From
the memoirs of David Irving
LENI Riefenstahl, film-maker and
photographer, was born in Berlin on
August 22, 1902. She died in
Pöcking, Bavaria, on September 8,
2003, aged 101.

THREE days after visiting Walter
Frentz, I went to see Leni
Riefenstahl. It was July 14, 1989.
Like the later Frau Traudl Junge,
she also effortlessly practiced a two-tier
approach to Hitler's memory, depending on
whom she was with. I make no criticism of
this -- I am well versed now in Germany's
unique criminal law on history. We visited
her in her hillside villa at Pöcking,
south of Munich, where she lived with
Horst ("Horstie") Kettner, her well-built
and youthful protector. I had Sally Cox with me, whom I
had just accompanied up to the
Obersalzberg for only my second
"pilgrimage" -- to quote the Daily
Mail's unhelpful reference to the
first, published thirty years earlier.
Much had been quietly eradicated, but if
you knew where to look into the hillside
scrub you could find the basement windows
of Hitler's ruined Berghof, and the shells
of Göring's and other villas dotted
around the wasted mountain slope. This
time I took in the Eagle's Nest
[Adlerhorst] as well, on the
summit of the Kehlstein, the eyrie built
for the Chief by his then estate manager
Martin Bormann in 1937. We were not
alone, as half a million tourists now
visit the site every year. Almost as soon as we stepped into her
airy open-plan drawing room, Leni
Riefenstahl sensed that she could switch
off the public voice and slip into a
higher gear, while Horstie listened in
admiringly. Her eyes gleamed as she
recalled those early years of Hitler's
empire. She needed no coaxing to offer us
a private showing of her 1934 epic,
Triumph of the Will (at that time
she believed its 1933 predecessor,
Victory of Faith, lost for
ever). "Of
course," she said disarmingly, momentarily
slipping into safety-gear, "I made it at
my own expense and not in any way for the
Nazi Party." I had found in the East
German (communist) archives the year
before the Propaganda Ministry files
documenting the substantial subsidy that
Dr Goebbels had granted for the film, but
I was too well-bred to say anything that
might disturb the mood.
Besides, the film itself was proof: as
the loudspeaker crackled the Horst Wessel
Anthem, the screen filled with the opening
title sequence, hewn from blocks of
MGM-style granite: IM
AUFTRAG DES FÜHRERS, the
blocks of giant stone thundered: "At the
Command of the Führer." Like a guide on a tourist bus, she had
already launched into her running
commentary, but it was vivid and
excitable, and for a documentary film buff
like myself it had a unique interest. "No,
that opening sequence of the Junkers 52
flying over the rooftops of Nuremberg --"
she said. ("-- bringing The Messiah down
from the Heavens --" I chimed in,
irreverently) "that was not my idea." Dreary, ill-recorded music accompanied
one of the most famous documentary opening
shots ever made. She seemed curiously
eager to disown it. "My opening sequence is the shot that
follows, the swastika banner fluttering
outside the attic window." She was like every professional
creative artist or author: somewhere, some
busybody had overruled her all those years
ago, and fifty-five years later it still
rankled. The scene changed and the cheers of
thousands who have doubtless long passed
on and perhaps even later regretted their
enthusiasm, filled her basement room. We
were riding in Hitler's open six-wheeled
Mercedes, right behind him, looking over
his shoulder at the multitudes as he gave
his funny little stiff-armed salute. In those days, it occurred to me, world
leaders could safely ride around in open
cars. "For the next ten minutes," Leni was
saying, "there is no commentary -- just
cheering." That was her idea too. Another thought occurred to me. I had
seen the other camera angles of that
procession, and there was no woman in
Hitler's car. "Ach, nein," she laughed.
"Das hat der Frentz gemacht."
[It was Frentz who filmed
that.] "Walter Frentz?" I exclaimed. "He was
the cameraman in the car? He worked with
you on Triumph of the Will? We were with
him three days ago, and he never mentioned
that." "Mr Irving," said Leni Riefenstahl,
with the voice of somebody explaining the
painfully obvious: "I spent two years in
jail for making Triumph. People
don't usually volunteer that they worked
on that."  [copyright
© David Irving 3007] 
Leni Riefenstahl
index
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