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Emmy Göring

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Nationality
  
German

Children
  
Edda Goring

Occupation
  
Actress

Movies
  
William Tell

Name
  
Emmy Goring

Books
  
My Life with Goering

Role
  
Actress


Emmy Goring Emmy Gring Wikiwand

Full Name
  
Emma Johanna Henny Sonnemann

Known for
  
Luftwaffe Commander-in-Chief Hermann Goring\'s second wife

Died
  
June 8, 1973, Munich, Germany

Spouse
  
Hermann Goring (m. 1935–1946), Karl Kostlin (m. 1916–1926)

Similar People
  
Hermann Goring, Edda Goring, Carin Goring, Heinrich Ernst Goring, Albert Goring

Emma Johanna Henny "Emmy" Göring (née Sonnemann; 24 March 1893 – 8 June 1973) was a German actress and the second wife of Luftwaffe Commander-in-Chief Hermann Göring. She served as Adolf Hitler's hostess at many state functions and thereby staked a claim to the title of "First Lady of the Third Reich".

Contents

Biography

Emmy Göring Emmy Goring Alchetron The Free Social Encyclopedia

Emmy Göring was born Emma Sonnemann in Hamburg, Germany on 24 March 1893 to a wealthy salesman. After schooling, she became an actress at the National Theatre in Weimar.

Married life

On her marriage to actor Karl Köstlin in late 1916, she became Emmy Köstlin.

Emmy Göring Emmy Gring Wikipedia

On 10 April 1935, she married the prominent Nazi and Luftwaffe chief Hermann Göring, becoming Emmy Göring. It was also Göring's second marriage; his first wife, Carin, had died in October 1931.

Emmy Göring The Daily Profiler How I Became the Great Niece of Emmy Gring

Göring's and her daughter Edda Göring was born on 2 June 1938. Edda was reported as being named after Countess Edda Ciano, eldest child of Benito Mussolini. Time reported: "Herr and Frau Göring became her fast friends." However, in her autobiography, Emmy said her daughter was named after one of her friends.

Emmy Göring Emmy Goring Alchetron The Free Social Encyclopedia

Hermann Göring named his country house Carinhall after his first wife, while referring to his hunting lodge at Rominten (now Krasnolesye) – the Reichsjägerhof – as "Emmyhall".

Emmy was given an unsolicited membership to the Nazi Party during Christmas 1938.

"First Lady of the Third Reich"

Emmy Göring served as Hitler's hostess at many state functions prior to the Second World War. This and her claim to be the "First Lady of the Third Reich" created much animosity between herself and Hitler's mistress, Eva Braun, whom she snubbed and openly despised. Hitler consequently issued angry instructions to Hermann Göring demanding that Emmy treat Eva with more respect; one of the outcomes of Emmy's condescending attitude toward Eva was that she was no longer invited to Hitler's Bavarian retreat, the Berghof. As for Eva Braun, she allegedly never forgave Emmy for having assumed the role of "First Lady of the Reich".

As wife of one of the richest and most powerful men in Europe, she received much public attention, was constantly photographed, and enjoyed a lavish lifestyle well into the Second World War. Her husband owned mansions, estates and castles in Austria, Germany and Poland and was a major beneficiary of the Nazis' confiscation of art and wealth from Jews and others deemed enemies by the Nazi regime. Her husband celebrated their daughter's birth by ordering 500 planes to fly over Berlin (he stated he would have flown 1,000 planes as a salute for a son).

After the end of the war, a German denazification court convicted her of being a Nazi and sentenced her to one year in jail. When she was released, 30 percent of her property was confiscated, and she was banned from the stage for five years, depriving her of a living.

Later years

Some years after her release from jail, Emmy Göring was able to secure a very small flat in a building in the city of Munich and remained there for the rest of her life. In her final years, she suffered from sciatica. She wrote an autobiography, An der Seite meines Mannes (1967), published in English as My Life with Goering in 1972. She died in Munich in 1973.

Emmy Göring is caricatured as the character "Lotte Lindenthal" in Klaus Mann's novel Mephisto: Roman einer Karriere (1936).

Selected filmography

  • William Tell (1934)
  • References

    Emmy Göring Wikipedia