Manasse HerbstManasse Herbst (1 November 1913 – 3 January 1997) was a German-speaking actor and singer.[1] He participated in 416 sold-out performances of the operetta White Horse Inn between 1930 and 1932 in Berlin. During the first half of the 1930s, Herbst had a relationship with the Baron Gottfried von Cramm, who was sentenced in a Nazi propaganda trial.[2] Due to his Jewish background and the Nazi prohibition to perform his job, Herbst fled from Germany in 1936. Later, he became a U.S. citizen. LifeIn 1920, Herbst appeared in the silent movie Papa Haydn as the young son of the composer Joseph Haydn.[3] In 1926 he acted in the silent movie The Son of Hannibal.[4] Between 1930 and 1932, he performed 416 times in the sold-out operetta Im weissen Rössl (White Horse Inn) in the Großes Schauspielhaus of Berlin.[5] It was described as a cultural highlight in the Weimar Republic, which antagonised the Nazis who prohibited it as degenerate art as soon as they came to power in 1933.[6] In 1931, 17-year-old Herbst met the married 21-year-old Gottfried von Cramm in the Berlin nightclub Eldorado when the latter was at the beginning of his career as a tennis champion. They were close friends until Herbst's forced emigration.[7] In April 1937, von Cramm was interrogated by Gestapo about his intimate relationship with Herbst. A rent boy had denounced him and others. For the Nazis, the denunciation of von Cramm was just a minor offshoot of the bigger Blomberg-Fritsch Affair. In an effort to reduce his sentence, von Cramm tried to shorten the duration of his liaison with Herbst to the time before the aggravation of the anti-gay laws that took place in 1935. In an exculpatory statement, he claimed to be blackmailed by Herbst to avoid a harsh sentence for a breach of exchange control regulations.[8][9] von Cramm was sentenced to one year in jail but was released on probation after seven months. His mother had intervened and met Hermann Göring, who was a member of the Rot-Weiss Tennis Club where von Cramm played.[10][11][12] After World War II, Herbst, meanwhile married, visited Germany to thank von Cramm for saving his life. Herbst later lived in Hallandale, Florida, where he died at the age of 83.[13] Silent movies
Theater
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