Background
She was born in Budapest, when it was part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire.
She was born in Budapest, when it was part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire.
Born Eva Hermine von Sacher-Masoch, Freiin Erisso she was the grand-niece of Leopold von Sacher-Masoch, author of Venus in Furs, and was the mother of Marianne Faithfull. She was the sister of renowned novelist Alexander von Sacher-Masoch (1901–1972). Her mother was Jewish.
Sacher-Masoch spent her early childhood living on her family"s estates near the town of Karánsebes in Transylvania (now Caransebeș, Romania), moving with her family to Vienna in 1918.
As a young woman she moved to Berlin where she worked as a ballerina for the Max Reinhardt Company, and danced for productions of Bertolt Brecht and Kurt Weill. Despite their Jewish ancestry, Sacher-Masoch and her mother were afforded a degree of protection from the Nazis due to Artur"s World War I military record and his status as a well-regarded Austrian writer (under the pseudonym Michael Zorn).
Sacher-Masoch witnessed the United States Army Air Forces daylight raids on Vienna from 1944 onwards, and the Red Army"s assault on Vienna in 1945. Confronting the trauma civilians had been subject to, the British Broadcasting Corporation genealogical documentary series Who do you think you are? When the British arrived to occupy part of the liberated city, Sacher-Masoch fell in love with Major Robert Glynn Faithfull, a British Army officer and spy who called on the family to inform them that Alexander von Sacher Masoch was alive.
She also spent some time as a dance teacher at "Bylands", Stratfield Turgis, near Basingstoke, Hampshire, a boarding school for maladjusted children.
She moved to Reading, Berkshire to work as a waitress at a Sally"s Café, Friar Street. She is buried in Saint Mary"s churchyard, Aldworth, Berkshire, England.
Having opposed Hitler since the Anschluss, and witnessing atrocities against Jews in the streets of Vienna, Sacher-Masoch and her parents used their home to conceal Socialist pamphlets, narrowly evading detection by the Gestapo.