On
Show: Riefenstahl ReduxBy
ANNE THOMPSON POTSDAM,
Germany (AP) -- For the first time in
Germany, a museum has organized a
retrospective of the controversial work
of Leni Riefenstahl, filmmaker,
photographer and Nazi-era
propagandist. The
show has brought record numbers of
visitors to the Film Museum, which was
crowded on a recent weekday with people
of all ages checking out the stages of
Riefenstahl's life and career: Her
early obsession with mountain climbing.
Her fascination with Adolf
Hitler's charisma. Her artistic
innovations and quest for visual
perfection, which reached a high point
with the Nazi masterpiece, "Triumph of
the Will," renowned and despised as the
best propaganda film ever
made. Riefenstahl
was a pariah after the war but regained
respect with her photographs of the
African Nuba tribe. Now 96, she
remains
under scrutiny
for her past. Was she a fascist or a
visionary, an artist ignorant of
politics, as she claims, or a knowing
aide to the terror of the Third
Reich? Fifty
years after the war, enough time has
passed for a comprehensive exhibition
that lets Germans decide for
themselves. Other
German exhibits have showcased
Riefenstahl's work, mostly alongside
other Nazi propaganda or art from the
Nazi period. A private art gallery in
Hamburg last year mounted a show of her
Nuba photos without reference to her
work for Hitler, drawing protests from
Jewish groups that the gallery was
glorifying a Third Reich
criminal. So
far, the show at the Film Museum in
Potsdam, a city on the outskirts of
Berlin, has been protest free --
apparently because of its bald
presentation of Riefenstahl's Nazi
films in context with her entire
career. Some
observers see the exhibit as part of a
discussion going on in Germany about
how the nation can be "normal,"
conscious and reflective of its fascist
past without feeling defined by guilt.
Centered mostly on plans for a national
Holocaust memorial, the discussion got
louder with the recent election of
Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder, the first
leader too young to be burdened with
memories of World War II. "It
has become normal to deal with the Nazi
period the way historians do -- neither
pointing to the guilt nor making it a
perverse, sensationalized attraction,"
says Bernhard Schulz, cultural
editor of the daily Berlin newspaper
Tagespiegel. Organizers
of the Film Museum show say it gives
older Germans a chance to consider
Riefenstahl anew while at the same time
introducing her to younger generations
that might know her name but not her
work. The
rarely seen "Triumph of the Will," for
example, is one of four Riefenstahl
films being shown from start to finish
on televisions at the beginning of the
exhibit. Her
idealized depiction of the 1934 Nazi
party rally at Nuremberg -- with its
tremendous goose-stepping parades
and round-cheeked children giving
flowers to Hitler -- is banned in
Germany unless presented with facts
of the Holocaust. The museum offers
one of the first public viewings of
a film until now seen almost
exclusively in postwar Germany in
university classrooms or excerpted
in documentaries. Show
coordinator Ines Walk says she
was looking for ways to explore the
relationship between art and politics
when she started planning the
Riefenstahl exhibit two years ago. She
also was thinking of the year 2000 and
how Riefenstahl's extraordinary life
reflects the passing
century. Riefenstahl
was a dancer -- with swooping, Isadora
Duncan-like moves -- when she saw one
of Arnold Fanck's silent films
set in the mountains. She presented
herself to him as his new star, and he
accepted, as much for her
high-cheekboned beauty as her daredevil
spirit. She rock climbed barefoot for
the camera and was buried in an
avalanche for the death scene in the
1926 film "Mountain of Destiny." Soon,
she was making her own films, fairy
tales celebrating Germany's Alpine
mystique in which she was star,
screenwriter and director. She heard
Hitler speak for the first time in 1932
and wrote to him -- again, offering her
talents to a powerful, inspirational
man. She believed, almost until the
end, that he was helping the
country. |
2.As
the Fuehrer's filmmaker, she was the
only woman to help shape the rise of
the Third Reich. And yet she insists,
against all plausibility, that she knew
nothing about the Holocaust while it
was happening. This has always been her
claim: She was an artist not a
Nazi. She
made "Triumph of the Will" only because
Hitler asked her; she tried to resist,
but how could she? She also made
"Olympia," about the 1936 Berlin
Olympic games, a gorgeous meditation on
muscle and movement suggesting the
athletic master race of Hitler's
fantasies. It also presented the Nazis
to the world as peaceful and
tolerant. Riefenstahl
says she regrets those films, largely
because they made her life miserable.
She never made another film after the
war, turning instead to still
photography in Africa and under the
sea, taking up scuba diving at age 72.
The Allies and eventually Germany
cleared her as a Nazi, yet she is
widely held responsible for helping
Hitler seduce the German public with
her hypnotic films. Despite
-- or perhaps because of -- her
notorious image, Riefenstahl has a
certain pop star status outside of
Germany. She photographed Rolling
Stones' Mick Jagger and his
wife, Bianca, in the 1970s. Clips from
"Olympia" appear in music videos. Leni
Riefenstahl computer screen savers can
be found on the Internet. She attended
Time magazine's 75th anniversary
gala earlier this year and has received
several honors for lifetime
achievement. With
500 visitors a day, the Film Museum
show could signal that Riefenstahl's
popularity is growing in her native
country. Some visitors say the
exhibit's many historical documents
and photos from the war increased
their empathy for
Riefenstahl. "It's
so easy for us to judge today, but you
really have to try to put yourself back
in those times," says Uta
Kutzer, 60, of Berlin. "How do you
know you'd have done any better? How do
you know you wouldn't have done the
exact same as Leni
Riefenstahl?" Today,
Riefenstahl lives just outside Munich
but has not yet seen her first German
retrospective. Her health is poor, and
she wanted to make sure the show was
well-received by the public before
coming to Potsdam, show coordinator
Walk says. For
now, she appears at the Film Museum in
the 1993 documentary about her life,
"The Power of Pictures: Leni
Riefenstahl," which is on view. (Shown
in the United States, it's called "The
Wonderful, Terrible Life of Leni
Riefenstahl.") At
the end, documentary-maker Ray
Mueller tells Riefenstahl he thinks
the German public is still waiting for
her to apologize, to admit guilt for
her role in the Third Reich. "What
am I guilty of?" she asks, angered. "No
words of anti-Semitism ever passed my
lips, nor did I write any. I was never
anti-Semitic and never joined the Nazi
party. So what am I guilty of, tell me
that?" Copyright
1998 The Associated
Press. |
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