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Eva Anna Paula Hitler (née Braun; 6 February 1912 – 30 April 1945) was a German photographer who was the longtime companion and briefly the wife of Adolf Hitler. Braun met Hitler in Munich when she was a 17-year-old assistant and model for his personal photographer, Heinrich Hoffmann .
Hitler was concerned that a relationship with a woman who had left her husband would be politically damaging to him, so the couple parted. Nevertheless, Hitler directed his personal lawyer Hans Frank to handle her divorce. In 1934, after Hitler's rise to power, Reiter met him once more and he again asked her to become his lover. Again she refused.
Himmler was constantly away on party business, so his wife took charge of their efforts—mostly unsuccessful—to raise livestock for sale. After the Nazis seized power in January 1933 , the family moved first to Möhlstrasse in Munich, and in 1934 to Gmund am Tegernsee , where they bought a house.
In 1938, Adolf Hitler and Eva Braun live in Berlin, next door to a Jewish couple, Arny and Rosa Goldenstein. [1] Hitler and Braun have little in common with their historical counterparts, acting more like a stock sitcom husband and wife. Hitler, for example, appears in a golfing sweater and cravat as well as military garb. [5]
Helga Kennedy-Dohrn in the 1955 West German film Der Letzte Akt (Hitler: The Last Ten Days). [73] Yulia Dioshi in the 1971 Eastern Bloc co-production Liberation: The Last Assault. [74] Eléonore Hirt in the 1972 French television production Le Bunker. Marion Mathie in the 1973 British television production The Death of Adolf Hitler. [75]
Hedwig Potthast was born on 5 February 1912 in Cologne, North Rhine-Westphalia as the daughter of a local businessman. [1] After her final Abitur exams at secondary school, and attending a finishing school, [2] she trained as a secretary qualified in foreign languages at the Economic Institute for Interpreters, Mannheim.
Ilse Braun (18 June 1909 – 28 June 1979 [1]) was one of two sisters of Eva Braun.Born in Munich, Ilse was the oldest daughter of school teacher Friedrich "Fritz" Braun and seamstress Franziska "Fanny" Kronberger.
Riefenstahl claimed in her memoir that Hitler made advances on her at their first meeting in May 1932. Her press secretary Ernst Jaeger came with her to the United States in 1938, but did not return to Germany. He published How Riefenstahl became Hitler's girlfriend in the Hollywood Tribune in 1939.