Elisabeth Veronika Mann was born in
Munich,
Germany, the youngest daughter of
Katia Pringsheim and
Nobel Prize winning German author
Thomas Mann. She was of
Jewish descent from her mother's side. Due to her being the granddaughter of
Júlia da Silva Bruhns, she was also of Portuguese-Indigenous Brazilian partial descent. The Mann family left Germany after
Adolf Hitler came to power, moving first to Switzerland. He began to explore the possibility of obtaining citizenship in Austria, Switzerland or
Czechoslovakia. Nonetheless, her "rough and ready" translation was for many years one of the few versions available. On 10 February 1938, Thomas Mann travelled to the United States on a lecture tour. Following the
annexation of Austria on 12 March 1938, he expressed grave concern over the appeasement policy and sought to become a citizen of the United States. In 1941, Thomas Mann and other family members, including Elisabeth Mann Borgese, became citizens of the United States. At the time of her death, Elisabeth Mann Borgese was the last living child of Thomas Mann. This came to prominence with the
Emmy-winning
docudrama TV mini-series
Die Manns – Ein Jahrhundertroman (2001), in which she was shown in interviews with director
Heinrich Breloer on different locations in Europe and the United States where her family once stayed. The
Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung described her appearance in the interviews as "unpretentious, wise and with a winning sense of humor". It marked the first time that she talked extensively about her family, and she agreed that she was the only one of the six children of Mann who felt totally reconciled with the shadow of their father. ==Marriage==