Robert Lucas papers
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- Creator
- Lucas, Robert (1904-1984) writer
TitleRobert Lucas papers
Held atUniversity of London, Institute of Languages, Cultures and Societies
Reference codeRLU
Date1890-1995
Scope and ContentThis archive contains the papers of writer and journalist Robert Lucas (formerly Ehrenzweig), who came to the UK as an exile from Austria in 1934. It includes, in series 1, records of RL’s work in and relating to theatre in Austria prior to his exile, such as scripts and photographs of political cabaret productions by the Politische Kabarett in Vienna in the late 1920s and early 1930s; the production of RL’s play Das grosse Festspiel at the Second International Workers' Olympiad in Vienna in 1931 and a complete set of the Austrian theatre journal RL edited, Die politische Bühne. Series 2 and 3 contain records mainly created in the course of RL’s activities as a writer and editor for radio. From 1940 until 1967 he was employed as a scriptwriter for the BBC’s German Service, and the archive holds over 70 scripts for wartime and post-war feature programmes.
In series 2, which relates to RL’s activities during the Second World War, there are scripts, correspondence and documents relating to the reception and post-war publication of his best-known and most successful radio propaganda creation, Die Briefe des Gefreiten Hirnschal, an anti-Nazi satire which was broadcast by the BBC throughout the war to German-speaking Europe. There are also scripts of the other Features programmes RL wrote at this time, such as the series Vormarsch der Freiheit, as well as material he gathered on a research trip he made to Vienna on behalf of the BBC in 1946. This series also contains audio recordings.
Series 3 contains further BBC German Service scripts by RL but those in this series are mainly from the 1960s and 1970s. In addition to the scripts, there is a file of BBC German Service staff photographs, mainly from the post-war period but with a small number probably dating from the early 1940s. Scripts RL wrote in the post-war period for German, Austrian and Swiss radio stations are also in this series.
Series 4 contains typescripts and drafts of articles RL wrote for Austrian, German, Swiss and British newspapers and journals through the course of his career as a journalist, from the late 1920s until 1983, a year before his death. Most notably, these were articles for the Austrian Arbeiterzeitung in the late 1920s and early 1930s, and for Die Zeit, Die Welt and Sie und Er in the post-war period.
Series 5 contains his annual diaries dating from 1940 until 1982, and in series 6 there are drafts (in notebook and loose pages, manuscript and typescript) of short prose fiction works, drama and verse written by RL in his youth and later life.
Series 7 comprises reviews, correspondence and (draft) scripts of plays RL wrote after settling in the UK. These include the play script, publicity material and newspaper reviews of his adaptation of Tolstoy’s War and Peace, which was performed in London, Blackpool and Manchester in 1943. There are also scripts and related records of two further plays that he wrote: Man bites Dog (in 1947) and Die Mohocks kommen (1976-1983). Series 8 contains typescripts and related research material from around 1966 for what appears to be an unpublished novel, Der leere Himmel, and series 9 holds correspondence, publicity material and reviews relating to RL’s biography of Frieda von Richthofen (Frieda Lawrence, the wife of D.H. Lawrence), which was published in Germany, the UK, the USA and Japan between 1972 and 1974. Correspondence between Robert Lucas and various family members, friends and acquaintances, including a number of figures known for their cultural, musical, literary or scientific achievements can be found in series 10. This includes letters from novelist and poet Naomi Mitchison, architect Victor Gruen and the pianist Alice Carrard (a distant relative of Ida Lucas), as well as anti-fascist activist Ella Lingens.
Series 11 holds a range of personal and official documents including certificates, passports, insignia, contracts and some work-related correspondence. It includes a number of items concerning the wider families of RL and his wife Ida Lucas (nee Klamka). Finally, there is a small number of miscellaneous items in series 12, including some ink drawings by the toy maker Yootha Rose.
In series 2, which relates to RL’s activities during the Second World War, there are scripts, correspondence and documents relating to the reception and post-war publication of his best-known and most successful radio propaganda creation, Die Briefe des Gefreiten Hirnschal, an anti-Nazi satire which was broadcast by the BBC throughout the war to German-speaking Europe. There are also scripts of the other Features programmes RL wrote at this time, such as the series Vormarsch der Freiheit, as well as material he gathered on a research trip he made to Vienna on behalf of the BBC in 1946. This series also contains audio recordings.
Series 3 contains further BBC German Service scripts by RL but those in this series are mainly from the 1960s and 1970s. In addition to the scripts, there is a file of BBC German Service staff photographs, mainly from the post-war period but with a small number probably dating from the early 1940s. Scripts RL wrote in the post-war period for German, Austrian and Swiss radio stations are also in this series.
Series 4 contains typescripts and drafts of articles RL wrote for Austrian, German, Swiss and British newspapers and journals through the course of his career as a journalist, from the late 1920s until 1983, a year before his death. Most notably, these were articles for the Austrian Arbeiterzeitung in the late 1920s and early 1930s, and for Die Zeit, Die Welt and Sie und Er in the post-war period.
Series 5 contains his annual diaries dating from 1940 until 1982, and in series 6 there are drafts (in notebook and loose pages, manuscript and typescript) of short prose fiction works, drama and verse written by RL in his youth and later life.
Series 7 comprises reviews, correspondence and (draft) scripts of plays RL wrote after settling in the UK. These include the play script, publicity material and newspaper reviews of his adaptation of Tolstoy’s War and Peace, which was performed in London, Blackpool and Manchester in 1943. There are also scripts and related records of two further plays that he wrote: Man bites Dog (in 1947) and Die Mohocks kommen (1976-1983). Series 8 contains typescripts and related research material from around 1966 for what appears to be an unpublished novel, Der leere Himmel, and series 9 holds correspondence, publicity material and reviews relating to RL’s biography of Frieda von Richthofen (Frieda Lawrence, the wife of D.H. Lawrence), which was published in Germany, the UK, the USA and Japan between 1972 and 1974. Correspondence between Robert Lucas and various family members, friends and acquaintances, including a number of figures known for their cultural, musical, literary or scientific achievements can be found in series 10. This includes letters from novelist and poet Naomi Mitchison, architect Victor Gruen and the pianist Alice Carrard (a distant relative of Ida Lucas), as well as anti-fascist activist Ella Lingens.
Series 11 holds a range of personal and official documents including certificates, passports, insignia, contracts and some work-related correspondence. It includes a number of items concerning the wider families of RL and his wife Ida Lucas (nee Klamka). Finally, there is a small number of miscellaneous items in series 12, including some ink drawings by the toy maker Yootha Rose.
NotesThis Archive forms one of the Exile Studies collections acquired through the Research Centre for German and Austrian Exile Studies at the Institute for Modern Languages Research.
Conditions governing accessOpen. At least 48 hours' notice is required for research visits. Access copies of the audio recordings are available for use in the Library's Special Collections Reading Room only.
Extent19 boxes and 1 oversize folder
Physical descriptionMainly paper archives but also includes audio records on open reel and cassette tapes (in RLU/2/11 and RLU/12).
System of ArrangementThe records in this archive have been ordered into the following series: 1: pre-emigration political theatre work; 2: Second World War activities; 3: post-war radio journalism; 4: print journalism (both pre- and post-emigration); 5: diaries; 6: draft scripts of drama, short stories and verse; 7: dramatic works; 8: drafts of an published novel, Der leere Himmel; 9: biography of Frieda von Richthofen; 10: correspondence; 11: personal records and 12: miscellaneous. As far as possible, the principle of original order was followed to create these series, and where it was necessary to create more coherent groupings of material, chronological order was also taken into account.
Finding aidsCatalogued online (click on the "contains" icon below). A pdf copy is attached to this description.
Level of descriptionfonds
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