Uhl was the daughter of Friedrich Uhl, editor of the
Wiener Zeitung, and Maria Uhl (née Rieschl), a Catholic. She met Swedish playwright
August Strindberg in early 1893, when she was only 20; they soon married and she at once tried to organize a production of his work in England, and took his financial affairs in hand. They had a daughter, Kerstin. Strindberg did not approve of the active role Frida was taking in his business affairs, and the marriage ended in divorce in 1895. German playwright
Frank Wedekind was the father of Frida's second child
Friedrich. She sent her children to be cared for by her parents. With a later lover, the poet
Hanns Heinz Ewers, she started the first German cabaret in 1900. She was closely involved with several writers of the
Young Vienna movement, such as the poet
Peter Altenberg for whom she organized a subscription, and the journalist
Karl Kraus, whom she convinced to sponsor a reading of Wedekind's ''
Pandora's Box.'' Her affair with the writer
Werner von Oesteren was particularly stormy. She threatened him on two separate occasions with a revolver. Details of this relationship were made public in 1905 when she sued him for harassing a detective she had hired to follow him. In 1908 she fired a gun in a Viennese hotel on New Year's Day. It is unclear whether this was a suicide attempt; she had recently written a number of suicide notes. The event caused a great scandal as
Karl, 5th Prince Fugger von Babenhausen was a guest at the party. She fled to London. On 26 June 1912, she opened
The Cave of the Golden Calf, a nightclub decorated by
Wyndham Lewis,
Charles Ginner, and
Spencer Gore.
Ezra Pound complimented her on her acumen. Other frequent guests of the establishment included
Katherine Mansfield,
Ford Madox Ford, and
Augustus John. In 1914, she left for the United States, where she quickly secured a job with
Fox Film. In 1933–1934, Uhl published the work
Strindberg and His Second Wife under the pseudonym Frida Strindberg, articulating her version of the marriage between her and August Strindberg. The translation into Swedish was by Karin Boye, with whom Uhl collaborated in Berlin. In 1937, she published the memoir
Marriage with Genius. She spent her last years in her family's summer residence at
Mondsee and died there at the age of 71 in 1943. ==References==