Nisha Rathode (Editor)

Gustaf Gründgens

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Years active
  
1920–1963

Name
  
Gustaf Grundgens


Role
  
Actor

Children
  
Peter Gorski


Full Name
  
Gustav Heinrich Arnold Grundgens

Born
  
22 December 1899 (
1899-12-22
)
Dusseldorf, German Empire

Died
  
October 7, 1963, Manila, Philippines

Spouse
  
Marianne Hoppe (m. 1936–1946), Erika Mann (m. 1926–1929)

Awards
  
German Film Award for Outstanding Individual Achievement: Over All Concept

Movies
  
M, Faust, A Glass of Water, Friedemann Bach, The Tunnel

Similar People
  
Marianne Hoppe, Otto Wernicke, Erika Mann, Will Quadflieg, Peter Lorre

Gustaf gr ndgens in faust 1960 inkl interview auf dvd blu ray kinotrailer filmjuwelen


Gustaf Gründgens (22 December 1899 – 7 October 1963), born Gustav Heinrich Arnold Gründgens, was one of Germany's most famous and influential actors of the 20th century, and artistic director of theatres in Berlin, Düsseldorf, and Hamburg. His career continued unimpeded through the years of the Nazi regime; the extent to which this can be considered as deliberate collaboration with the Nazis is hotly disputed.

Contents

Gustaf Gründgens Gustaf Grndgens der leibhaftige Mephisto NDRde Kultur

His single most famous role was that of Mephistopheles in Goethe's Faust in 1956/57, which is still considered by many to have been the best interpretation of the role ever given.

Gustaf Gründgens Arno Breker Useful Stooges

Günter Gaus im Gespräch mit Gustaf Gründgens (1963)


Early life

Gustaf Gründgens Gustaf Grndgens der leibhaftige Mephisto NDRde Kultur

Born in Düsseldorf, Gründgens attended the drama school of the Düsseldorfer Schauspielhaus after World War I and started his career at smaller theaters in Halberstadt, Kiel, and Berlin.

Career

Gustaf Gründgens Gustaf Grndgens

In 1923 he joined the Kammerspiele in Hamburg, where he also appeared as a director for the first time, collaborating with the author Klaus Mann, the son of Thomas Mann, and his sister Erika. Gründgens, who meanwhile had changed his first name to Gustaf, married Erika Mann in 1926; they divorced three years later.

Gustaf Gründgens Gustaf Grndgens

In 1928 he moved back to Berlin to join the renowned ensemble of the Deutsches Theater under the director Max Reinhardt. Apart from spoken theatre, Gründgens also worked with Otto Klemperer at the Kroll Opera, as a cabaret artist and as a screen actor, most notably in Fritz Lang's 1931 film M, which significantly increased his popularity. From 1932 he was a member of the Prussian State Theatre ensemble, in which he first stood out as Mephistopheles.

Gustaf Gründgens Faustian act Strange Flowers

Gründgens' career continued after the Nazi party came to power: in 1934 he became the Intendant, or artistic director, of the Prussian State Theatre and was later appointed a member of the Prussian state council by the Prussian Minister-President Hermann Göring. He also became a member of the Presidential Council of the Reichstheaterkammer (Theatre Chamber of the Reich), which was an institution of the Reichskulturkammer (Reich Chamber of Culture). In 1941, Gründgens starred in the propaganda film Ohm Krüger and also in Friedemann Bach, a film he also produced. After Goebbels's total war speech on 18 February 1943, Gründgens volunteered for the Wehrmacht but was again recalled by Göring, who had his name added to the Gottbegnadeten list.

Post-war life

Gustaf Gründgens Gustaf Grndgens Film Series 1 nr 66 movie card

Imprisoned by the Soviet NKVD in 1945, Gründgens was released thanks to the intercession of the Communist actor Ernst Busch, whom Gründgens himself had saved from execution by the Nazis in 1943. During the denazification process his statements helped to exonerate acting colleagues, including Göring's widow Emmy and Veit Harlan, director of the film (Jud Süß). Gründgens returned to the Deutsches Theater, later became Intendant of the Düsseldorfer Schauspielhaus, and from 1955 directed the Deutsches Schauspielhaus in Hamburg. He again performed as Mephistopheles; the 1960 film Faust by Peter Gorski was made with the Deutsches Schauspielhaus ensemble.

Personal life

Gründgens married Erika Mann in 1926; the marriage ended after three years. From 1936 to 1946, Gründgens was married to the famous German actress Marianne Hoppe in what was widely seen as a lavender marriage.

Death

On 7 October 1963, while traveling around the world, Gründgens died in Manila of an internal hemorrhage. It has never been ascertained whether or not he committed suicide by an overdose of sleeping pills. His last words, written on an envelope, were, "I believe I have taken too many sleeping pills; I feel a bit weird, let me sleep ." He is buried at the Ohlsdorf Cemetery in Hamburg.

Mephisto judgement

Posthumously, Gründgens was involved in one of the most famous literary cases in 20th-century Germany as the subject of the novel Mephisto by his former brother-in-law Klaus Mann, who had died in 1949. The novel, a thinly veiled account of Gründgens's life, portrayed its main character, Hendrik Höfgen, as having shady connections with the Nazi regime. Gründgens's adopted son and heir Peter Gorski, who had directed Faust, successfully sued the publisher on his late father's behalf in 1966. The judgment was upheld by the Federal Court of Justice in 1968.

In the time-consuming lawsuit, the controversy over libel and the freedom of fiction from censorship was finally decided by the Federal Constitutional Court in 1971. It ruled that Gründgens's post-mortem personality rights prevailed and upheld the prohibition imposed on the publisher. However, the novel met with no further protests when it was published again in 1981 by Rowohlt.

In 1981 the novel was made into the film Mephisto, directed by István Szabó, with Klaus Maria Brandauer in the role of Hendrik Höfgen. The film was a huge commercial and critical success, and won the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film in 1981.

More Alchetron Topics

Filmography

Actor
1960
Faust as
Mephistopheles / Lustige Person
1960
Das Glas Wasser as
Sir Henry St. John
1941
Friedemann Bach as
Friedemann Bach
1941
Ohm Krüger as
Chamberlain
1938
Tanz auf dem Vulkan as
Komödiant Debureau
1937
Love in Stunt Flying as
Jack Warren
1936
A Woman of No Importance as
Lord George Illingworth
1935
Pygmalion as
Professor Higgins
1935
Das Mädchen Johanna as
King Charles VII
1935
Hundert Tage as
Fouché
1934
Inheritance in Pretoria as
Eugen Schliebach
1934
So endete eine Liebe as
Count Metternich
1934
Schwarzer Jäger Johanna as
Dr. Frost
1933
The Tunnel as
Woolf
1933
Der Tunnel as
Mr. Woolf - Tunnel Syndicate Director
1933
Die schönen Tage von Aranjuez as
Alexander
1933
Une histoire d'amour as
Baron von Eggersdorf (as Gustave Grundgens)
1933
Playing at Love as
Baron von Aggersdorf (as Gustaf Gruendgens)
1932
Teilnehmer antwortet nicht as
Fahrlehrer
1932
Die Gräfin von Monte-Christo as
Der 'Baron' Hochstapler
1931
Yorck as
Karl August Fürst von Hardenberg
1931
Luise, Königin von Preußen as
König Friedrich Wilhelm III
1931
The Theft of the Mona Lisa as
Der Unbekannte (as Gustav Gründgens)
1931
M as
Schränker
1931
Danton as
Robespierre
1930
Brand in der Oper as
Otto van Lingen
1930
Va Banque as
John James Brown - Privatdetektiv
1930
Hokuspokus as
Dr. Wilke
1930
Never Trust a Woman as
Jean
Director
1964
Totentanz (TV Movie) (theatre director)
1964
Don Gil von den grünen Hosen (TV Movie) (theatre director)
1960
Faust (uncredited)
1941
Friedemann Bach (supervision)
1940
Zwei Welten
1939
The False Step
1937
Love in Stunt Flying
1934
The Grand Duke's Finances
1933
The Town Stands on Its Head
Producer
1941
Friedemann Bach (executive producer)
1940
Zwei Welten (executive producer)
1939
The False Step (executive producer)
Writer
1962
Die Banditen (TV Movie)
1934
The Grand Duke's Finances (screenplay)
Soundtrack
1960
Das Glas Wasser (performer: "Party-Chanson")
Self
2000
Ich tret' aus meinem Traum heraus (TV Movie documentary) as
Self (archive material)
1963
Zur Person (TV Series) as
Self
- Gustaf Gründgens (1963) - Self
1953
Aus der Proben-Arbeit für 'Kätchen von Heilbronn' (TV Short documentary) as
Self
Archive Footage
2022
Der letzte Flug - Ein deutsches Geheimnis (TV Mini Series documentary) as
Self
- Flucht (2022) - Self
2018
Die Hamburg-Story (TV Mini Series documentary) as
Self
- Wiederaufbau (2018) - Self
2016
ZDFzeit (TV Series documentary) as
Self
- Wir Nachkriegskinder - Zeit des Aufbruchs (2016) - Self
2014
From Caligari to Hitler: German Cinema in the Age of the Masses (Documentary) as
Self
2004
René Deltgen - Der sanfte Rebell (TV Movie documentary)(uncredited)
2003
Unsere Besten (TV Series) as
Mephisto
- Das große Lesen (2004) - Mephisto
- Wer ist der größte Deutsche? (2003) - Mephisto
2004
Fritz Lang, le cercle du destin - Les films allemands (TV Movie documentary) as
Schränker (in "M") (uncredited)
2002
Das Jahrhundert des Theaters (TV Series) as
Self
- Blick zurück nach vorn (2002) - Self
- Spiele der Diktaturen (2002)
2001
Die Manns - Ein Jahrhundertroman (TV Mini Series) as
Self
- Teil 1 (2001) - Self (uncredited)
2000
Tanz mit dem Tod: Der Ufa-Star Sybille Schmitz (TV Movie documentary)
1999
Television Under the Swastika (TV Movie documentary) as
Self - at Karinhall with Hans Frank (uncredited)
1963
Vorbei - ein dummes Wort! (TV Movie documentary) as
Self
1958
It Only Happened Once as
Self - Gustav Gründgens
1941
Wir erinnern uns gern as
Selbst / Self

References

Gustaf Gründgens Wikipedia