Patrick Süskind

Writer

Birthday March 26, 1949

Birth Sign Aries

Birthplace Ambach, Bavaria, Germany

Age 74 years old

Nationality Germany

#47223 Most Popular

1949

Patrick Süskind (born 26 March 1949) is a German writer and screenwriter, known best for his novel Perfume: The Story of a Murderer, first published in 1985.

Süskind was born in Ambach, Bavaria.

His father was writer and journalist Wilhelm Emanuel Süskind, who worked for the newspaper Süddeutsche Zeitung and is famous as the co-author of the well-known publication Aus dem Wörterbuch des Unmenschen (From the Dictionary of an Inhuman), a critical collection of essays concerning the language of the Nazi era.

Patrick Süskind went to school in Holzhausen, a small Bavarian village.

His mother worked as a sports trainer; his older brother Martin E. Süskind is also a journalist.

Süskind has many relatives from the aristocracy in Württemberg, making him one of the descendants of the exegete Johann Albrecht Bengel and of the reformer Johannes Brenz.

1968

After his qualification testing for university and his mandatory community service, he studied medieval and modern history at the University of Munich and in Aix-en-Provence from 1968 to 1974, but never graduated.

Funded by his parents, he relocated to Paris, where he wrote "mainly short, unpublished fiction and longer screenplays which were not made into films".

1980

During the 1980s, Süskind was also successful as a screenwriter for the television productions Monaco Franze (1983) and Kir Royal (1987), among others.

1981

During 1981, he had his first major success with the play Der Kontrabaß (The Double Bass), which was conceived originally as a radio play.

1984

During the theatrical season of 1984–85, the play was performed more than 500 times.

The only role is that of a tragi-comical orchestra musician.

1985

His best-known work is the internationally acclaimed bestseller Perfume: The Story of a Murderer (1985).

Perfume was on the bestselling list of the German weekly news magazine Der Spiegel for nine years.

It was adapted into a film directed by Tom Tykwer.

1988

Süskind is also the author of a novella, The Pigeon (1988), The Story of Mr Sommer (1991, illustrated by French cartoonist Sempé), Three Stories and a Reflection (1996), and a collection of essays, On Love and Death (2006).

Süskind lives a reclusive, private lifestyle and divides his time between Munich and France.

He rarely grants interviews and few photographs of him have been published.

1997

For his screenplay of Rossini (1997 film), directed by Helmut Dietl, he won the Screenplay Prize of the German Department for Culture during 1996.

He rejected other awards, like the FAZ-Literaturpreis, the Toucan Prize, and the Gutenbergpreis.