Hildegard Frieda Albertine Knef (1925 –2002) was a German
actress, singer and writer. She was billed in some English language films as
Hildegard Neff or Hildegarde Neff.
Knef began studying acting at the age of 14, in 1940 and at
15 became an apprentice animator with Universum Film AG. After she had a
successful screen test, she went to the State Film School at Babelsberg,
Berlin, where she studied acting, ballet and elocution. Hitler's propaganda
minister Josef Goebbels wrote to her and asked to meet her, but Knef's friends
wanted her to stay away from him.
Knef appeared in several films before the fall of the Third
Reich, but most were released only afterward. During the Battle of Berlin, Knef
dressed as a soldier in order to stay with her lover Ewald von Demandowsky, and
joined him in the defence of Schmargendorf. The Soviets captured her and sent
her to a prison camp.
Her reputation in the U.S. was hurt because of her nude
scenes in the German film Die Sünderin (1950) and because at the age of 19 she
fell in love with a Nazi.
During her career, she performed in over 50 films. Nineteen
of her films were produced in different countries other than Germany; the
United States, United Kingdom, France, Italy, Austria and Spain.
Knef died in Berlin where she moved after German
reunification. The Associated Press reported that she died of a lung infection
at the age of 76. Knef smoked heavily for most of her life and suffered from
emphysema.
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