Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Why watching films about an Austrian empress is a German holiday tradition

- This article was adapted from German by Sarah Hucal.

The "Sissi" films are historical tearjerker­s starring actress Romy Schneider. Released 65 years ago, they're still popular today.

Christmas season has arrived in Germany, and this means it's time to watch the Sissimovie trilogy, which tells the story of a young Viennese empress with a radiant smile and gleaming blue eyes. Released in the 1950s, the films by Austrian director Ernst Marischka,starring Romy Schneider as Sissi, have been At the time of their release in divided post-war Germany, the lightheart­ed Sissifilms were balm for the soul of a fractured nation. Today, they remain feelgood holiday classics.

Completely irrelevant to present-day fans is how much the director distorted historical reality. The real-life love story between Elisabeth and FranzJosep­h, the rulers of the Hapsburg Monarchy, was "not even enough for a short film," as the Wiesbadene­r Tagblatt newspaper wrote in 1957, when Austria proudly submitted the third Sissi film to the Cannes Festival.

Yet the critics were mistaken.

A box-office hit

One day after the successful film premiere in Vienna, Austria

in 1955, the first film, Sissi, was released in German cinemas. The story of the charming Bavarian teen who becomes Austrian royalty was followed by two successful movies detailing the young empress's life: Sissi—The Young Empress ( Sissi - Die junge Kaiserin) in 1956, and Sissi—Fateful Years of an Empress ( Sissi - Schicksals­jahre einer Kaisierin) in 1957. The films, which launched German actress Romy Schneider into stardom, were box office hits. Although exact figures are not available, an estimated 25 million moviegoers are said to have seen them.

The plot details the early years of Empress Elisabeth of the Habsburg Empire and is based on the novel of the same name by author Marie Blank-Eismann, which was published in two parts in 1952 in Germany. The book had previously been brought to life as an illustrate­d story in the magazine Blütenrege­nin 1933.

Kitsch and criticism

Critics accuse the films' director of leaning too heavily on kitsch, but others say such accusation­s fall flat. While it's true that the films do not offer an entirely faithful depiction of the Austro-Hungarian monarchy, the basic story is accurate, including the young Elisabeth's rapid alienation from the Viennese court, her enthusiasm for Hungary, her escapades abroad and her dislike of royal life. "I don't want to become empress! I want to live freely without constraint!" says Sissi in the film. Above all, the films brought classic Hollywood elements to European cinema, by telling heart-warming stories with beautiful imagery, thus making their mark on film history.

Eventually, German actress

Romy Schneider became unhappy with the role that made her famous and overshadow­ed her later career. "I loved this role back then," Schneider said. "I was the princess, not just in front of the camera. I was always a princess. But one day I simply did not want to be a princess anymore," she said in an interview later in her life. The actor who played her royal husband, Karlheinz Böhm, complained that the production whisked the audience away to a "pink marzipan pig world," meaning to a kind of cotton-candy fluff. Böhm broke away from his clean-cut image when he played a psychopath­ic murderer in the 1959 film Peeping Tom.

Still today, the enchantmen­t with Sissi lives on. Netflix now plans to make an adaptation of the life of the Austrian empress starring German actress Devrim Lingnau in the leading role. In the homes of many families in Germany and Austria during Christmas celebratio­ns, the monarch couple can be seen on television, filling the time between eating a roast and drinking afternoon coffee.

 ??  ?? Families around Germany and Austria enjoy watching the film trilogy at Christmast­ime
Families around Germany and Austria enjoy watching the film trilogy at Christmast­ime
 ??  ?? getting German audiences in the holiday spirit for decades.
getting German audiences in the holiday spirit for decades.

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