This Day in Celebrity History

Anne Frank Born in Frankfurt Germany 1929

3 min · 12. juni 2026
episode Anne Frank Born in Frankfurt Germany 1929 cover

Beskrivelse

On June 12th, 1929, one of history's most remarkable young women was born in a city-state that would later become one of the most iconic stories of courage during World War Two. Anne Frank entered the world in Frankfurt, Germany, the second daughter of Otto and Edith Frank. Though she would live only fifteen short years, her diary would become one of the most widely read books in the world, translated into more than seventy languages and touching the hearts of millions. Anne's early childhood in Germany was relatively comfortable until the Nazi Party's rise to power forced her Jewish family to make a difficult decision. In 1933, when Anne was just four years old, Otto Frank made the prescient choice to move his family to Amsterdam in the Netherlands, hoping to escape the growing persecution of Jews in Germany. For several years, the Franks built a new life there. Anne attended school, made friends, and enjoyed the normal pleasures of childhood. But history had other plans. When Nazi Germany invaded the Netherlands in May 1940, the relative safety the Franks had found began to crumble. Anti-Jewish decrees followed, restricting where Jewish people could work, shop, and even go to school. Anne had to leave her Montessori school and transfer to the Jewish Lyceum. On her thirteenth birthday, June 12th, 1942, exactly thirteen years after her birth, Anne received a gift that would eventually make her immortal in the pages of history. It was a small diary with a red and white checkered cover. She immediately began writing in it, addressing her entries to an imaginary friend she named Kitty. Just three weeks later, the family would go into hiding in the secret annex behind Otto Frank's business premises on Prinsengracht Street. For twenty-five months, Anne chronicled life in hiding, documenting not just the fear and claustrophobia of their situation, but also the universal experiences of adolescence, her complicated relationships with her mother and sister, her budding romance with Peter van Pels, and her dreams for the future. Her writing revealed a girl of exceptional intelligence, wit, and insight who somehow maintained hope even in the darkest circumstances. Tragically, the annex was raided in August 1944, and Anne was deported to Auschwitz and later to Bergen-Belsen concentration camp, where she died of typhus in early 1945, likely in February or March, just weeks before the camp's liberation. Otto Frank was the only member of the family to survive, and when he returned to Amsterdam, he was given Anne's diary, which had been saved by Miep Gies, one of the helpers who had supported the family in hiding. Otto recognized the power of his daughter's words and worked to have the diary published in 1947. Since then, Anne Frank has become a symbol of both the Holocaust's terrible toll and the enduring power of the human spirit. Her birthdate reminds us that behind the statistics of history's greatest tragedies were individuals with dreams, talents, and voices that deserved to be heard. Some great Deals https://amzn.to/49SJ3Qs For more check out http://www.quietplease.ai

Kommentarer

0

Vær den første til å kommentere

Registrer deg nå og bli medlem av This Day in Celebrity History sitt community!

Prøv gratis

Prøv gratis i 14 dager

99 kr / Måned etter prøveperioden. · Avslutt når som helst.

  • Eksklusive podkaster
  • 20 timer lydbøker i måneden
  • Gratis podkaster

Alle episoder

636 Episoder

episode Dolly the Sheep: The First Cloned Mammal cover

Dolly the Sheep: The First Cloned Mammal

On July 5th, 1996, something extraordinary happened that would forever change the landscape of biological science and capture the imagination of people around the world. This was the day that Dolly the sheep was born at the Roslin Institute in Scotland, though the world wouldn't learn about her remarkable existence until the following year. Now, you might be wondering why a sheep qualifies as a celebrity, but Dolly was no ordinary sheep. She became arguably the most famous animal in scientific history, gracing the covers of magazines, becoming the subject of countless news stories, and even inspiring debates in parliaments and religious institutions across the globe. What made Dolly so special was how she came into existence. She was the first mammal ever to be cloned from an adult somatic cell, meaning scientists had taken a cell from a six-year-old ewe's mammary gland and used it to create an entirely new, genetically identical sheep. The team of scientists, led by Sir Ian Wilmut and Keith Campbell, had essentially achieved what many thought was impossible, turning back the biological clock and proving that specialized adult cells could be reprogrammed to create a whole new organism. The process was incredibly difficult. It took 277 attempts before Dolly was successfully created, highlighting just how groundbreaking and challenging this achievement truly was. She was named after the country music legend Dolly Parton, a choice the scientists made with a bit of humor since the cell was taken from a mammary gland. When news of Dolly's existence was announced to the world in February 1997, it created an immediate sensation. People were simultaneously amazed and worried about what this technology might mean. Could humans be cloned next? What were the ethical implications? Religious leaders weighed in, politicians called for regulations, and science fiction suddenly seemed a lot closer to science fact. Dolly lived for six years at the Roslin Institute, where she became a mother herself the old-fashioned way, giving birth to six healthy lambs and proving that cloned animals could reproduce normally. She lived a relatively normal sheep life, though she was certainly the most photographed and discussed sheep in history. Her life wasn't without controversy though. When she died in 2003 at the age of six, which is younger than the typical sheep lifespan of eleven to twelve years, it sparked debates about whether cloning led to premature aging or health problems. Dolly had developed arthritis and a progressive lung disease, though scientists debated whether these conditions were related to her cloning or just unfortunate circumstances. Today, Dolly's legacy lives on. Her body was preserved and is on display at the National Museum of Scotland in Edinburgh, where visitors can see this history-making sheep up close. She opened the door to countless advances in stem cell research, regenerative medicine, and our understanding of cellular biology. Scientists have since cloned many other animals, and the techniques developed through Dolly's creation have contributed to important medical breakthroughs. So while July 5th might seem like an ordinary summer day, it marks the birthday of one of the most significant celebrities in scientific history, a sheep who changed our understanding of life itself and whose impact continues to resonate in laboratories and ethical discussions around the world nearly three decades later. Some great Deals https://amzn.to/49SJ3Qs For more check out http://www.quietplease.ai

5. juli 20263 min
episode Connors Crushes Borg on America's Bicentennial Birthday cover

Connors Crushes Borg on America's Bicentennial Birthday

On July 4th, 1976, which also happened to be America's bicentennial celebration, something absolutely extraordinary occurred in the world of tennis and celebrity sports history. While the entire United States was wrapped up in fireworks and patriotic festivities marking two hundred years of independence, a young tennis prodigy named Jimmy Connors was busy dominating Wimbledon in a way that few champions ever have. Connors faced Sweden's Björn Borg in the Wimbledon final that day, and what unfolded was nothing short of spectacular. The brash American, known for his fiery temperament and his two-handed backhand, was playing at the absolute peak of his powers. He demolished Borg in straight sets with a score of six to two, six to two, six to three, completing one of the most lopsided Wimbledon finals in the modern era. What made this victory particularly memorable was the contrast between the two players. Borg was the ice-cool Swede with his long blonde hair and his baseline grinding style, while Connors was the aggressive, in-your-face American who rushed the net and talked trash to anyone within earshot. The match itself lasted barely over two hours, and Connors was so dominant that Borg, who would go on to win five consecutive Wimbledon titles starting just a year later, looked almost helpless on that particular day. The timing couldn't have been more perfect for American sports fans. While most Americans were at barbecues and watching Independence Day parades, those who tuned in to watch the Wimbledon final got to see an American absolutely throttle his opponent on the most prestigious tennis court in the world. Connors himself seemed to feed off the energy of the occasion, playing with an intensity and precision that left commentators stunned. This victory was part of what many consider Connors' greatest season. He won ninety-one matches that year and captured three Grand Slam titles. His Wimbledon triumph on America's two hundredth birthday became a defining moment in his Hall of Fame career, cementing his status not just as a tennis champion but as an American sports icon. The celebration that followed was doubly sweet for Connors. He hoisted the golden Wimbledon trophy while America hoisted its metaphorical hat to two centuries of existence. It was one of those rare moments where athletic achievement and national celebration merged into something greater than either could have been alone. For tennis fans and patriots alike, July 4th, 1976 became a date that represented American excellence on the world stage in the most literal sense possible. Some great Deals https://amzn.to/49SJ3Qs For more check out http://www.quietplease.ai

I går2 min
episode Jim Morrison Dies in Paris at Twenty-Seven cover

Jim Morrison Dies in Paris at Twenty-Seven

On July 3rd, 1962, one of the greatest literary voices of the twentieth century breathed his last breath in Ketchum, Idaho. Tom Cruise was born on this date in 1962, but let me tell you about something even more dramatic that happened years earlier on this very day. Actually, let me pivot to something truly spectacular: on July 3rd, 1971, Jim Morrison, the legendary frontman of The Doors, was found dead in a bathtub in Paris at the shockingly young age of twenty-seven. The Lizard King, as he was known, had joined what would become known as the infamous Twenty-Seven Club, that tragic roster of musicians who died at that exact age. Morrison had moved to Paris with his longtime companion Pamela Courson just a few months earlier, seeking refuge from his legal troubles in the United States and hoping to focus on his poetry. He wanted to escape the rock star lifestyle that had consumed him and return to his first love: writing. Paris in the early seventies was the perfect place for an artist seeking reinvention, with its romantic cafes, literary history, and bohemian atmosphere. On that fateful evening, Morrison allegedly attended a movie and then returned to the apartment he shared with Pamela at 17 Rue Beautreillis in the Marais district. The official story, pieced together from Pamela's account, was that Jim took a bath to relax, and she found him unresponsive in the tub. No autopsy was performed, which has fueled decades of speculation, conspiracy theories, and alternative narratives about what really happened that night. The official cause of death was listed as heart failure, though many have questioned this over the years. Some theories suggest a heroin overdose, others point to the possibility that he actually died at a nightclub and was moved back to the apartment. The mystery surrounding his death only amplified his legend. Morrison was buried at Père Lachaise Cemetery in Paris on July 7th in a small, quiet ceremony. Today, his grave remains one of the most visited sites in that historic cemetery, covered in flowers, poems, and tributes from fans around the world who continue to be mesmerized by his dark poetry and shamanistic stage presence. The Doors had created some of the most psychedelic and introspective rock music of the sixties, with Morrison's baritone voice and cryptic lyrics becoming the soundtrack for a generation exploring consciousness and rebellion. Songs like Light My Fire, Riders on the Storm, and The End showcased his ability to blend rock and roll with genuine literary ambition. His death marked the end of an era and completed a tragic trilogy, following the deaths of Jimi Hendrix and Janis Joplin within the previous year. These three losses devastated the music world and seemed to signal the definitive end of the sixties dream of peace and love, replaced by something darker and more uncertain as the seventies began. Some great Deals https://amzn.to/49SJ3Qs For more check out http://www.quietplease.ai

3. juli 20263 min
episode iPhone Launch Changed the World Forever in 2007 cover

iPhone Launch Changed the World Forever in 2007

On June 29th, 1982, one of the most iconic and tragic events in the history of film and television occurred when actress Vickie Lawrence discovered something was terribly wrong with her friend and costar John Belushi... wait, let me correct that. Actually, the truly significant celebrity event on this date takes us to June 29th, 2007, when Apple Inc. CEO Steve Jobs changed the world forever by releasing the very first iPhone to the public. The anticipation leading up to this moment was absolutely electric. When Steve Jobs had unveiled the iPhone six months earlier in January at the Macworld conference in San Francisco, he proclaimed it as three revolutionary products in one: an iPod with touch controls, a revolutionary mobile phone, and a breakthrough internet communications device. The tech world was buzzing, but many industry experts were skeptical. Some called it a toy. Others predicted it would be a massive failure. Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer famously laughed at the idea of a five hundred dollar phone with no physical keyboard. But on that warm June morning, thousands of Apple devotees had camped out overnight outside Apple stores across America. The scenes were remarkable. People brought lawn chairs, sleeping bags, and enough enthusiasm to power a small city. In New York, the line outside the Fifth Avenue Apple Store stretched for blocks. The store opened at six in the evening, and the moment those doors swung open, history was made. The original iPhone seems almost quaint by today's standards. It had a mere two megapixel camera, no app store, couldn't record video, and ran on the painfully slow EDGE network that made downloading anything feel like watching paint dry. It came in just two models: four gigabytes for four ninety-nine or eight gigabytes for five ninety-nine. Yet despite these limitations, it was genuinely revolutionary. The multitouch screen that responded to your fingers like magic, the ability to actually browse the real internet on a mobile device, and that gorgeous interface that made every other phone look like a relic from the stone age. Steve Jobs himself appeared at the Palo Alto Apple Store that evening, surprising customers and soaking in the moment. He knew this was special. Within seventy-four days, Apple sold its millionth iPhone. The device would go on to completely transform not just Apple's fortunes, turning it into the most valuable company on Earth, but would fundamentally reshape human civilization itself. The smartphone revolution that began on this June day changed how we communicate, work, date, navigate, take photos, consume media, and interact with the world around us. Critics who dismissed the iPhone as a luxury gadget for fanboys were eating their words within months. Competitors scrambled to copy the touchscreen interface. Within a few years, physical keyboards on phones were essentially extinct. The iPhone spawned the app economy, created entirely new industries, and put the power of a computer in everyone's pocket. Steve Jobs, with his trademark black turtleneck and jeans, had once again proven his genius for understanding what people wanted before they knew they wanted it. The launch of the first iPhone on June 29th, 2007 stands as one of the most significant product releases in human history, marking the true beginning of the mobile computing era that continues to define our lives today. Some great Deals https://amzn.to/49SJ3Qs For more check out http://www.quietplease.ai

29. juni 20263 min
episode Tyson Bites Holyfield's Ear in Shocking Rematch cover

Tyson Bites Holyfield's Ear in Shocking Rematch

On June twenty-eighth, nineteen ninety-seven, boxing fans around the world were left absolutely stunned when one of the most infamous and shocking moments in sports history unfolded at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas. This was the night that Mike Tyson, the former heavyweight champion known as "Iron Mike," bit off a piece of Evander Holyfield's ear during their highly anticipated rematch. The fight had been billed as "The Sound and the Fury," and it certainly lived up to the fury part, though not in the way anyone expected. The two heavyweights had previously met in November of nineteen ninety-six, when Holyfield pulled off a major upset by defeating Tyson with an eleventh-round technical knockout. Tyson had been desperate for redemption, and the rematch was one of the most anticipated boxing events of the decade. From the opening bell, tensions were running high. Tyson appeared frustrated as Holyfield employed similar tactics to their first fight, including what Tyson perceived as excessive headbutting. A cut opened above Tyson's right eye from an accidental head clash in the second round, which seemed to enrage him further. But nobody could have predicted what would happen next. In the third round, during a clinch, Tyson suddenly bit down on Holyfield's right ear, tearing off a one-inch piece of cartilage. Holyfield jumped back in pain, spitting his mouthpiece out and hopping around the ring. Referee Mills Lane initially didn't realize what had happened, but the evidence was literally on the canvas when the piece of ear was spotted on the ring floor. Lane deducted two points from Tyson but incredibly allowed the fight to continue. However, when action resumed, Tyson bit Holyfield again, this time on the left ear. This second bite caused absolute pandemonium. Lane immediately disqualified Tyson, but chaos erupted in and around the ring. Tyson attempted to continue fighting and had to be restrained. He even tried to get at Holyfield after the disqualification was announced, leading to a melee involving both fighters' entourages, security personnel, and police officers. The aftermath was just as dramatic as the fight itself. Tyson's boxing license was revoked by the Nevada State Athletic Commission, and he was fined three million dollars, which was ten percent of his purse. Holyfield required surgical repair to reattach the piece of cartilage to his ear. The incident became instant global news, spawning countless jokes, parodies, and references in popular culture that persist to this day. What made this moment so significant was that it represented a shocking fall from grace for Tyson, who despite his troubled past, was still considered one of boxing's most compelling figures. The bite heard round the world became a defining moment not just in boxing history, but in the broader landscape of celebrity scandals and sports infamy. It overshadowed both fighters' legitimate athletic accomplishments and became the moment that many people think of first when they hear Mike Tyson's name, at least until his later career reinvention and cultural rehabilitation in recent years. Some great Deals https://amzn.to/49SJ3Qs For more check out http://www.quietplease.ai

28. juni 20263 min