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Author | Gregor Collins |
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Country | United States |
Language | English |
Subject | Memoir, intergenerational relation, art restituion |
Genre | Non-fiction |
Publisher | Bloch-Bauer Books |
Publication date
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2012 |
Pages | 362 |
ISBN | |
OCLC | 820878705 |
The Accidental Caregiver: How I Met, Loved, and Lost Legendary Holocaust Refugee Maria Altmann is a 2012 memoir by Gregor Collins, recounting his three years as a caregiver for Maria Altmann, and a stageplay, which premiered at the Robert Moss Theater in New York City on January 26, 2015.
In late 2007 a friend of Collins's, Tom Trudeau, answered an ad on Craigslist for a caregiver to a 92-year-old woman from Austria who lived in Cheviot Hills, Los Angeles. Trudeau mentioned to Collins he had taken the job, moved into her bungalow on Danalda Drive, and urged him to visit. But Collins was in pre-production on the film Night Before the Wedding, and focused on his acting career. A few weeks later, in January 2008, another caregiver quit, leaving Trudeau as the lady's sole caregiver. The family asked Trudeau if he knew anyone who could immediately fill the vacant position, and he asked Collins, who after some resistance accepted the job, at first as a temporary fill-in. The lady was Holocaust refugee Maria Altmann.
Aside from their day-to-day relationship chronicled in folksy, journal-entry-style chapters, the book depicts Maria's childhood in pre-Hitler Vienna as a member of the influential Bloch-Bauer family, and the family's relationship with the painter Gustav Klimt, who was regularly commissioned by Maria's wealthy Uncle Ferdinand Bloch-Bauer to paint portraits of his wife Adele Bloch-Bauer, a prominent Jewish patron of the arts. It also depicts Altmann's several anecdotes about her meetings, connections and relationships with eclectic notables such as Joan Sutherland, Walter Slezak, Hedy Lamarr, Placido Domingo, Danny Thomas, Gary Cooper, Ezio Pinza, Paul Henreid and others, and Altmann and her husband Fritz's harrowing escape from Austria during the Anschluss, their subsequent journey through Holland, England and Massachusetts, and their eventual nesting in Los Angeles.