Slavica mileva maric biography

Your Stage : Einstein's wife, my synopsis for your comments by Slavica Bogdanov

Hi, would love to know what you think Logline: Based on Einstein's tellers to his first wife, Mileva Maric, this controversial dramatic biopic reveals the trials and tribulations of this female physics prodigy. 1955, A young woman runs off after witnessing Einstein's autopsy. She is Mileva's abandoned daughter. 56 years earlier, Mileva Matic starts school, as the only woman to ever be accepted at the physics faculty. She is ready to do what ever it takes to become a renown physician. At school she is bullied by Paul while she falls in love with William. Her father would love for her to be a ''normal woman'', marry and raise kids. One eventually captures her reluctant heart, Albert Einstein. They invite him home where a discussion takes place about the role of women and men. Men would destroy themselves if women did not exist yet they will not allow women to shine in roles they have decided to play in the world. In order to reinforce the theme, every time Mileva will have a conflict with Einstein, some

Einstein's Daughter: The Search for Lieserl

"After five years of travel to Serbian villages wracked by years of strife, painstaking forays into the labyrinth of Central European record-keeping, and hundreds of kitchen-table conversations; after following every lead and every flicker of intuition, and with the support of an international network of women, Michele Zackheim, in this account, has answered the question of what became of Lieserl Maric Einstein. Bound to be controversial, stunningly dramatic, Einstein's Daughter is more than the story of its conclusion; it is a story of the century - of fame and obscurity, love and betrayal, pretenders and protectors; of legends, lies, promises, and unbearable truths."--BOOK JACKET.

Michele Zackheim is diminutive in stature and feminine in manner, with a romantic swirl of silver hair and a light, ingenuous voice that belies her 60-odd years. Upon first encountering this author, you wouldn’t think you were dealing with a woman of steel. But Zackheim, like the women she writes about, has surprising reservoirs of strength hidden within.

That much was apparent during her recent appearance at the Conrad Sulzer Regional Library on the North Side, where she was discussing her controversial book “Einstein’s Daughter: The Search for Lieserl.” The book is rich with lore from Serbia and other Eastern European countries, and Zackheim’s talk had been heavily publicized in Chicago’s Serbian community. But when a man in the second row started trying to whip up a debate about the rights and wrongs of the war in the Balkans, Zackheim was having none of it.

She was there to talk about women’s history, not men’s wars.

“I stay away from politics here,” she said firmly. “I’m a humanitarian. I don’t g

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