Dance Between Flames,A:Berlin Between the Wars

Dance Between Flames,A:Berlin Between the Wars

by Anton Gill (Author), Anton Gill (Author)

Synopsis

Anton Gill brilliantly recaptures the Berlin of the Twenties and Thirties, where the world's most exotic talents flourished against a background of decadence, corruption, hyperinflation and finally fear. For a few, the Twenties really were golden. Max Reinhardt, Berthold Brecht, Marlene Dietrich, Greta Garbo and Josephine Baker electrified the stage. Berlin became the cabaret capital of the world, just as in the film Cabaret inspired by Christopher Isherwood who was there with Auden and Spender. Harry Kessler rubbed shoulders with Einstein, Kurt Tucholsky with Arthur Koestler; Kurt Weill and Lotte Lenya with Klemperer and Karajan; Grosz, Kandiniky and Kokoschka with the founders of the Bauhaus; Max Schmeling with Anita Berber. Berlin was the Hollywood before Hollywood, where Fritz Lang, Josef von Sternberg, Ernst Lubitsch and Billy Wilder all started their careers. For most Berliners, though, life was harsh. While the rich danced there was fighting on the streets. When the mark crashed those with hard currency lived like princes, but middle-class Germans prostituted their daughters to make ends meet. As the Twenties became the Thirties, politics veered from farce to tragedy in the face of Nazi terror. More and more left for Paris, London or New York. Others threw in their lot with the new regime. Hitler's favourite, Leni Riefenstahl, created in her film of the 1936 Olympics perhaps the greatest piece of propaganda in history. Erich Kastner - best known now for Emil and the Detectives - saw his own books burned by the Nazis. Wilhelm Furtwangler almost destroyed his future. Wernher von Braun developed the rockets that would later bring such havoc to London (though his subsequent work for the USA underpinned the entire Space programme). Nazi victory condemned Berlin to fifty years in the wilderness. This book is perfectly timed to celebrate its return to capital status and its old elan. Anton Gill's most recent books are The Journey back from Hell, a study of the post-war lives of survivors of Hitler's death camps, and Berlin to Bucharest, an account of journeys in the crumbling Eastern bloc. He knows Berlin intimately and has interviewed many of those, now elderly and scattered world-wide, who lived through the period. He lives in London.

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More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 304
Edition: ,First Edition
Publisher: John Murray
Published: 14 Oct 1993

ISBN 10: 0719549868
ISBN 13: 9780719549861