Michael Thomas Mann (April 21, 1919 – January 1, 1977) was a German-born musician and professor of German literature.
Life
Born in Munich, Michael Mann was the youngest and sixth child of writer Thomas Mann and Katia Mann. His older siblings were Erika, Klaus, Golo, Monika and Elisabeth. He was of Jewish descent from his mother's side. Due to his being the grandson of Júlia da Silva Bruhns, he was also of Portuguese-Indigenous Brazilian partial descent.
He studied viola and violin in Zürich, Paris and New York City.
thumb|Mann's grave at the cemetery of [[Kilchberg, Zürich|Kilchberg in the canton of Zurich, where he is buried in the family grave with his parents and his sisters.]]
He was a viola player in the San Francisco Symphony Orchestra from 1942 to 1947 as well as being a solo viola player. Accompanied by pianist Yaltah Menuhin, he made a concert tour in 1951 and recorded the 1948 Viola Sonata by Ernst Krenek. He was forced to give up professional music due to a neuropathy.
Mann's tour with Menuhin came to an end when he struck her in a fit of rage. He also was physically abusive to his wife Gret.
Mann gained a master's degree in musicology from Duquesne University and a PhD in German literature from Harvard before joining the German faculty at the University of California, Berkeley in 1961.
He died at age 57 in Orinda, California on 1 January 1977. Reported at the time as a heart attack,
