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Marianne was the subject of a 2001 "biography in poems", The Other Mozart by Sharon Chmielarz. [18] Mozart's Sister, a 2005 novel by Alison Bauld, [19] follows Marianne's life through marriage, children, widowhood, and death in conversations with her nephew Franz Xaver. Nancy Moser wrote Mozart's Sister: A Novel (2006). [20]
Nicolaus's possessions were liquidated to help pay the debt, and his remaining family (Anna Maria's mother and her older sister Maria Rosina, born 24 August 1719) lapsed into poverty. They moved to Salzburg, not far away, and lived on a charity pension of just eight (later nine) florins per month, perhaps supplemented by low-level employment.
Modern reconstruction of a target for Bölzlschiessen (dart shooting), a light entertainment of the Mozart family. It depicts a sad farewell between Marianne and Mozart in 1777. She was born in Augsburg, Germany, the third and only surviving of five daughters of Franz Alois Mozart (a younger brother of Leopold Mozart) and Maria Victoria ...
Maria Constanze Cäcilia Josepha Johanna Aloysia Mozart (née Weber; 5 January 1762 – 6 March 1842) was a German soprano, later a businesswoman.She is best remembered as the spouse of the composer Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, who from the evidence of his letters was deeply in love with her throughout their nine-year marriage.
‘Mozart/ Mozart’ continues this success, by telling a wild drama about an extraordinary musician who was pushed out of the limelight when she was a girl and who reclaims her spot in a most ...
Mozart's Sister (French title: Nannerl, la sœur de Mozart) is a 2010 French drama film written and directed by René Féret, and starring two of his daughters.It presents a fictional account of the early life of Maria Anna Mozart, nicknamed Nannerl, who was the sister of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart and his only sibling to survive infancy.
The Mozart family grand tour was a journey through western Europe, undertaken by Leopold Mozart, his wife Anna Maria, and their children Maria Anna (Nannerl) and Wolfgang Theophilus (Wolferl) from 1763 to 1766. At the start of the tour the children were aged eleven and seven respectively.
The Mozart family were the ancestors, relatives, and descendants of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart. The earliest documents mentioning the name "Mozart", then spelled "Motzhart" or "Motzhardt", are from the Bavarian part of Swabia (today the Regierungsbezirk of Bavarian Swabia ).