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  1. Helen Deutsch (21 March 1906 – 15 March 1992) was an American screenwriter, journalist, and songwriter. Biography. Deutsch was born in New York City and graduated from Barnard College. She began her career by managing the Provincetown Players.

  2. Helen Deutsch teaches and researches at the crossroads of eighteenth-century studies and disability studies, with particular emphases on questions of authorship, originality, and embodiment across a variety of genres.

  3. Helene Deutsch (née Rosenbach; 9 October 1884 – 29 March 1982) was a Polish-American psychoanalyst and colleague of Sigmund Freud. She founded the Vienna Psychoanalytic Institute. In 1935, she immigrated to Cambridge, Massachusetts, where she maintained a practice. Deutsch was one of the first psychoanalysts to specialize in women.

  4. Mar 17, 1992 · Helen Deutsch, the award-winning screenwriter for "Lili," "I'll Cry Tomorrow" and "The Unsinkable Molly Brown" and co-author of "National Velvet," died on Sunday at her home in Manhattan.

  5. Deutsch, Helen (1906–1992) American screenwriter of such superhits as The Unsinkable Molly Brown, I'll Cry Tomorrow, and National Velvet, who initiated the New York Drama Critics Circle Award.

  6. Oct 21, 2022 · Helene Deutsch (Fig. 15.1) was an eminent psychiatrist and psychoanalyst, the first director of the Training Institute of the Vienna Psychoanalytical Society, and a lecturer at the Boston Psychoanalytic Institute, where she influenced a generation of American psychoanalysts and social scientists.

  7. Helene Deutsch (Fig. 15.1) was an eminent psychiatrist and psychoanalyst, the first director of the Training Institute of the Vienna Psychoanalytical Society, and a lec-turer at the Boston Psychoanalytic Institute, where she influenced a generation of American psychoanalysts and social scientists.