CABARET VILLE
MAGAZINE. P26
CABARET BOOKS
Berlin Cabaret
By Peter Jelavich
Step into Ernst Wolzogen's Motley
Theater, Max Reinhardt's Sound and Smoke, Rudolf Nelson's Chat noir, and
Friedrich Hollaender's Tingel-Tangel. Enjoy Claire Waldoff's rendering
of a lower-class Berliner, Kurt Tucholsky's satirical songs, and Walter
Mehring's Dadaist experiments, as Peter Jelavich spotlights Berlin's
cabarets from the day the curtain first went up, in 1901, until the Nazi
regime brought it down. Fads and fashions, sexual mores and political
ideologies--all were subject to satire and parody on the cabaret stage.
This book follows the changing treatment of these themes, and the fate
of cabaret itself, through the most turbulent decades of modern German
history: the prosperous and optimistic Imperial age, the unstable yet
culturally inventive Weimar era, and the repressive years of National
Socialism. By situating cabaret within Berlin's rich landscape of
popular culture and distinguishing it from vaudeville and variety
theaters, spectacular revues, prurient "nude dancing," and Communist
agitprop, Jelavich revises the prevailing image of this form of
entertainment. Neither highly politicized, like postwar German
Kabarett, nor sleazy in the way that some American and European
films suggest, Berlin cabaret occupied a middle ground that let it cast
an ironic eye on the goings-on of Berliners and other Germans. However,
it was just this satirical attitude toward serious themes, such as
politics and racism, that blinded cabaret to the strength of the radical
right-wing forces that ultimately destroyed it. Jelavich concludes with
the Berlin cabaret artists' final performances--as prisoners in the
concentration camps at Westerbork and Theresienstadt.
This book gives us a sense of what the
world looked like within the cabarets of Berlin and at the same time
lets us see, from a historical distance, these lost performers enacting
the political, sexual, and artistic issues that made their city one of
the most dynamic in Europe.