Brainin
Brainin is a French surname. Notable people with the surname include:
- (Sepp Österreicher, 1905-1996), Austrian poet and translator [1]
- (?-?), film actor (Xtro, Street Smart)[2]
- (1905-1942), French painter and dancer, murdered in Auschwitz[3][4]
- (1949), Austrian psychoanalyst and scientific writer, daughter of Lotte and Hugo Brainin
- (1913-1992), Austrian/American poet
- (Moineau, 1933), French poet and philosopher
- (1923-2006), Austrian poet and writer
- (1924), Austrian locksmith, survivor, and contemporary witness of the Holocaust, brother of Norbert Brainin, father of Elisabeth Brainin, husband of Lotte Brainin
- (1916-2000), American jazz and film composer, the author of a song The Night Has a Thousand Eyes (for the same film, 1948), which became a Jazz standard[5]
- (1920), Austrian resistance fighter against National Socialism, contemporary witness, and survivor of the Holocaust, prisoner of Auschwitz and Ravensbruck, mother of Elisabeth Brainin, wife of Hugo Brainin
- (1909-2002), Austrian/American commercial graphic artist and violinist
- Norbert Brainin (1923–2005), Austrian/British violinist, the founder of Amadeus Quartet
- (1959), American saxophonist and jazz composer
- Reuben Brainin (1862–1939), Hebrew publicist, biographer and public figure
- Simon Brainin (1854-?), Russian/American physician and public figure
- (1905-?), Russian film actor, the most known film: Benya Krik (1926)
- Valeri Brainin (1948), Russian/German musicologist, music manager and poet
- (1912-2012), MBE - member of British Empire, Bahamian Politician, Former member of Bahamas parliament, Former V. president of senate, Builder/ developer, statesman, related (nephew) to the late Sir Alvin R. Braynen
- (1904-1992) knighted by Queen Elizabeth II, KCMG - Knight Commander of British Empire, Bahamian Politician, Former member of Bahamas parliament, Former Speaker & Deputy Speaker in Parliament, Co-Founder of Bahamas Chamber of Commerce
Other manner of writing:
- (1861-1937), Polish/German soprano
Sources[]
- ^ Lexikon of German-Russian Literature. By Ingmar Brantsch.
- ^ Danny Brainin - Trailer - Showtimes - Cast - Movies - The New York Times
- ^ David Brainin Archived September 4, 2006, at the Wayback Machine
- ^ "Explore". Archived from the original on 2011-07-23. Retrieved 2008-03-24.
- ^ Jerome Brainin - Biography
Categories:
- Surnames
- Russian-Jewish surnames