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The Story of the Trapp Family Singers

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Cover art for the first and some subsequent editions
AuthorMaria Augusta von Trapp
Genrememoir

The Story of the Trapp Family Singers is a 1949 memoir written by Maria Augusta von Trapp, whose life was later fictionalized in Rodgers and Hammerstein's Broadway musical The Sound of Music in 1959.

Background

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Maria never intended to write anything of her life. However, a friend persistently pleaded with her not to allow her story to be forgotten by others. Though she denied she had any writing skill whatsoever, her friend was not to be put off and kept on asking her whenever they saw each other. Finally, one day, in desperation, Maria excused herself and went to her room for an hour to scribble a few pages about her life story, hoping to prove once and for all she was no writer.

However, this displayed such natural writing talent that she reluctantly agreed to finish what she had started, and her jottings formed the basis of the first chapter of her memoirs.[citation needed] Her book, The Story of the Trapp Family Singers, was a best-seller.[1] The book was published in 1949 by J. B. Lippincott Company of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

Contents

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The book describes the life of the von Trapp family, from their beginnings in Salzburg, Austria, to their adventures in America where they escaped from German-occupied Europe. The story reflects on family tragedies, victories, and the kindness of strangers who soon became friends to the young family.

Adaptations

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Differences between the book and the musicals

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Maria married Georg von Trapp in 1927, not 1938, as portrayed in the musical. She initially fell in love with the children, rather than the father, and only later came to love him. The father was not the aloof patriarch who disapproved of music, but a warm, gentle-hearted parent. They also left Austria openly by train, instead of secretly at night.

They first performed in the Salzburg Festival in 1936, not 1938, as portrayed in the musical, and not as a ruse to give them more time to make their escape, as portrayed in the musical. The musical telescopes many events and a long time frame into fewer events and a very short space of time. By the time the family left Austria in real life in 1938, two more children had been born and a third was on the way. In the musical, only the original seven children are portrayed, and Maria and Georg have only been married for one month when they and the seven children leave Austria.

The children's names and ages are different in the musical and there is no exact equivalent for each child, although some of the children in the musical seem similar to the ones in the book. Liesl, the oldest daughter in the musical, is, for the most part, a fictional character, and certainly Rolf, the messenger boy with a romantic interest in Liesl, has no known equivalent in the family's real life. The younger children were probably at least partly inspired by the family's real children, but this does not necessarily imply any direct link between any particular fictional child and any particular actual child.[2]

Edition

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  • The Story of the Trapp Family Singers, ISBN 0-385-02896-2 (Doubleday 1990).

References

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  1. ^ Sherwell, Philip (3 January 2009). "New generation of von Trapps embrace Sound of Music legacy". The Telegraph. Retrieved 27 July 2019.
  2. ^ Gearin, Joan (2005). "Movie vs. Reality:The Real Story of the von Trapp Family". Prologue Magazine. National Archives. Retrieved 2014-01-01.
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