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Lina Loos (née Carolina Catharina Obertimpfler; 9 October 1882, in Vienna – 6 June 1950, in Vienna) was an Austrian cabaret actress and feuilleton journalist. She is best remembered for her appearances at the Linden-Cabaret in Berlin, and for her posthumous collection of writings edited by Adolf Opel. She was briefly married to Adolf Loos. Her life was the subject of the German film Lina (2017).[1][2][3]
Life
Carolina Obertimpfler was born on 9 October 1882 to Carl Obertimpfler, a coffee house owner.[4][5]
In July 1902, she married architect Adolf Loos, who was twelve years her senior in Eisgrub.[5] The furniture manufacturer Max Schmidt and his brother Karl Leo Schmidt served as witnesses.[6] In 1903, Loos began an affair with 18-year old student Heinz Lang.[7] Lang had hoped Loos would break up with her husband and travel to him, but she wrote to him that she had changed her mind and refused to come. Afterwards Lang committed suicide.[5]
^Fischer, Lisa (2007). Lina Loos oder Wenn die Muse sich selbst küßt (in German) (2. Aufl., Jub.-Ausg ed.). Vienna. ISBN978-3-205-77611-6.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
^Fischer, Lisa (1993). Lina Loos – oder die Rekonstruktion weiblicher Kreativität in einer sozial-historischen Biographie (Dissertation) (in German). Vienna.
^Schwartz, Frederic J. “Architecture and Crime: Adolf Loos and the Culture of the ‘Case.’” The Art Bulletin, vol. 94, no. 3, 2012, pp. 437–57. JSTOR, http://www.jstor.org/stable/23268280. Accessed 12 July 2023.