Leni Riefenstahl Biography

Name at birth: Helene Bertha Amalie Riefenstahl

Trained as an dancer, Leni Riefenstahl was an up-and-coming actress in German movies of the 1920s before becoming a film director. She impressed Adolf Hitler so much he put her in charge of filming the 1934 Nazi rally at Nuremberg, as well as the 1936 Olympics in Berlin. The two films, Triumph of the Will (1935) and Olympia (1938) are landmark documentaries, and Riefenstahl is considered one of the great innovators in moving pictures. But she was also accused of being a great propagandist for the Nazis, and it ruined her film career. After World War II she escaped being charged with war crimes (and she was never a Nazi party member), but she remained a controversial figure. Later in her career Riefenstahl turned to still and underwater photography; her 2002 film Impressions Under Water was compiled from footage she took while scuba diving. She lived to be 101, dying in September 2003.

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    Despite her claims that she would stop suing people that made accusations against her regarding her Nazi ties, she sued Nina Gladitz in 1983 and tried to stop the screening of her 1982 documentary film, Time of Silence and Darkness. That film claimed Leni had personally gone to a concentration camp and chosen Gypsies whom she then forced to become "film slaves" for her film Tiefland, with no compensation for their work. Eye witnesses testified Leni hand picked them at concentration camps and that she knew they would be gassed, so Leni lost on that point in court.

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