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  1. Ferdinand Maximilian Reyher (July 26, 1891 – October 8, 1967) was an American screenwriter, novelist, and newspaper correspondent. Reyher was also a notable friend and collaborator of Bertolt Brecht.

  2. Ferdinand Reyher was born on 26 July 1891 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA. He was a writer, known for The World, the Flesh and the Devil (1959), You May Be Next! (1936) and Don't Turn 'em Loose (1936). He was married to Eileen Chang. He died in October 1967 in Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA.

  3. Ferdinand Reyher (1891-1967) was a novelist, newspaper correspondent, screenwriter, and playwright active in and among many influential artistic, cultural, and social spheres of the twentieth century. The papers document Reyher's literary activities and personal life.

  4. Ferdinand Reyher. Region: NEW YORK. MacDowell Fellowships: 1955, 1956, 1957. Ferdinand Reyher was a screenwriter originally from Philadelphia. He earned a master’s degree in English from Harvard University in 1913 and taught English for one year at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

  5. Dec 23, 2020 · She met her second husband, screenwriter Ferdinand Reyher, while in residence at The MacDowell Colony. Chang, however, faced challenges breaking into the English-language fiction market as readers’ views of China were Orientalist and framed by Cold War ideologies.

  6. Ferdinand Reyher was born on 26 July 1891 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA. He was a writer, known for The World, the Flesh and the Devil (1959), You May Be Next! (1936) and The Big Cage (1933).

  7. Aug 1, 2019 · Changs second husband, Ferdinand Reyher, was a leftist writer thirty years older than her. They met at the MacDowell artists’ colony in New Hampshire. She didn’t read his books, and he didn’t mind: ‘I’m in good company, because she doesn’t read Joyce either.’

  8. The Ferdinand Reyher papers document the literary activities and personal life of German-American author Ferdinand Reyher, covering the years between 1868 and 1996. The bulk of the materials dates from 1917 to 1960.

  9. This series contains two audio recordings of Ferdinand Reyher reading from his play Night Sky. (See Series 2.1, Box 12, Folders 15 and 16 for Reyhers manuscript.)

  10. In 1917, she married fellow writer Ferdinand Reyher. Their daughter Faith was born in 1919. The marriage was unconventional from the beginning, with Reyher continuing to travel for the National Woman’s Party; by the late 1920s she was raising Faith by herself.

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