\/em>, which was performed at the Grosses Schauspielhaus with Heinrich George, Roma Bahn, Alexander Moissi and Werner Krauss. Then, a restless wanderer between several worlds of music, he travelled south to Capri, where he wrote a string quartet which Stefan Zweig had performed in his Salzburg ch\u00e2teau on the Kapuzinerberg in 1921.<\/p>\n<p>Back in Berlin, Heymann met Trude Hesterberg, the singer of his first chanson opus; she intended to use the experience she had meanwhile gathered with the cabaret to become a director of her own business and asked him whether he would like to join her. The musician did not need much persuasion, although he could not possibly know that the \u201cWilde B\u00fchne\u201d that Hesterberg intended to set up in the basement of the \u2018Theater des Westens\u2019 on Kantstrasse was to open up a new and important chapter in the history of cabaret.<\/p>\n<p>Kurt Tucholsky wrote his Prolog for the opening programme that was performed on the tiny basement stage in September 1921. Annemarie Hase sang Leo Heller\u2019s street ballads, Isabel Herma recited Mehring\u2019s Moralisches Glockengel\u00e4ute &#8211; A moral peal of bells -, and Kurt Gerron went on his Nachtspaziergang 1921 &#8211; Night walk 1921 &#8211; through pulsating post-war Berlin. And then there was also \u201cwild Trude\u201d herself, who, according to critic Kurt Pinthus, \u201cbelts out her chansons as if from a well-oiled Browning\u201d. Musical director Werner Richard Heymann, who supplied the compositions, was largely instrumental in turning the \u201cWilde B\u00fchne\u201d into what the press called \u201cthe Berlin cabaret with the highest artistic merit\u201d, and one \u201cthat was well on its way to becoming a modern version of what the inventors of the genre had in mind for their time\u201d. There was close co-operation with Klabund and especially with Walter Mehring: An den Kan\u00e4len &#8211; Down by the canals -, Arie der gro\u00dfen Hure Presse &#8211; Aria of the great whore press -, Die K\u00e4lte &#8211; The cold -, Die kleine Stadt &#8211; Little town -, Die gro\u00dfe Sensation &#8211; The great sensation. But in those inflationary times, the \u201cWilde B\u00fchne\u201d soon got into financial difficulty, principally because of its uncompromising line, and its days were numbered.<\/p>\n<p>After the concert hall, the theatre stage and the cabaret, Heymann got involved with a new medium &#8211; film. Producer Erich Pommer introduced him to the Ufa (Universum-Film AG), where, with his own small orchestra, he supplied \u201cmood music\u201d while they were shooting silent movies in the Babelsberg studios. A short while later he became assistant to Ern\u00f6 Rap\u00e9e, the chief musical director of the Ufa who had an orchestra of 70 available at the Ufa Palace near the Zoo. In those days Heymann wrote, as he records in his biographical notes, \u201caround 3000 pages of scores for large orchestras every year\u201d. When Rap\u00e9e returned to America in 1926 Heymann became his successor and took over as musical director of 120 cinemas. What happened next Heymann outlined as follows: \u201cI leave the Ufa in protest against the Hugenberg regime &#8211; write my last stage music for Max Reinhardt: Artisten &#8211; write my first world hit: Kennst Du das Haus am Michigansee? &#8211; Do you know the house at Lake Michigan? &#8211; Join the Tobis &#8211; Work together with the inventors of the sound movie, Masolle, Vogt and Engel; make first German sound movies.\u201d Till then he had written the music for more than a dozen silent movies, including the music for Murnau\u2019s Faust film version, Asagaroff\u2019s Jugendrausch &#8211; Youthful rapture -, Arnold Franck\u2019s Der gro\u00dfe Sprung &#8211; The great leap &#8211; and Fritz Lang\u2019s Spione &#8211; Spies.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cI love: my wife, my child, the world; eating, drinking, smoking, driving. I love freedom. I hate: dictatorship, godlessness, writing scores, wool next to my skin and stones in my shoes. I hope for: a United States of Europe.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Heymann, who had experimented with the Tri-Ergon team, was the right man for the \u201ctalkies\u201d. Melodie des Herzens &#8211; Melody of the heart &#8211; was the title of the first \u201cperfectly fashioned\u201d Ufa sound film. It was made in 1929 and directed by Hanns Schwarz with Dita Parlo and Willy Fritsch in the leading roles. Paul Abraham was supposed to write the music for the second sound film <em>Liebeswalzer<\/em> &#8211; Love waltz &#8211; with Willy Fritsch and Lilian Harvey. \u201cBut Abraham did not deliver. And then Erich Pommer, who was my producer, got very excited and came to me and said, \u2018Listen, my dear Heymann, you are my musical director. What am I going to do now? Abraham has left me in the lurch and we have to start.\u2019 \u2018What about me?\u2019, I said. \u2018But you are a serious composer\u2019, he replied. And I said, \u2018Well, I wrote das Kleine Haus am Michigansee and that was a piece of stage music, wasn\u2019t it?\u2019 But Pommer was still reluctant and said that it was probably a fluke. Next day I brought him the Liebeswalzer and a day later Das s\u00fc\u00dfeste M\u00e4del der Welt. And then he believed me.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Heymann once confessed that he had never intended to write hits. But when, to his surprise, his songs actually became hits, he started to enjoy writing them, although he realised that these successes would cost him his reputation as a \u2019serious composer\u2019 and an entry in serious encyclopaedias of music. But never mind: Heymann wrote one sound-film hit song after another. And without exception they were all to become \u201cErvolkslieder\u201d (a blend of the German words Erfolg and Volkslied, meaning \u201csuccessful song\u201d and \u201cfolk song\u201d) as his lyricist and close friend Robert Gilbert liked to call them. Heymann\u2019s collaboration with Gilbert started in 1930 for Wilhelm Thiele\u2019s film comedy <em>Die drei von der Tankstelle<\/em> &#8211; The three from the garage &#8211; with Lilian Harvey\/Willy Fritsch, who had become the dream couple of the silver screen, and Heinz R\u00fchmann, Oskar Karlweis, Kurt Gerron, Fritz Kampers, Olga Tschechowa, Felix Bressart and the Comedian Harmonists. With their seemingly impromptu hits like <em>Ein Freund, ein guter Freund<\/em> &#8211; A friend, a good friend, <em>mein Herz l\u00e4\u00dft dich gr\u00fc\u00dfen<\/em> &#8211; Darling, my heart sends its love, <em>Erst kommt ein gro\u00dfes Fragezeichen<\/em> &#8211; First there\u2019s a big question mark &#8211; and <em>Lieber, guter Herr Gerichtsvollzieher<\/em> &#8211; My dear, my good Mr. Bailiff -, the Heymann\/Gilbert team were exactly what the newly emerging sound films required. And the authors also broke completely new ground when, as already anticipated in Liebeswalzer, they attempted a genre that can be looked upon as the precursor of the film musicals still to come: the film operetta.<\/p>\n<p>In the cinemas from September 1930, the film, of which a French version was also made, broke all records &#8211; it was by far the most successful production of the season. Heymann\u2019s music contributed a great deal to this, with its catchy tunes it caught the mood of the people in the last years of the Weimar Republic and it satisfied people\u2019s longings for a tiny bit of security and a sense of optimism.<\/p>\n<p>Exactly one year later, in September 1931, Harvey and Fritsch, the dream couple par excellence, were back on the screen again, this time in the film operetta <em>Der Kongre\u00df tanzt<\/em> &#8211; The congress dances &#8211; a Viennese story from far up north. Brought to the screen by Erik Charell, the romance between the Czar of all the Russias and a poor glove maker was meant to provide a sense of joie de vivre in difficult times. And it was full of music: choreographer Charell, a former dancer, who in the twenties had already filled Reinhardt\u2019s Grosses Schauspielhaus with his eponymous revues, and the long-running success <em>Das wei\u00dfe R\u00f6ss<\/em>l &#8211; The white horse &#8211; subjected everything to the musical airs supplied by Heymann. Even the actors and the cameras seemed to move in time with the waltz, humming <em>Das mu\u00df ein St\u00fcck vom Himmel sein<\/em> &#8211; This must be a piece of heaven. In one single, often quoted, shot, Harvey, sitting in a coach and with Heymann\u2019s song on her lips, is escorted through the Viennese Gate. The title of the song she sang was for decades to remain a metaphor of blissful memories: <em>Das gibt\u2019s nur einmal<\/em>\u2026 &#8211; It can only happen once &#8211; and even more so: \u201c\u2026 das kommt nie wieder, das ist zu sch\u00f6n um wahr zu sein\u2026 &#8211; it will never happen again, it\u2019s too beautiful to be true\u2026\u201d<\/p>\n<p>No wonder the film was a big box-office success. The recipe for success worked in other productions as well. And Heymann always had the right hit song ready: <em>Frag nicht wie, frag nicht wo<\/em> &#8211; Don\u2019t ask how, don\u2019t ask where -, and <em>Du hast mir heimlich die Liebe ins Haus gebracht<\/em> &#8211; You sneaked love secretly into my home (in <em>Ihre Hoheit befiehlt<\/em> &#8211; By Royal Command), <em>Eine Nacht in Monte Carlo<\/em> &#8211; A night in Monte Carlo &#8211; <em>Das ist die Liebe der Matrosen<\/em> &#8211; That\u2019s how sailors love you &#8211; and <em>Wenn der Wind weht<\/em> &#8211; When the wind blows (in <em>Bomben auf Monte Carlo<\/em> &#8211; Bombs on Monte Carlo), <em>Es f\u00fchrt kein andrer Weg zur Seligkeit<\/em> &#8211; There is no other way to happiness &#8211; and <em>Hoppla, jetzt komm ich<\/em> &#8211; Look out, here I come (in <em>Der Sieger<\/em> &#8211; The Winner), <em>Gn\u00e4dige Frau, komm und spiel mit mir<\/em> &#8211; Milady, come and play with me &#8211; (in Quick), <em>Wir zahlen keine Miete mehr<\/em> &#8211; We aren\u2019t paying rent any more -, <em>Einmal schafft\u2019s jeder<\/em> &#8211; Everybody succeeds once &#8211; and <em>Irgendwo auf der Welt gibt\u2019s ein kleines bi\u00dfchen Gl\u00fcck<\/em> &#8211; Somewhere in the world there is a little bit of happiness &#8211; (in <em>Ein blonder Traum<\/em> &#8211; A blond dream), <em>Wenn ich Sonntag\u2019s in mein Kino geh<\/em> &#8211; When I go to my cinema on Sundays (in <em>Ich bei Tag und du bei Nacht<\/em> &#8211; Me in the daytime and you at night) and <em>Mir ist so, ich wei\u00df nicht wie<\/em> &#8211; I have a feeling, I don\u2019t know what it is &#8211; (in <em>Saison in Kairo<\/em> &#8211; Season in Cairo).<\/p>\n<p>The seizure of power by the National Socialists started a massive exodus of artists: a whole generation of prominent and successful actors, directors and script writers were ejected from the Babelsberg UFA studios.<\/p>\n<p>Overnight, Heymann left his home country with two suitcases and 600 marks in his pocket and escaped from Berlin via the Saarland to Paris where he wrote his first operetta based on a book by Sacha Guitry: <em>Florestan I., Prinz von Monaco<\/em> &#8211; Florestan I., Prince of Monaco. The premiere was in 1934 in the \u201cBouffes Parisiens\u201d. The main hit once again revealed the old Heymann quality: Margot. He then went to Hollywood to work for Centfox to write the music for <em>Caravan<\/em>. Here he met Charell again, who was filming the comedy with Loretta Young and Charles Boyer. But Charell was unable to establish himself in Hollywood, and the first encounter with the New World also proved to be a bitter disappointment for Heymann. The German emigr\u00e9s were looked upon as difficult, and ill-adapted to new situations. Old successes in distant Europe did not count for very much here. Werner Richard Heymann had the reputation of being a stubborn German, especially as the English language was not exactly his thing. Werner Richard Heymann went back to Europe. This was the beginning of a restless time, which continued until 1936, when he made a second attempt to be successful in Hollywood. This time the conditions were more favorable than his first d\u00e9but: Ernst Lubitsch got him to work together with Friedrich Hollaender and had them write the music for the film <em>Bluebeard\u2019s Eighth Wife<\/em>. Billy Wilder, a friend from the old days at the UFA, also worked on the script.<\/p>\n<p>The collaboration between Lubitsch and Heymann developed into a series. Year after year produced a film classic: 1939 <em>Ninotschka<\/em>, 1940 <em>The Shop Around The Corner<\/em>, 1941 <em>That Uncertain Feeling<\/em>, 1942 <em>To Be Or Not To Be<\/em>. Heymann worked for Alexander Hall, Lewis Milestone, Richard Wallace, Charles Vidor, Preston Sturges and Harry Joe Brown. He had the reputation of being a good, sound craftsman &#8211; the man in the background. He wrote the music for more than forty Hollywood films, most of them light comedies, from time to time with a mild dose of social satire, and now and then for a science fiction movie. His background music was nominated four times for the much-sought-after Oscar: in 1939 for <em>One Million B.C.<\/em>, in 1941 for <em>That Uncertain Feeling<\/em>, 1942 for <em>To Be Or Not To Be<\/em> and in 1944 for <em>Knickerbocker Holiday<\/em> with Weill\u2019s world-famous September-Song.<\/p>\n<p>In 1951 Heymann decided to return to Germany and once again he received an offer for a German film. The film, for which he was to write the music, starred O.W. Fischer and Liselotte Pulver and was called <em>Heidelberger Romanze<\/em> &#8211; Heidelberg Romance. Werner Richard Heymann and Robert Gilbert, the tried-and-tested success combination, got together once again in Munich. They supplied the lyrics and the music for a theatre version of the <em>Blaue Engel<\/em> &#8211; Blue Angel -, which had its premiere in 1952 in Munich\u2019s \u201cKleine Kom\u00f6die\u201d under the title <em>Professor Unrat<\/em>. Not only the plot, but also the ensemble, recalled the old times: Trude Hesterberg, the \u201cwild one\u201d of old from the Kantstrasse, &#8211; in the meantime a strapping sixty-year-old &#8211; sang, with a twinkle in her eye, of the charm of pensioners and a widow who chooses to cohabit with a man rather than marry him and lose her pension rights: \u201cThe older ones quite suit me, no matter how long their hair is\u2026\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Two years later, the team of authors tried to repeat the succ\u00e9s d\u2019estime, clinched by at least 75 performances. This time it was with a remake of an old favourite project of Heymann\u2019s, which decades previously had run under the title of <em>Dame Nr. 1 rechts<\/em> &#8211; Lady No. 1 on the right &#8211; with the then still young K\u00e4the Dorsch: <em>Kiki vom Montmartre<\/em> &#8211; Kiki from Montmartre. This musical comedy also draws its strength from its nostalgic element of by-gone days. One of the main songs, Das sch\u00f6nste sind die Damen &#8211; The most beautiful things are the ladies &#8211; is written to a strict marching rhythm, just like the songs from the days when Heymann worked for Ufa.<\/p>\n<p>And just like his songs, they too can only happen once. Werner Richard Heymann died in Munich on 30th May 1961. Robert Gilbert gave the funeral address. \u201cWe bid farewell to Werner Richard Heymann, all of us, his family, his nearest and dearest, his friends, all who loved him. And all those countless people, all over the world, join us in this, our last farewell, all those for whom he made life just that little bit more pleasant and sometimes a little bit easier with his music.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>The text by Volker K\u00fchn has been taken &#8211; in a much abridged form &#8211; from the catalogue for the exhibition \u201cEin Freund, ein guter Freund &#8211; Der Komponist Werner Richard Heymann\u201d &#8211; A friend, a good friend &#8211; the composer Werner Richard Heymann (Akademie der K\u00fcnste, Berlin 2000). After Berlin, Munich and Salzburg, the exhibition can be seen at the Ostpreussische Landesmuseum in L\u00fcneburg from July 2001 to February 2002.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"http:\/\/www.heymann-musik.de\/xenglish.htm\" target=\"_blank\">Hear Werner Richard Heymann&#8217;s music<\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Photo from Heymann\u2019s application for U.S. citizenship. Click to see the application. by Elisabeth Trautwein Werner Richard Heymann was the most famous film composer in Germany and France until 1933. His music was everywhere. You could hear it from the orchestra pits of the great theatre stages and on the battered pianos in the tiny [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":78,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[3325],"tags":[3434,827,3798],"class_list":["post-217","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-the-composers","tag-biography","tag-composer","tag-werner-richard-heymann"],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v27.4 - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>Biography: Werner Richard Heymann | Cinema&#039;s Exiles | PBS<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.pbs.org\/wnet\/cinemasexiles\/biographies\/the-composers\/biography-werner-richard-heymann\/217\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"Biography: Werner Richard Heymann | Cinema&#039;s Exiles | PBS\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"Photo from Heymann\u2019s application for U.S. citizenship. Click to see the application. by Elisabeth Trautwein Werner Richard Heymann was the most famous film composer in Germany and France until 1933. His music was everywhere. 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