Germany buys Thomas Mann's California villa
November 18, 2016The German government has purchased the house at 1550 San Remo Drive in LA's Pacific Palisades area.
Well-known to literature fans, it's the home where Mann worked on his later literary works, "Doctor Faustus," "Lotte in Weimar," and "Joseph and His Brothers." The Mann family lived in the villa between 1942 and 1952, after fleeing from Nazi-ruled Germany.
Meeting place for young writers
Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier told newspaper "Süddeutsche Zeitung" newspaper on Friday that the Thomas Mann residence "was home for many Germans who worked toward a better future for their country, paved the way for an open society and laid the foundations for common transatlantic values."
"We want to revive the Thomas Mann villa in that spirit," Steinmeier added.
The history-steeped house was listed at around $15 million (14 million euros). Tough negotiations preceded the final sale, according to "Süddeutsche Zeitung."
The possibility of the house's eventual demolition caused an outcry in Germany a few months ago, with German intellectuals and art curators urging the government to buy the property. An online petition to save the Mann villa gathered around 3,000 signatures, including that of Herta Müller, who won the 2009 Nobel Prize for Literature.
The Mann villa is now destined to become a place of cultural exchange and a meeting place for young writers.
The Mann house could possibly work in cooperation with the nearby Villa Aurora - the former home of German-Jewish novelist and playwright Lion Feuchtwanger, according to German Ministry plans. Villa Aurora has been a gathering place for German-American cultural exchange since 1994.
db/eg (afp,dpa)