In the movie, romance quickly blossoms between Maria and George, but in real life nothing was further from the truth. Maria had no particular feelings for the captain, she saved them all for his children. When she met them for the first time, now that was love at first sight, but her love for George took more time to develop.
When he asked her to marry him, she accepted because of the way he proposed, asking for her hand so that someone would take care of the children. Maria was torn between her religious duties at the convent and Georg’s offer of marriage, but in the end even the nuns believed she should tie the knot.
Maria’s Childhood
The real Maria had quite an eventful childhood. She was born on a moving train on the way to the hospital. She was orphaned by the young age of ten. She was then sent to live with a violent uncle, whom she decided to run away from. Maria felt an affinity for the Catholic Church, and naturally found her way to a convent.
Her connection to religion was surprising, since her foster parents were atheists. It’s a good thing that she felt that spiritual pull, otherwise she would have never met the von Trapps and spent her life with them!
More Than She Bargained For
Maria had no idea that she would end up taking care of so many children. When she received the request, she was supposed to serve as a governess for only one of the children who was sick at the time with scarlet fever. After she started working, her responsibilities increased to include all the other von Trapp children as well.
Unbelievably, the von Trapps ended up with ten children, and not just the seven shown in the film. She may have been daunted by the enormous task at first, but she quickly fell in love with each and every child in the house.
Maria The Novelist
Maria, in an effort to show off her poor writing skills, surprised herself and the world when she inadvertently wrote a best-selling novel. The Sound of Music was inspired by her memoir titled “The Story of the Trapp Family Singers”. It was published in 1949 by the J.B. Lippincott Company in Pennsylvania.
When the book gained popularity, Maria made a film deal with German producers, but little did she know that she was signing away her rights to her life story while signing the contract. This bad deal is the reason that Maria and the rest of the von Trapps never received any of the proceeds from the movie that made them famous around the world.
They Already Knew How To Sing
The movie includes a wonderful scene in which Maria shows the children how to deal with problems through singing. In real life, the von Trapp siblings were already accomplished singers and musicians. But Maria does get the credit for convincing the family to share their talent with the world. In an interview with the Washington Post in 1978, Eleonore von Trapp revealed that her father was not sure he wanted his children performing, “but accepted it as God’s will that they sing for others.
It almost hurt him to have his family onstage, not from a snobbish view, but more from a protective one.” The decision seems like a good one, since the family ended up winning first place in the Salzburg Music Festival in 1936.