Hans-Otto Borgmann
Hans-Otto Borgmann (20 October 1901 – 26 July 1977) was a German film music composer during the Third Reich.[1]
Hans-Otto Borgmann | |
---|---|
Born | Hans-Otto Borgmann 20 October 1901 |
Died | 26 July 1977 75) | (aged
Nationality | German |
Occupation(s) | Film director, screenwriter, film producer, actor |
Years active | 1928–1977 |
He joined UFA as a silent film music conductor in 1928, and became head composer by 1931. A melody he had composed for a documentary on Svalbard island and had become well known was taken up by Hitler Youth leader Baldur von Schirach who wrote new lyrics as "Our flag flutters before us", becoming one of the Hitler Youth's anthems.[2]
In 1938 he composed a Großdeutsche Hymne for Schirach[3] which coincided with the Anschluss of Austria.[4]
From 1937 to 1951 he collaborated on a series of films with Veit Harlan. From 1959 to 1971 he withdrew from film popular music to lecture at the Max Reinhardt Theatre and privately compose difficult atonal music.
Film music credits
- When Love Sets the Fashion (1932)
- Quick (1932)
- Man Without a Name (1932)
- Narcotics (1932)
- The Beautiful Adventure (1932)
- The White Demon (1932)
- Spoiling the Game (1932)
- You Will Be My Wife (1932)
- The Cheeky Devil (1932)
- A Door Opens (1933)
- Happy Days in Aranjuez (1933)
- The Star of Valencia (1933)
- Hitler junge Quex. Ein Film vom Opfergeist der deutschen Jugend, 1933.[5]
- Gold (1934)[6]
- Count Woronzeff (1934)
- The Girl from the Marsh Croft (1935)
- The Night With the Emperor (1936)
- Moscow-Shanghai (1936)
- The Unknown (1936)
- Victoria in Dover (1936)
- Tango Notturno (1937)
- The Journey to Tilsit (1939)
- A Hopeless Case (1939)
- Our Miss Doctor (1940)
- Der große König, 1942[7]
- Diesel (1942)
- The Master of the Estate (1943)
- The Buchholz Family (1944)
- Marriage of Affection (1944)
- The Noltenius Brothers (1945)
- An Everyday Story (1948)
- The Great Mandarin (1949)
- How Do We Tell Our Children? (1949)
- Only One Night (1950)
- The Girl from the South Seas (1950)
- Hanna Amon (1951)
- The Deadly Dreams (1951)
- The Chaplain of San Lorenzo (1953)
- The Stronger Woman (1953)
- Consul Strotthoff (1954)
- Island of the Dead (1955)
Songs
- Tango notturno in the film of the same name. The role originally for Marlene Dietrich was given to Pola Negri who popularised Borgmann's song.
Recordings
- Tango notturno, "Ich hab' an dich gedacht", on the album of the same name by Isabel Bayrakdarian (2007). The song is contrasted in the booklet notes by Bayrakdarian's husband and pianist Serouj Kradjian with the Youkali tango, "C'est presque au bout du monde", of Kurt Weill, a Jewish refugee from Nazi persecution at the same time.
References
- The concise Cinegraph: encyclopaedia of German cinema 2009 p52 ed. Hans-Michael Bock, Tim Bergfelder HANS-OTTO BORGMANN "Similar to Max Steiner in Hollywood, composer Borgmann was Germany's foremost exponent of applying the leitmotif technique to film scores during the 1930s and 1940s, ... "
- Baldur von Schirach: "Unsere Fahne flattert uns voran. In die Zukunft ziehn wir Mann für Mann. Wir marschieren für Hitler Durch Nacht und Not"
- Eva Sternheim-Peters Habe ich denn allein gejubelt?: eine Jugend im Nationalsozialismus 2000 "Baldur von Schirach dichtete eine »Großdeutsche Hymne«, die Hans Otto Borgmann vertonte, und die Paderborner Hitlerjugend sang auf einer großen Freudenkundgebung: »Großdeutschland, früher so fern, nun strahlst du hell wie ein Stern. ..."
- Neue Zeitschrift für Musik: NZ. Robert-Schumann-Gesellschaft (Frankfurt am Main, Germany) - 1983 "So erscheint das Autorenpaar Schirach-Borgmann in der Sammlung Unser Liedbuch noch ein zweitesmal 1938 pünktlich zum sogenannten Anschluß Österreichs mit einer Großdeutschen Hymne. "
- Eric Rentschler The ministry of illusion: Nazi cinema and its afterlife 1996 p319
- "Gold". Filmportal.de. Retrieved November 4, 2012.
- Linda Schulte-Sasse Entertaining the Third Reich: illusions of wholeness in Nazi cinema 1996 p333