Background
Editorial (Gelb) Gyömrői was born in Budapest to Mark Gelb, a furniture manufacturer, and Ilona Pfeifer. At her father’s request, she began studying interior design, but later dropped out.
Editorial (Gelb) Gyömrői was born in Budapest to Mark Gelb, a furniture manufacturer, and Ilona Pfeifer. At her father’s request, she began studying interior design, but later dropped out.
Through her uncle, she began to learn about psychoanalysis and attended the 5th International Psychoanalytical Congress in Budapest.
She was one of the handful of European Radicals in Sri Lanka. From 1918 onwards she participated in gatherings of the Sunday Circle, a group of left-wing intellectuals which included psychoanalyst René Spitz. In 1919, she worked for the Commissariat for Education during the short-lived Hungarian Soviet Republic.
When the republic fell following the Romanian invasion, she fled to Vienna, where she supported herself by working at a parachute factory, and then as a sales assistant at a bookshop.
She knew the Hungarian writers Béla Balázs, composer Hanns Eisler, Czechoslovakian writer Egon Kisch and Hermann Broch - who translated her poetry into German. Thereafter she was for short periods in Czechoslovakia and Romania.
She designed costumes for the films of Elisabeth Bergner at the Neumann Produktion film studio, translated, interpreted and took photographs. She also worked on the staff of the Rote Hilfe newspaper of the German Communist Party for a time.
She studied psychoanalysis from 1924 onwards and later practised lieutenant
When Hitler came to power in 1933, Gyömrői emigrated to Prague. The following year she returned to Budapest and was also expelled by the German Communist Party. In 1956, because the island"s humid climate caused her problems, the couple moved to London.
After being expelled from Romania for her communism, she settled in Berlin in 1923, with her second husband Laszlo Tology (Gluck). She joined the Lanka Sama Samaja Party and in 1947, together with Vivienne Goonewardena and several other women of the LSSP, the Bolshevik Samasamaja Party and the Communist Party, she founded the Eksath Kantha Peramuna (United Women's Front), the first autonomous socialist women's association in the country.