Bettina Moissi
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Bettina Moissi | |
---|---|
Born | 15 October 1923 Berlin German Empire |
Ethnicity | Albanian father; Austrian mother |
Occupation | Film actress Stage actress |
Years active | 1947 - 1950 (film) |
Spouse(s) | Heinz Berggruen |
Children | 2 Olivier Berggruen Nicolas Berggruen |
Parent(s) | Alexander Moissi Maria Moissi |
Bettina Moissi (born October 15, 1923) is a German stage and film actress. She played the female lead in the 1948 film Long Is the Road, the first German film to portray the Holocaust.
Contents
Biography
Moisses was born in Berlin in 1923, the only child of leading stage actor Aleksandër Moisiu, a Christian of Albanian descent and his first wife, Maria Moisiu/Moissi, who was from Vienna. Her father was often branded as Jewish due to his name (which translates as "Moses") and his outspoken defense of his fellow Jewish actors and people during a period of growing anti-semitism.[1][2][3][4] She is Catholic but was married to the Jewish Heinz Berggruen.[5]
Personal life
In 1960, she married the art collector Heinz Berggruen. They had two children:[6]
- Olivier Berggruen, curator at the Kunsthalle called Schirn Schirn Kunsthalle Frankfurt in Frankfurt, Germany; and
- Nicolas Berggruen, a financier and art collector.
Selected filmography
- In Those Days (1947)
- Der Apfel ist ab (1948)
- Long Is the Road (1948)
- The Orplid Mystery (1950)
References
- ↑ The Jacobean: "Alexander Moissi, Non-Jewish Actor, Indicts Christian World for its Persecution of the Jew" page 5 | December 4, 1931 | "As a Christian, states Moissi, he cannot stand by and see the virus of anti-semitism infect Christian people, nations, and states, robbing them of all semblance of humanity and justice."
- ↑ Becoming Austrians:Jews and Culture between the World Wars By Lisa Silverman Although actor Alexander Moissi was not Jewish, many assumed he was because of his name..."
- ↑ Bernard Shaw's Letters to Siegfried Trebitsch By George Bernard Shaw, Siegfried Trebitsch page 335 | In February, 'Too True' opened in Manheim with Alexander Moissi (not a Jew) in the leading role and was disrupted by Nazi shouts of "Jew Moissi" "Jew Shaw" until police intervened.
- ↑ Jews and the Making of Modern German Theatre edited by Jeanette R. Malkin, Freddie Rokem page 76 | "The appeal and success of some non-Jewish foreign actors among German audiences, however, was due at least in part to their foreignness. Such was the case with star actor Alexander Moissi, whose German was tinged with an "Italian singsong, which fascinated many."
- ↑ Der Spiegel: "Seinen Geist am Leben erhalten" by Ulrike Von Knöfel and Martin Doerry (in German) "Meine Mutter ist katholisch, mein Vater jüdisch" / My mother is Catholic, my father is Jewish
- ↑ New York Times: "Heinz Berggruen, Influential Picasso Collector, Dies at 93" By ALAN RIDING February 27, 2007
Bibliography
- Shandley, Robert R. Rubble Films: German Cinema in the Shadow of the Third Reich. Temple University Press, 2001.
External links
Categories:
- Pages using infobox person with unknown parameters
- Infobox person using ethnicity
- Infobox person using religion
- Articles with hCards
- No local image but image on Wikidata
- 1923 births
- Living people
- German film actresses
- German people of Albanian descent
- German people of Austrian descent
- German stage actresses
- Actresses from Berlin
- 20th-century German actresses