Niklas Frank

Author

Birthday March 9, 1939

Birth Sign Pisces

Birthplace Munich, Bavaria, Germany

Age 85 years old

Nationality Germany

#44881 Most Popular

1927

His brothers and sisters were Sigrid (1927–d. in South Africa), Norman (1928–2010), Brigitte (1935–1981), and Michael (1937–1990).

When Niklas was about eight months old, his father was appointed Hitler's Governor-General of the General Government in German occupied Poland.

In this position, Hans Frank became responsible for the Nazi policy of enslaving the Poles and exterminating the Polish Jews.

Niklas grew up in Cracow, Poland.

1939

Niklas Frank (born 9 March 1939) is a German author and journalist best known for an intimate and strongly accusatory book about his father, Hans Frank, a lawyer who became Governor-General of the General Government in German-occupied Poland during World War II.

Frank was born in Munich on 9 March 1939 to Hans Frank and Brigitte Herbst as the youngest of five children.

1946

He was seven years old when his father was executed in Nuremberg trials (16 October 1946).

1959

His mother died in 1959.

Niklas studied German literature, sociology, and history, and became a journalist, working for the German edition of Playboy and for the weekly Stern.

Over the course of the years, his initial embarrassment about his father developed into a "burning, obsessive hatred" as he uncovered minute details of his father's life during a 40-year search.

1967

Frank contributed as a writer to the 1967 film A Degree of Murder and also to the 1973 Tatort television series episode Weißblaue Turnschuhe, but this would not have earned him lasting fame.

1987

In 1987, however, he published a book about his father, Der Vater: Eine Abrechnung ("The Father: A Settling of Accounts"), translated into English as In the Shadow of the Reich (1991).

This book, serialized in the magazine Stern, caused controversy in Germany because of the unheard-of, savage way in which its author sought to utterly destroy the memory of his father, referring to him as "a slime-hole of a Hitler fanatic" and questioning his remorse before his execution.

Together with Israeli author Joshua Sobol, Frank later wrote the play Der Vater (The Father), commissioned for the Wiener Festwochen (Vienna Festival).

1990

In the early 1990s, Frank was still working as a journalist, after a distinguished career during which he interviewed, among others, the Polish trade-union leader, Lech Wałęsa.

1993

Niklas Frank appears as himself in the 1993 television documentary Personenbeschreibung and also in the 2012 film, Hitler's Children. He also appeared in a 2015 BBC documentary, which was shown as an episode of Independent Lens, My Nazi Legacy: What Our Fathers Did that aired in May 2016.

1995

It was first performed in 1995 at the Theater an der Wien and directed by Paulus Manker.

In it, the son exhumes the putrid corpse of his father Hans and revivifies him to answer for his deeds, while his 'phallic mother' (Brigitte) and Hitler are played by one and the same person.

2005

Having thus dealt with his father, Niklas Frank entirely concentrated on his mother, the once 'Queen of Poland', in his book My German Mother (2005), which reads in part like a brilliant satire of high-ranking Nazi women.

2013

He concluded his trilogy with Brother Norman! (2013), reporting the painful discussions with his eldest and favorite brother, who had died three years before, on their diverging views of a youth spent in occupied Poland and on filial love.

2017

An April 2017 BBC HARDtalk programme was dedicated to him.

2019

He was also interviewed in the Hans Frank episode of Hitler's Most Wanted (Series 1, Episode 8, 2019).

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