Friedrich Alexander Maria "Fritz" Mandl (9 February 1900 – 8 September 1977) was chairman of
HirtenbergerPatronen-Fabrik, a leading Austrian armaments firm founded by his father, Alexander Mandl.
The Wöllersdorfer cartridge factory, from October 1933, the site of the holding camp
Wöllersdorf
A prominent
fascist, Mandl was attached to the
Austrofascism and Italian varieties and an
opponent of Nazism. In the 1930s he became close to Prince
Ernst Rüdiger Starhemberg, the commander of the Austrian nationalist militia ("
Heimwehr"), which he furnished with weapons and ammunition.[1] He inherited the weapons factory from his father, Alexander Mandl, which was used to help equip Hitler's Germany. Until 1940, Mandl tried to maintain contact with
Hermann Göring's office in order to supply Germany with iron.[2]
Private life
Mandl was born on 9 February 1900, in
Vienna,
Austria-Hungary, the son of a Jewish father, Alexander Mandl (1861–1943) and a Roman Catholic mother, Maria (née Mohr; 1873–1924) Mandl. He had a younger sister, Renata Renée Mandl (later Ferro). Fritz Mandl was married five times.[citation needed]
His wives were:
Helene Hella Mandl (née Strauss; born 1899, Vienna[citation needed] to whom he was married at the age of 21. The marriage lasted for six weeks.[2]
Hedwig "Hedy" Kiesler. They married in August 1933, when she was 18 year old. She was an Austrian actress who had sparked controversy after her appearance in the infamous film Ecstasy (1933), in which she appeared nude for a few seconds and reportedly simulated sexual intercourse and orgasm. Mandl required her to
convert to Catholicism, which she did at their wedding in the Vienna
Karlskirche. (Both of Kiesler's parents were born Jewish, though her mother converted to Catholicism at some point.) Mandl is rumoured to have attempted to bring a halt to her acting career in Germany. He reportedly spent US$280,000 ($6.59 million in 2023 dollars)[3] in an unsuccessful attempt to suppress the film Ecstasy by purchasing every existing print.[4] In her autobiography, Ecstasy and Me, Lamarr described Mandl as extremely controlling. She wrote that she escaped from him by disguising herself as a maid and fleeing to
Paris, where she obtained a divorce.[citation needed] Kiesler would later become known as
Hedy Lamarr and became a major star in
Hollywood.
Herta Mandl (née Wrany; born 1911, Steiermark – unknown date of death).[citation needed] (The LaVoz article suggests she was also known as Schneider, and was with him in Buenos Aires in 1938.[2]) They married in 1939 and divorced in 1951.
Gloria de Quaranta (née Vinelli; born 1922, Buenos Aires, Argentina – died 1976).[citation needed] They married in 1951, and later divorced.[citation needed]
Monika Brücklmeier (born 1938),[2] daughter of
Eduard Brücklmeier, an accessory executed for his involvement in the
July 20 plot to assassinate Hitler. Monika Brücklmeier survived her husband. [citation needed]
Business affairs
Lamarr later wrote in Ecstasy and Me, that both Italian dictator
Benito Mussolini and German dictator
Adolf Hitler attended Mandl's parties. However, Mandl had a personal quarrel with the Nazi minister
Hermann Göring which, as well as his Jewish descent, led to the expropriation of his property in Europe. After the
Anschluss of Austria by
Nazi Germany in March 1938, Mandl transferred as many of his assets as he could to Swiss ownership, resigned as director-general of the munitions company and fled to Switzerland. He was forced to sell his business for £170,000 and 1.24 million Sperrmark to the German
Wilhelm Gustloff Stiftung.[5] The remaining property was seized.
In exile
Some time in the mid-1940s, Mandl moved to
Brazil and then to
Argentina. He arrived in Argentina as a "refugee", with his
Rolls-Royce automobile, a court of maintainers, and a ton of
gold bullion. He became a citizen and remarried in 1951. In Argentina, he opened factories and companies during
Peronism.[2] He served as an advisor to
Juan Perón and attempted a new role as film producer. He founded a new airplane manufacturing firm, Industria Metalúrgica y Plástica Argentina.[citation needed]
Mandl became a leading member of Argentina's social circles. He acquired a home in
Mar del Plata, a castle in
Córdoba and a small hotel in
Buenos Aires.[2] He worked closely with French designer
Jean-Michel Frank, who was then artistic director of Comte S.A.,[6] who produced most of Mandl's furnishings.
Return to Austria
Mandl had to close his businesses in Argentina when Americans harassed him on suspicion of his being a Nazi.[2] In 1955 after the fall of peronism in Argentina, he left for Austria where he resumed running the factory at
Hirtenberg.[1] He died in Vienna in 1977. After his death, a dispute broke out over his inheritance that took years to resolve.[2]
^Feaster, Felicia.
"Ecstasy". Turner Classic Movies.
Archived from the original on 22 July 2016. Retrieved 7 December 2017.
^Ulrike Schulz: Simson Vom unwahrscheinlichen Überleben eines Unternehmens 1856–1993. Wallstein Verlag, Göttingen 2013,
ISBN978-3-8353-1256-2, S. 184
^Martin-Viver, Pierre-Emmanuel (2008). Jean-Michel Frank: The Strange and Subtle Luxury of the Parisian Haute-Monde in the Art Deco Period. Rizzoli. pp. 74, 257–58.
ISBN9780847830299.
General references
Bill, Ramón. Waffenfabrik Solothurn. Schweizerische Präzision im Dienste der deutschen Rüstungsindustrie. In: Schriftenreihe des Kantonalen Museums Altes Zeughaus Solothurn, Heft 14. Solothurn, 2002
Hug, Peter. Schweizer Rüstungsindustrie und Kriegsmaterialhandel zur Zeit des Nationalsozialismus. Unternehmensstrategien – Marktentwicklung – politische Überwachung. Zurich: Chronos Verlag, Band 11 der Publikationen der Unabhängigen Expertenkommission, 2002.
Kerekes, Lajos. Abenddämmerung einer Demokratie. Mussolini, Gömbös und die Heimwehr. Wien-Frankfurt-Zürich: Europa Verlag, 1966.
Louçã, António. Conspiradores e traficantes. Portugal no tráfico de armas e de divisas nos anos do nazismo. 1933–1945. Lisbon: Oficina do Livro, 2005.
Hanauska, Fritz. Heimatbuch der Marktgemeinde Hirtenberg. Marktgemeinde Hirtenberg, Hirtenberg 1980