Johannes Heesters Dead: Nazi-Era Performer Dies At 108

Johannes Heesters Dead

By GEIR MOULSON   12/24/11 12:51 PM ET   AP

BERLIN -- Dutch-born entertainer Johannes Heesters, who made his name performing in Adolf Hitler's Germany and was dogged later in his long career by controversy over his Nazi-era past, died Saturday, his agent said. He was 108.

The tenor Heesters made his debut on the big stage at the Volksoper in Vienna, Austria in 1934. His career took off in Berlin where, starting in 1935 – two years after the Nazis took power – he became a crowd favorite at the Komische Oper and Admiralspalast.

He gained fame by appearing in films such as "Die Leuchter des Kaisers" ("The Emperor's Candlesticks") and "Das Hofkonzert" ("The Court Concert").

Despite his popularity in the Third Reich, Heesters was never accused of being a propagandist or anything other than an artist willing to perform for the Nazis, and the Allies allowed him to continue his career after the war, when he took Austrian citizenship.

Heesters died early Saturday at the hospital in the southern city of Starnberg, where he had been cared for while being in critical condition for several days, his agent Juergen Ross said.

In Heesters' native Netherlands – which was occupied by Germany for most of the war – some viewed him as irredeemable given his appearances under the Nazi regime.

In February 2008, he braved protests to perform in the Netherlands for the first time in 44 years at a theater in his native Amersfoort.

In his previous attempt, in 1964, he was booed off the stage in Amsterdam when he tried to appear as the Nazi-hating Captain Von Trapp in "The Sound of Music."

Heesters said it gave him a "heavy heart" to know he was "not wanted in my homeland."

"What did I do wrong? Sure, I acted in films in the Third Reich, entertainment films, which distracted countless people inside and outside Germany from daily life during war," he wrote later about the reception he received.

"Sure, I wanted to make my career and I remember well at the time how many people in the Netherlands were proud that I made a career in the huge neighboring country," he added. "But apart from my career – and the fact that, through no fault of my own, Adolf Hitler was one of the fans of my art – what have I done?"

Critics focused on a visit Heesters made to the Dachau concentration camp in 1941.

In December 2008, Heesters lost a court attempt to force a German author to retract allegations that he sang for SS troops there.

Heesters maintained he had been ordered to go to Dachau by the Nazis in an attempt to deceive the public about what was really going on there, but said the alleged performance "never happened."

But Berlin author Volker Kuehn cited an interview with former Dachau inmate Viktor Matejka where the prisoner recalled "I pulled the curtain for him, I was there, I saw him singing."

Around the time of the court case, Heesters was shown on a Dutch television show saying that Hitler was "a good guy." His wife, Simone Rethel, immediately intervened, saying that Hitler was the worst criminal in the world.

"I know, doll," Heesters responded. "But he was nice to me."

Rethel protested after the clip was aired, telling Dutch papers that he had been tricked into making the remarks, and that the program had cut out other parts of the interview where Heesters condemned the Nazi regime.

Heesters continued to be a popular performer in Germany well into his old age, making regular appearances on television and on stage. He made 1,600 appearances in his best-known role, as Count Danilo in Franz Lehar's operetta "The Merry Widow," and 750 as Honore in the musical "Gigi."

At age 98, he put health problems such as knee and appendix operations behind him to perform in Chekhov's "The Cherry Orchard." As he turned 105 in 2008, Heesters was performing in a musical comedy in Hamburg.

"To have nothing to do, to sit there waiting for little aches and pains, is fundamentally wrong," he once wrote. "Life has to be lived."

Heesters was born Dec. 5, 1903 in the Dutch city of Amersfoort, the youngest of four sons of a businessman. His first wife, Dutch actress Louisa Ghijs, died in 1983. The couple had two daughters, Wiesje and Nicole.

Heesters married his second wife, German actress Rethel, in 1992.

___

Juergen Baetz contributed to this report.

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08:28 PM on 01/04/2012
I happen to be serious classic film fan .Part of this is the golden age of German film making.Some parts of the silent Wiemar period, 33 and 45 and after ward.My cut off period is the 1960. I'm a Johannes Heesters fan as well as a fan of Hienz Ruhmann,Marika Rokk and Zarah.But I am aware of what happen in history.Many performers were passively anti Nazi.Brigiite Horney. Paul Wegner would disguise himself at night and write insults against Hitler on the building walls.Olga Tschykowa brother was involved in an attemped to asassinate Hitler. Gerthe Wieser , character actress, resisted joining the Nazi party.Even Zarah when she went home to Sweden on breaks eventually gave secrets to the Russians about Hitler, although they weren't really that important.She was accused of being a communist after the war and was not allowed to do her concert tours in the U.S. in 1951.I had forgiven Johannes and others for their mistakes to begin with. I got no problem with them
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
LalaSmiles
03:24 PM on 12/31/2011
Srsly - HP?
so if comments are not to an admin's personal taste, they are erased? Liberty and justice for all - No? Freedom of speech - No?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
LalaSmiles
03:19 PM on 12/31/2011
Our government took the brightest nazi scientist under their wings and wiped the slate clean! We had Wernher von Braun developed "our" NASA program....when we are pointing a finger at others, 3 fingers are pointing back at us. How many of those guys lived/live in our neck of the woods, without any repercussions.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
LastAngryWoman
waiting for godot
01:04 PM on 12/28/2011
Really? HP? Not a single one of my replies were ordained acceptable?

How about this one: Albert S. should have been set free immediately. He was wrongly convicted by Nuremberg.
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Cactus Cat
Pissed-off liberal chick
06:29 PM on 12/27/2011
Leni Riefenstahl lived to be over 100 also. Why do these evil, unrepentant pigs get to live so long when so many other, better souls get taken away so young.
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Want2knowY
02:59 PM on 01/05/2012
Remember the Billy Joel song? Only the good...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MichaelFroemel
Star Trek fan from Germany
09:37 AM on 12/27/2011
He was a beloved entertainer here in Germany. The nazi thing was well known but let's be serious - it was almost 70 years ago. He was a naive young man with no clue about politics. All he wanted was a career. In the last decades he was just known as the (very) old man singing musical numbers from a lost era. Heut geh'n wir ins Maxim...
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Want2knowY
03:01 PM on 01/05/2012
FYI, he was in his 30's and 40's during the period you refer to. Not that young.
08:54 PM on 12/26/2011
It is so hard to judge a performing artist by his/her politics, but it's a nice hobby if you can't really judge his music. Playing in a restaurant or theater does not necessarily mean that a performer endorses the owner's politics; he was just getting paid for his talent, and NOT volunteering to appear for nothing at the rally for his favorite candidate. Well, that's it for the democratic point of view; performing publicly within a totalitarian regime is a whole different game of cards.. As an artist, you are a piece of tissue paper and if a dictator wants to wipe a stage with you, you do not dare say NO. The regime may even command you to sing verses written to glorify the "Dear Leader", and saying NO is the easiest way to turn a sore throat into a fatality. After all these years, knowing the deck was stacked, who really can say if an artist who even wrote a song to praise a tyrant wrote it sincerely or just as a play for survival. I say talented people have a hard enough time getting ahead in their precarious and demanding careers. Why add still more burdens? Think about this when you hear a Mexican ranchero group sing praises of a drug gang.
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Cactus Cat
Pissed-off liberal chick
06:32 PM on 12/27/2011
I disagree completely. There were PLENTY of artists and performers who refused to collaborate under that and other hateful regimes. They emigrated, they worked publicly against the regime and financed the underground resistance. Just because you consider yourself an artist and try to make your living doing your art doesn't mean you HAVE to accept sponsorship by people who commit genocide.
07:07 PM on 12/27/2011
Surprizingly, I agree with you. Yes, plenty of people did not want to use their talents and/or education to benefit or glorify Naziism, Communism, Saddam Hussein, Moamar Gadhaffi, Kim Jung Il, etc., etc. Yes, they DID emigrate, join resistance movements, or even give up their performing careers. Don't forget Pete Seeger, American, who was banned because he opposed the war in Vet Nam. BUT, I was talking about people who CANNOT escape, cannot emigrate,and who are captives of the regimes decent people despise. Try to imagine what would have happened if Pete Seeger had been a German citizen, unable to emigrate, who sang songs that expressed his opposition to the Nazi invasion of Poland? Banned, my foot, he'd be DEAD, and probably his family, too. Please read my comment again. As I said, performing inside a totalitarian regime is a whole different deck of cards.
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LastAngryWoman
waiting for godot
12:48 PM on 12/28/2011
Wow, that's kinda fuzzy logic, ain't it?

Could I use that for any number of other situations?

Such as...Well...it WAS over 70 years ago...and just because someone was good at architecture and knew nothing about politics, doesn't mean he shouldn't have worked closely with a mass-murderer and built the mass-murderer's dreams and visions into concrete. because he was "scared". because he "didn't know any better". amirite? AMIRITE?

nOT according to the court in Nuremburg, tho. Apparently they thought he deserved 20 years in prison. Huh.
01:35 PM on 12/28/2011
Each case is different, and in the one you refer to, I agree with the Court's sentence in Nuremberg. However, over and over, I see repliers who simply do not understand what it is like to live under a totalitarian police state. The majority of people, whether they are performers or not, CAN"T GET OUT. If they could, there would be no dictatorship. So to ask, "Why didn't Herr and Frau Johann Schmidt just leave?" is to show little understanding of the hand-to-mouth economic situation of most citizens; they simply did not have the means to flee. We can also say that about people who could not get out of the way of floods, forest fires and earthquakes. Most of the victims are people who can least afford to get out ; while the rich see the writing on the wall and have the money for travel and relocation. Many Germans, wealthy enough to vacation abroad, never came back to Germany after the Nazis seized power. But definitely, somebody who designed concentration camps for Hitler is just as guilty as that madman.
07:14 PM on 12/26/2011
Let's see, he lived to 108 in a nation that has "socialized medicine"???? How is that possible Newt?How is that possible Mit? How is that possible Sean Hannity?
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Waterlooboy
Alba gu Bràth
08:17 PM on 12/26/2011
Socialized medicine had nothing to do with his longevity. If he had lived in the US he would have had Medicare for 43 years.
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Margo Arrowsmith
Elizabeth Warren in 2016!
12:20 PM on 12/27/2011
Exactly!  We now have two examples of socialized medicine working!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Margo Arrowsmith
Elizabeth Warren in 2016!
12:20 PM on 12/27/2011
Fanned and faved.  This and Medicare are two examples of socialized medicine working.
06:11 PM on 12/26/2011
This guy is condemned yet George Bush who created a fictitious war where over a hundred thousand Americans, allies and Iraqis have died still walks the earth a free man.
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Margo Arrowsmith
Elizabeth Warren in 2016!
12:22 PM on 12/27/2011
Fanned and faved because AMEN!  Not one of us knows what we would have done had we been a young person then and there.  We know what we hope we would have done, but not what we would have done. 


Bush on the other hand, we know exactly what he did when he had a chance to be decent and did the opposite for family revenge and money for his friends.
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fratricide08
Yellow Dog Democrat
02:22 AM on 12/26/2011
Heesters made a "Devil's Bargain" in return for fame and fortune. Whether he made this bargain before knowing what Hitler's then new regime was all about or after doesn't really matter since once everyone knew he made no effort to escape or resist. Even the idea that if he got into it unknowingly and was too far in it to get out--trapped by the relationships he'd formed with Hitler and other SS officials--doesn't wash because some things are simply too horrible not act and Heesters never did try to flee or resist. And for that he will always be remembered as either a coward or a collaborator.
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UCBAlum
I love not man less, but nature more
03:04 AM on 12/26/2011
That sounds rather harsh and I'd like to know how it is you think you know Heester's motivations.

Not everyone who didn't speak up is complicit in murder or war crimes or made a Faustian bargain. Those were different times and I'm more skeptical of monday morning quarterbacking 70 years removed than I am of people who did what they had to do to either survive or live their lives.
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fratricide08
Yellow Dog Democrat
04:52 AM on 12/26/2011
Then you propose he was a mere coward? That was one of the options I offered.
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CandyRaptor
Malia Obama 2044!
02:51 PM on 12/26/2011
When faced with life or death, most people choose life.
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LastAngryWoman
waiting for godot
12:57 PM on 12/28/2011
Well, to put a finer point on it...they choose THEIR life. Not the lives of others, though, right? What you're saying is, when faced with life or death, most people choose life...of their OWN...they choose death if it's someone else.
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rvtgr8
Your boots are made out of WHAT?
12:20 AM on 12/26/2011
If there is no solid evidence that the man was a sympathizer, then let him rest in peace. There are too many people who want to condem people just for being German and alive during these times. Would we condem the baker for allowing his bread to feed the members of the SS? Entertainers had to survive along with doctors, plumbers, masons, bakers and anybody else in their country at the time. It is too simplistic to make broad sweeping judgements about something that happened nearly 80 years ago. Trust the US intelligence of the day that viewed him as safe.
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Curt F
Well, this is another fine mess you got me into...
12:19 AM on 12/26/2011
I lived in Germany for 9 years and speak the language fluently. Mr. Heesters was very popular in Germany. Believe me, if the post-WWII Germans or Austrians thought that Mr. Heesters was a Nazi sympathizer, they would have not given him 1 sec to entertain.
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Moti
Guns 'n Moses
12:17 AM on 12/26/2011
Boy, I'm glad HP clarified things with that front page headline, otherwise I might have confused Heesters with all those non-controversial Nazi entertainers like, you know, er...
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syds180turn
Independent and Proud of It!
09:57 PM on 12/25/2011
We can all say what we would have done during that era sitting here in 2011 not having to worry about such a brutal murderous regime. However, knowing what we know about the Third Reich and how they killed millions of innocent people with swift and barbaric efficiency, can we honestly say that we wouldn't have done anything to survive? Hitler and his psychotic thugs not only dispatched Jews, they killed anyone who they deemed inferior and this included other Germans. So maybe this guy performed for Hitler and his SS but it was probably go along and survive or resist and die. Hitler was a psychotic, murderous megalomaniac with no conscience...no remorse...no gauge for right and wrong, and this man was an entertainer and he entertained and that shouldn't have been held against him. I'll say this again, we all have basic survival instincts and we will do whatever we have to in order to survive and that hasn't changed one bit in our natural evolution.
12:29 AM on 12/26/2011
Eh I can't quite buy that. I'm sure he was a decent guy, and it seems he was frustrated that others could not get past that which he had already gotten past. That said, if it really was a choice between appeasing the Nazis and death (and I highly doubt he was in any sort of mortal danger), and he chose life, it goes with the territory that this sort of thing should haunt him for the rest of his life.
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syds180turn
Independent and Proud of It!
11:42 AM on 12/26/2011
I'm part German and I know the history. Living under the Third Reich was dangerous for anyone because the Nazi's could turn on a dime on anyone they felt were against them. They were barbaric and evil to the core...do I know this guy personally...no. But, I know Germany's history under Hitler and it had to have been Hell...for anyone.
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Want2knowY
03:05 PM on 01/05/2012
He didn't do what he did to SURVIVE, he did it to THRIVE professionally. There is a difference.
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Joebudgie
09:42 PM on 12/25/2011
I don't know anything about the man other than what this article tells me. From this information he seemed to be a nice guy. He certainly was dedicated to his craft and the world is poorer for his passing. RIP old man.