Leni Riefenstahl | |||||||
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Born | Helene Bertha Amalie Riefenstahl August 22, 1902 Berlin, Germany |
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Died | September 8, 2003 (aged 101) Pöcking, Germany |
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Years active | 1925 - 1954, 2002 | ||||||
Spouse(s) | Peter Jacob (1944-1947) Horst Kettner (2003-death) |
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Helene Bertha Amalie "Leni" Riefenstahl (August 22, 1902 – September 8, 2003) was a German film director, actress and dancer widely noted for her aesthetics and innovations as a filmmaker. Her most famous film was Triumph des Willens (Triumph of the Will), a propaganda film made at the 1934 Nuremberg congress of the Nazi Party. Riefenstahl's prominence in the Third Reich along with her personal friendships with Adolf Hitler and Joseph Goebbels thwarted her film career following Germany's defeat in World War II, after which she was arrested but never convicted of war crimes.[1] Riefenstahl later published her still photography of the Nuba tribes in Africa and made films of marine life.
Triumph of the Will gave Riefenstahl instant and lasting international fame. Although she made but eight films, only two of which received significant coverage outside of Germany, Riefenstahl was widely known throughout the rest of her life. The propaganda value of her films made during the 1930s repels most commentators but many film histories cite the aesthetics as outstanding.[2][3][4][5] The Economist wrote that Triumph of the Will "sealed her reputation as the greatest female filmmaker of the 20th century."[6]
After her death, the Associated Press described Riefenstahl as an "acclaimed pioneer of film and photographic techniques."[7] Der Tagesspiegel newspaper in Berlin noted, "Leni Riefenstahl conquered new ground in the cinema."[8] The BBC said her documentaries "were hailed as groundbreaking film-making, pioneering techniques involving cranes, tracking rails, and many cameras working at the same time."[9]
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Riefenstahl was born in the working-class neighbourhood of Wedding in Berlin to Bertha (nee Sherlach) and Alfred Riefenstahl.[10] Bertha was the youngest of 18 children and a seamstress who had put aside her dreams of becoming an actress to support her widowed father and then marry Riefenstahl, a businessman.[10] Riefenstahl was born at home and was called "Leni" from an early age. As Alfred's business expanded, the family became solidly middle-class.[10] Riefenstahl also had a brother, Heinz, who was three years younger, and the family moved frequently around Berlin. The family bought a weekend house an hour outside of Berlin which they would travel to on weekends, and Riefenstahl developed a lifelong love of nature there.[10]
Riefenstahl took dancing lessons and attended dance academies from an early age and began her career as a self-styled and well-known interpretive dancer, traveling around Europe and working with director Max Reinhardt in a show funded by Jewish producer Harry Sokol.[11][12] After injuring her knee while performing in Prague, she saw a nature film about mountains and became fascinated with the possibilities of this sort of film.[13] She went to the Alps to meet the film's director, Arnold Fanck, hoping to secure the lead in his next project.[13] Instead, Riefenstahl found an actor who had starred in Fanck's films, who wrote to the director about her.
Riefenstahl went on to star in many of Fanck's mountain films as an athletic and adventurous young woman with a suggestive appeal; she became an accomplished mountaineer during the winters of filming on mountains and learned filmmaking techniques.[13] Riefenstahl went on to have a prolific career as an actor in silent films. She was popular with the German public and highly regarded by directors. Her last acting role before becoming a director was the 1933 U.S.-German co-production SOS Eisberg (U.S. title SOS Iceberg), produced and distributed by Universal Studios. One of her fans at this time was Adolf Hitler.[6] Riefenstahl accompanied Fanck to the 1928 Olympic Games in St. Moritz, where she became interested in athletic photography and filming.[13] She also lost the lead role in 'The Blue Angel to her neighbor, Marlene Dietrich.[14]
When presented with the opportunity to direct Das Blaue Licht (The Blue Light) (1932), she took it. Breaking from Fanck's style of setting realistic stories in fairytale mountain settings, Riefenstahl -- working with leftist screen writers Béla Balázs and Carl Mayer -- filmed Das Blaue Licht as a romantic, wholly mystical tale which she thought of as more fitting to the terrain.[1] She co-wrote, directed and starred in the film and produced it under the banner of her own company, Leni Riefenstahl Productions.[13] Das Blaue Licht won the Silver Medal at the Venice Biennale and played to full audiences all over Europe.[13] However, it was not universally well-received, for which Riefenstahl blamed the critics, many of them Jewish.[15] Upon its 1938 re-release, the names of co-writer Béla Balázs and producer Harry Sokal, both Jewish, were removed from the credits; some reports claim this was at Riefenstahl's behest.[16][15] Riefenstahl received invitations to travel to Hollywood to create films, but she refused the offers to stay in Germany with a boyfriend.[1]
Riefenstahl heard presidential candidate Adolf Hitler speak at a rally in 1932 and was mesmerized by his talent as a public speaker. Describing the experience in her Memoiren, Riefenstahl wrote: "I had an almost apocalyptic vision that I was never able to forget. It seemed as if the earth's surface were spreading out in front of me, like a hemisphere that suddenly splits apart in the middle, spewing out an enormous jet of water, so powerful that it touched the sky and shook the earth."[17]
According to the Daily Express of 24 April 1934, Leni Riefenstahl had read Mein Kampf during the making of Das Blaue Licht. This newspaper article quotes her as having commented, "The book made a tremendous impression on me. I became a confirmed National Socialist after reading the first page. I felt a man who could write such a book would undoubtedly lead Germany. I felt very happy that such a man had come."[18] She wrote to Hitler requesting a meeting.[11]
Hitler already admired Das Blaue Licht and during the personal meeting he asked Riefenstahl, whose career had stalled,[19] to direct the 1933 film Der Sieg des Glaubens (Victory of Faith), an hour-long feature about the fifth Nazi Party rally at Nuremberg in 1933 (released on DVD in 2003). By that point, Jewish filmmakers had been banned from their trade and others had fled to other countries, which created a vacuum in talent.[13] Riefenstahl directed the film after returning from Greenland, where she starred in her last film for Fanck, SOS Iceberg.[13] During the filming of SOS Iceberg, co-stars later recalled Riefenstahl immersing herself in Hitler's works, including Mein Kampf.[13] Ernst Röhm was featured in the film but when he was murdered during the purge of the SA (Night of the Long Knives), Der Sieg des Glaubens became a political embarrassment.[20] Riefenstahl was not happy with the film, either.[16]
Nonetheless impressed with Riefenstahl's work, Hitler asked her to film the upcoming 1934 Party rally in Nuremberg, the sixth such rally.[13] At first, according to Riefenstahl's memoir, she resisted and did not want to create further Nazi films; instead, she wanted to direct a feature film based on Hitler's favorite opera, Eugen d'Albert's Tiefland. Riefenstahl received private funding for the production of Tiefland, but the filming in Spain was derailed. Hitler was able to convince her to film Triumph instead, on the condition that she not be required to make further films for the party.[17] She also told Hitler she wanted the freedom to act again: "I would not be able to go on living if I had to give up acting."[17]
The resulting chronicle of the Nuremburg rally, Triumph of the Will (named by Hitler),[21] was generally recognized as a masterful, epic, innovative work of documentary filmmaking. Triumph of the Will became a rousing success in Germany. However, it was widely banned in America as a propaganda film for the Nazi Party; a copy was kept at the Museum of Modern Art and shown to a select few, including Charlie Chaplin.[22] The film won many international awards[13] as a ground-breaking example of filmmaking and is widely regarded as one of the most effective pieces of propaganda ever produced. It made Riefenstahl the first female film director to achieve international recognition.[11]
In interviews for the 1993 film The Wonderful, Horrible Life of Leni Riefenstahl, Riefenstahl adamantly denied any deliberate attempt to create pro-Nazi propaganda and said she was disgusted that Triumph of the Will was used in such a way.[1]
Despite again vowing not to make any more films about the Nazi Party,[16] in 1935, Riefenstahl made the 18-minute Tag der Freiheit: Unsere Wehrmacht (German for Day of Freedom: Our Armed Forces), a lesser-known film about the German Wehrmacht. Like Der Sieg des Glaubens and Triumph of the Will, this was made at the annual Nazi Party Nuremberg Rally. Over a million Germans had participated in the 1934 rally in Nuremberg and later, yearly rallies held there got even bigger. The 1935 rally is noted for pronouncements about the status of Jews in Germany.[23] These became known as the Nuremberg Laws, which for Jews in Europe would soon become matters of life and death. Riefenstahl denied making this film until a copy was found in 1971.[12]
In 1936, Hitler invited Riefenstahl to film the Olympic Games in Berlin, a film which Riefenstahl claimed had been commissioned by the International Olympic Committee.[21][24] She also went to Greece to take footage of the games' original site at Olympia, where she was aided by Greek photographer Nelly's. This material became Olympia, a successful film which has since been widely noted for its technical and aesthetic achievements.[13] She was one of the first filmmakers to use tracking shots in a documentary, placing a camera on rails to follow the athletes' movement, and she is noted for the slow motion shots included in the film.[21] Riefenstahl's work on Olympia has been cited as a major influence in modern sports photography.[25] Although Joseph Goebbels told Riefenstahl to ignore non-Aryan athletes at the Games, Riefenstahl filmed competitors of all races, including African-American Jesse Owens in what would later become famous footage.[21][19] She also conducted an affair with American gold medalist Glenn Morris, whom she thought she would marry.[17] Riefenstahl appeared on the cover of American Time magazine on February 17, 1936 for their Olympic coverage.[26]
Olympia was very successful in Germany after it premiered for Hitler's 49th birthday in 1938,[11] and its international debut led Riefenstahl to embark on an American publicity tour in an attempt to secure commercial release.[22] In 1937, Riefenstahl told a reporter for the Detroit News: "To me, Hitler is the greatest man who ever lived. He truly is without fault, so simple and at the same time possessed of masculine strength."[5] She arrived in New York City in November 1938, five days before Kristallnacht; when news of the event reached America, Riefenstahl maintained that Hitler was innocent.[13] Walter Winchell declared her "as pretty as a swastika."[27] Invitations for her appearances in Hollywood were suspended, and Riefenstahl's publicity tour dissolved into disaster as she drew protests.[13] Riefenstahl later said that a planned run for the film at Radio City Music Hall was cancelled in the uproar.[22] In California, Walt Disney was one of the few who agreed to meet with her, although only in private.[21] She also met with Henry Ford.[15] Ads taken out in the trade press by the Hollywood Anti-Nazi League for the Defense of American Democracy proclaimed: "There is no room in Hollywood for Leni Riefenstahl."[22]
After the Goebbels Diaries surfaced, researchers learned that Riefenstahl had been friendly with Joseph Goebbels and his wife, Magda, attending the opera with them and coming to the Goebbels' parties.[5] However, Riefenstahl maintained that Goebbels was upset that she had rejected his advances[15] and jealous of her influence on Hitler, seeing her as an internal threat; therefore, his diaries could not be trusted. By later accounts, Goebbels thought highly of Riefenstahl's filmmaking but was angered with what he saw as her overspending on the Nazi-provided filmmaking budgets.[15]
During the Invasion of Poland, Riefenstahl was photographed in Poland wearing a military uniform and a pistol on her belt in the company of German soldiers;[28] she had gone to the site of the battle as a war correspondent.[16] On 12 September 1939 she was in the town of Końskie when 30 civilians were executed there, in retaliation for an alleged attack on German soldiers.[29] According to her memoir, Riefenstahl tried to intervene but a furious German soldier held her at gunpoint and threatened to shoot her on the spot. She claimed she did not realize the victims were Jews.[15] Closeup photographs of a distraught Riefenstahl survive from that day.[15] Nevertheless, by 5 October 1939, Riefenstahl was back in occupied Poland filming Hitler's victory parade in Warsaw.[29] She left Poland[16] and apparently chose not to make any Nazi-related movies after this, however.[14]
On June 14, 1940, the day Paris was declared an open city by the French and occupied by German troops, Riefenstahl wrote to Hitler in a telegram, "With indescribable joy, deeply moved and filled with burning gratitude, we share with you, my Führer, your and Germany's greatest victory, the entry of German troops into Paris. You exceed anything human imagination has the power to conceive, achieving deeds without parallel in the history of mankind. How can we ever thank you?"[30][29] She later explained: "Everyone thought the war was over, and in that spirit I sent the cable to Hitler."[16] Riefenstahl was friends with Hitler for 12 years, and reports vary as to whether she ever had an intimate relationship with him.[31] According to Hitler's spokesman, Ernst Hanfstaengl, Riefenstahl had attempted to initiate a relationship early on and was turned down by Hitler.[19] For whatever reason, her relationship with Hitler had declined by 1944, when her brother Heinz died on the Russian Front of the war.[14]
After the Nuremberg rallies trilogy and Olympia, Riefenstahl began work on the movie she had tried and failed to direct once before, Tiefland. On Hitler's direct order the German government paid her 7 million reichsmarks in compensation.[32] From September 23 until November 13, 1940 she filmed in Krün near Mittenwald. The extras playing Spanish women and farmers were drawn from gypsies (Sinti) detained in a camp at Salzburg-Maxglan who were forced to work with her. Filming at the Babelsberg Studios near Berlin began 18 months later in April 1942 and lasted into summer. This time Sinti and Roma from the Marzahn detention camp near Berlin were compelled to work as extras.[33] A surviving document from camp Marzahn shows a list of 65 inmates who were ordered to serve in the production.[34] 50 stills from the filming in Krün near Mittenwald were later found and from these, surviving prisoners were able to identify 29 camp inmates who worked for Riefenstahl and were then deported to Auschwitz-Birkenau in the first weeks of March 1943 following Himmler's December 1942 decree.[35][36] To the end of her life, despite overwhelming evidence that stated that concentration camp occupants had been forced to labor unpaid on the movie,[19] Riefenstahl continued to maintain all the film extras survived and that she had met them after the war.[37] Riefenstahl sued a filmmaker, Nina Gladitz, who said Riefenstahl personally chose the extras at their holding camp; Gladitz had found one of the Gypsy survivors and matched his memory with stills of the movie for a documentary Gladitz was filming.[38] The German court found for Gladitz, agreeing that Riefenstahl had known the extras were from a concentration camp, and they agreed with Riefenstahl on only one count (finding that Riefenstahl had not informed the Gypsies that they would be sent to the Auschwitz camp after filming was completed).[38]
After similar statements by Riefenstahl were objected to by Rom groups in Germany, on her 100th birthday the Frankfurt prosecutor's office opened an investigation into whether Riefenstahl had denied the Holocaust; however, the investigation was dropped within a few months due to lack of evidence and Riefenstahl's age.[16]
Riefenstahl married Peter Jacob on March 21, 1944, shortly after she introduced him to Hitler in Kitzbühel, Austria (they divorced in 1946).[13] It was the last time she saw Hitler.[16]
In October 1944, the production of Tiefland moved to Barrandov Studios in Prague for interior filming. Lavish sets made these shots some of the most costly in the film but they were finished within days. The film would not be edited and released until almost 10 years later.
As Germany's military collapsed in the spring of 1945, Riefenstahl left Berlin[13] and was hitchhiking with a group of men, trying to reach her mother, when she was taken into custody by American troops. She walked out of a holding camp, beginning a series of arrests and escapes across the chaotic landscape. At last making it back home on a bicycle, she found that American troops had seized her house, then was surprised by how kindly they treated her.[39]
Writer Budd Schulberg, assigned by the US Navy to the OSS for intelligence work while attached to John Ford's documentary unit, was ordered to arrest Riefenstahl at her chalet in Kitzbühel, Austria, ostensibly to have her identify the faces of Nazi war criminals in German film footage captured by the Allied troops. Screenwriter Schulberg had previously protested Riefenstahl's 1938 Hollywood visit.[11] Riefenstahl claimed she wasn't aware of the nature of the internment camps. According to Schulberg, "She gave me the usual song and dance. She said, 'Of course, you know, I'm really so misunderstood. I'm not political.'"[40] However, when Riefenstahl later claimed she had been forced to follow Goebbels' orders under threat of being sent to a concentration camp, Schulberg asked her why she should have been afraid if she didn’t know concentration camps existed.[15] When shown photographs of the camps, Riefenstahl reacted with horror.[13]
Riefenstahl continued to maintain she was "fascinated" by the National Socialists but politically naïve and ignorant about any war crimes.[41] From 1945 through 1948 she was held in sundry American and French-run detention camps and prisons along with house arrest[39] but although Riefenstahl was tried four times by various postwar authorities, she was never convicted in a denazification trial either for her alleged role as a propagandist or for the use of concentration camp inmates in her films. However, she was found to be a "fellow traveler" who was sympathetic to the Nazis.[24][16]
Riefenstahl later said that her biggest regret was meeting Hitler: "It was the biggest catastrophe of my life. Until the day I die people will keep saying, 'Leni is a Nazi', and I'll keep saying, 'But what did she do?'"[13] She won more than 50 libel cases against people accusing her of knowledge of the Nazis' crimes.[14]
Most of the negatives for Riefenstahl's finished films and other production materials relating to her unfinished projects were lost towards the end of the war. The French government confiscated all of her editing equipment, along with the production reels of Tiefland. After years of legal wrangling these were returned to her, but the French government had reportedly damaged some of the film stock whilst trying to develop and edit it and a few key scenes were missing (although Riefenstahl was surprised to find the original negatives for Olympia in the same shipment). She edited and dubbed what elements were left and Tiefland premiered on 11 February 1954 in Stuttgart, however, it was denied entry into the Cannes Film Festival.[39] Although Riefenstahl lived for almost another half century, Tiefland was her last feature film.[42]
Riefenstahl tried many times (15 by her count)[13] to make films during the 1950s and 1960s but was met with resistance, public protests and sharp criticism. Many of her filmmaking peers in Hollywood had fled Nazi Germany and were unsympathetic to her.[13] Although both film professionals and investors were willing to support her work, most of the projects she attempted were stopped owing to ever-renewed and highly negative publicity about her past work for the Third Reich.[39] In 1956, inspired by Ernest Hemingway's 1935 novel Green Hills of Africa, she began an ambitious film project in Africa drawn from another novel called Schwarze Fracht (Black Freight).[14] Whilst scouting shooting locations, she almost died from injuries received in a truck accident. After waking up from a coma in a Nairobi hospital, she finished writing the script there, but was soon thoroughly thwarted by uncooperative locals, the Suez Canal crisis and bad weather (only test shots were ever made).
In 1954, Jean Cocteau insisted on Tiefland being shown at the Cannes Film Festival, which he was running that year.[11] Cocteau greatly admired the film.[24] In 1960, Riefenstahl unsuccessfully attempted to prevent filmmaker Erwin Leiser from juxtaposing scenes from Triumph of the Will with footage from concentration camps in his film Mein Kampf.[13] Riefenstahl had high hopes for a collaboration with Cocteau called Friedrich und Voltaire, wherein Cocteau was to play two roles. They thought the film might symbolize the "love-hate relationship" between Germany and France. Cocteau's illness and 1963 death put an end to this project.[39] A musical remake of The Blue Light with L. Ron Hubbard also fell through.[27]
In the 1960s, Riefenstahl became interested in Africa from Hemingway's book and from the photographs of George Rodger.[24] Rodger, who had taken the first photographs of the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp, refused to help Riefenstahl meet Africans, citing their backgrounds.[24] Riefenstahl took up photography, documenting a diverse array of subjects. She traveled many times to Africa[29] to photograph the Nuba tribe in Sudan, with whom she sporadically lived, learning about their culture so she could photograph them more easily.[39] They readily accepted her since they knew nothing of her past.[14] She began a lifelong companionship with her cameraman Horst Kettner, who was 40 years her junior and assisted her with the photographs; they were together from the time she was 60 and he was 20.[43]
Her books with photographs of the tribe were published in 1974 and 1976 as The Last of the Nuba and The Nuba of Kau and were successful.[29] While heralded by many as outstanding colour photographs, they were harshly criticized by Susan Sontag, who claimed in a review that they were further evidence of Riefenstahl's "fascist aesthetics".[44] She also sold her pictures to German magazines for income.[39] She photographed the 1972 Olympic Games in Munich and rock star Mick Jagger and his wife Bianca for the Sunday Times.[11] Years later, she was similarly photographed with Las Vegas entertainers Siegfried and Roy. She befriended Andy Warhol and was a Guest of Honour at the 1976 Olympic Games in Montreal.[13]
At age 72, Riefenstahl began pursuing underwater photography, after lying about her age to gain certification for scuba diving (she claimed she was 52). In 1990, she published a book of her below-water photographs, Wunder unter Wasser (Wonder under Water).[13] On August 22, 2002, her 100th birthday, Riefenstahl released a film called Impressionen unter Wasser (Underwater Impressions), an idealized documentary of life in the oceans.[29] She was the oldest scuba diver in the world at this time.[24]
She survived a helicopter crash in Sudan in 2000 while trying to learn the fates of her Nuba friends during the Sudanese civil war.[14]
In 2003, at the age of 101, Riefenstahl married Kettner.[45]
Leni Riefenstahl died in her sleep on the late evening of September 8, 2003 at her home in Pöcking, Germany, a few weeks after her 101st birthday. She had been suffering from cancer. She was buried in the Waldfriedhof cemetery in Munich.
In his book The Story of Film, film scholar Mark Cousins claims, "Next to Orson Welles and Alfred Hitchcock, Leni Riefenstahl was the most technically talented Western film maker of her era."
Reviewer Gary Morris called Riefenstahl "an artist of unparalleled gifts, a woman in an industry dominated by men, one of the great formalists of the cinema on a par with Eisenstein or Welles."[46] Pauline Kael called Triumph and Olympia "the two greatest films ever directed by a woman."[43]
The Guardian reported in April 2007 that British screenwriter Rupert Walters was writing a movie based on Riefenstahl's life which would star actress Jodie Foster.[29] The project had been in the works for more than seven years under the working title The Leni Riefenstahl Project.[47] The project is co-produced by Primary Pictures and Foster's own Egg Pictures.[47] Foster said in 1999, "There is no other woman in the 20th century who has been so admired and vilified simultaneously."[47] The project had not been able to capture Riefenstahl's consent while she was alive, since Riefenstahl requested the ability to veto any scenes she didn't agree with; Riefenstahl also preferred Sharon Stone as the star of the movie rather than Foster.[29][48] Both Foster and Madonna had sought the rights to Riefenstahl's autobiography since the early 1990s.[11] Director Paul Verhoeven corresponded with Riefenstahl about a separate film biography.[48]
In translation:
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Persondata | |
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NAME | Riefenstahl, Leni |
ALTERNATIVE NAMES | Riefenstahl, Helene Berta Amalie |
SHORT DESCRIPTION | German film director, dancer and actress |
DATE OF BIRTH | August 22, 1902 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Berlin, Germany |
DATE OF DEATH | September 8, 2003 |
PLACE OF DEATH | Berlin, Germany |