Hollywood helped Adolf Hitler with Nazis' propaganda drive
Historian Ben Urwand says he has cache of documents that prove
Tinseltown enthusiastically cooperated with Nazis' global propaganda
effort Hollywood is not widely thought of as providing much support to
Hitler's regime, instead producing a wealth of anti-Nazi films during
the Second World War, ranging from Casablanca to The Great Dictator.
But now a young historian says that in the years before the war,
Tinseltown was marching to a very different tune. Ben Urwand, 35 has
written a book,
The Collaboration: Hollywood's Pact With Hitler, in which he cites
documents that prove, he says, US studios acquiesced to Nazi censorship
of their films actively cooperated with the regime's world propaganda
effort.
"Hollywood is not just collaborating with Nazi Germany," Urwand told
the New York Times .
"It's also collaborating with Adolf Hitler, the person and human
being."
Urwand, reportedly a folk musician from Australia who has become a
member of the Society of Fellows at Harvard, said his interest was first
aroused as a student in California when he read an interview with the
screenwriter Budd Schulberg referring to meetings between the MGM boss
Louis Mayer and a representative of the Nazi regime to discuss cuts to
his studio's films.
The book describes many Jewish studio bosses not only censoring films
to suit the regime, but also producing material that could be inserted
into German propaganda films and even financing German weapons
manufacturing.
The collaboration of Hollywood with the regime began in 1930, says
Urwand, when Carl Laemmle Jr of Universal Studios agreed major cuts to
the First World War film All Quiet On The Western Front after riots in
Germany instigated by the Nazi party.
"I would say there were a few shocking moments, probably starting
with the document I discovered in the National Archives in Washington
which explained how MGM was insulating its profits," Urwand told the
Times of London .
"There was a law in Germany that foreign businesses couldn't export
currency. They made an exception for MGM because they were financing the
production of German armaments." After Hitler came to power, the book
details regular studio visits by representatives of the regime,
including Georg Gyssling, the special consul assigned to monitor
Hollywood, who watched films and dictated scene-by-scene requests for
cuts. In June 1939 MGM gave 10 Nazi newspaper editors a tour of its
studio in Los Angeles, and during the 1930s hardly any Jewish characters
appeared in Hollywood films.
Despite some raised eyebrows from other academics over the book's
title, Urwand is unequivocal about it:"Collaboration is what the studios
were doing, and how they describe it."
- The Independent
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