Meyer Levins Anne Frank

Published: Sept. 14, 2012, 11 a.m.

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In 1952, Meyer Levin had every reason to believe he would bring Anne Frank\\u2019s diary to the stage. Levin, an American who served as a war correspondent in Europe during World War II, first came across Frank\\u2019s diary in a Paris bookshop in 1951. He immediately contacted Frank\\u2019s father, Otto, and was instrumental in getting the book published in the United States, and then in attracting the interest of readers, thanks to a glowing review he wrote for the New York Times.

Otto Frank granted Levin the rights to adapt the diary for stage, but Levin would never see that dream realized. The production only got as far as a preliminary radio play. It\\u2019s hard to pin down why. Some say the Anne Frank that Levin was so moved by\\u2014indeed revered\\u2014was too Jewish a character for early 1950s American audiences. Others say Levin\\u2019s difficult personality and lack of writing ability scuttled the project. Either way, Levin eventually relinquished the stage rights, shunned by Frank and his cohort. The failure left...


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