20 February 2020

Sonja Ziemann (1926-2020)

On 17 February 2020, German film and television actress, singer and dancer Sonja Ziemann (1926) passed away at the age of 94. The delicately lovely, dark-haired and innocent-looking Ziemann was one of the first stars of Germany's post-war cinema. She starred in film operettas and Heimatfilms as Schwarzwaldmädel/The Black Forest Girl (1950) and Grün ist die Heide/The Heath is Green (1951). Her private life knew several tragedies.

Sonja Ziemann (1926-2000)
German postcard by Film und Bild, Frankfurt-Main. Photo: Gaza-Studio.

Sonja Ziemann
German collectors card in the "Deutsche Film-Lieblinge" series I.

Sonja Ziemann (1926-2000)
German postcard by Kunst und Bild, Berlin, no. A 1115. Photo: CCC / Gloria / Arthur Grimm. Sonja Ziemann in Meine Schwester und Ich/My Sister and I (Paul Martin, 1954).

Sonja Ziemann (1926-2000)
German postcard by UFA, Berlin-Tempelhof, no. FK 3117. Photo: Joe Niczky / UFA.

Sonja Ziemann
French postcard by Edition P.I., Paris, no. CK-238. French licency holder for UFA, Berlin-Tempelhof. Photo: Klaus Collignon / UFA.

Sonja Ziemann
German postcard by UFA, Berlin-Tempelhof, no. CK-56. Retail price: 30 Pfg. Photo: Arthur Grimm / UFA.

Her mix of naivety, simplicity and good humour


Sonja Alice Selma Toni Ziemann was born in Eichwalde, near Berlin, in Germany in 1926. Her father was a tax consultant.

At age 10, Sonja began to train in ballet and from 1939 on she studied at the ballet school of Tatjana Gsovsky in Berlin. She made her stage debut in 1941 at the Plaza variety Theater and appeared in several revues.

Her film career started a year later and during the war period, she played supporting parts in films like Ein Windstoß/A Blast (Walter Felsenstein, 1942) starring Paul Kemp, Eine kleine Sommermelodie/A little summer melody (Volker von Collande, 1944) and the horror-comedy Spuk im Schloss/Ghost in the Castle (Hans H. Zerlett, 1945) starring Margot Hielscher.

After the war, she appeared in cabarets and worked together with Hildegard Knef, who became a lifelong friend. At the Metropol-Theater in Berlin, she had her first successes as a soubrette in such operettas as 'Die Zirkusprinzessin' (The Circus Princess), 'Nächte in Schanghai' (Nights in Shanghai), 'Chanel Nr. 5' (Chanel No. 5) and 'Die Kinoköniginn' (The Cinema Queen).

The lead role in the Heimatfilm Schwarzwaldmädel/The Black Forest Girl (Hans Deppe, 1950) starring Paul Hörbiger was her breakthrough in the cinema. The public loved her mix of naivety, simplicity and good humour.

The following year she had another huge hit with the film operetta Grün ist die Heide/The Heath is Green (Hans Deppe, 1951) with Rudolph Prack. She won the Bambi award that year, for the most popular German star. For a while, she and her film partner Rudolph Prack were one of the great 'Traumpaare' (Dream Couples) of the German cinema, and they were lovingly nicknamed 'Zieprack'.

Sonja Ziemann
German postcard by Kunst und Bild, Berlin. Photo: Pontus Film. Sonja Ziemann in Die Diebin von Bagdad/The Thief of Baghdad (Karel Lamac, 1952).

Sonja Ziemann
German postcard by Kunst und Bild, Berlin, no. A 813. Photo: Arthur Grimm, Berlin / CCC-Film. Publicity still for Hollandmädel/Dutch Girl (J.A. Hübler-Kahla, 1953).

Sonja Ziemann (1926-2000)
German postcard by F.J. Rüdel, Filmpostkartenverlag, Hamburg-Bergedorf, no. 1101. Photo: Arthur Grimm / CCC Film / Gloria. Sonja Ziemann in Der Zarewitsch/The Little Czar (Arthur Maria Rabenalt, 1954).

Sonja Ziemann (1926-2000)
German postcard by Ufa/Film-Foto, Berlin-Tempelhof, no. FK 1255. Photo: Arthur Grimm / CCC Film / Gloria. Sonja Ziemann in Der Zarewitsch/The Little Czar (Arthur Maria Rabenalt, 1954).

Sonja Ziemann
German postcard by FBZ, no. 550. Photo: Lilo-Photo.

Sonja Ziemann (1926-2000)
German postcard by Kunst und Bild, Berlin-Charlottenburg, no. T 856. Photo: CCC Film. Sonja Ziemann in Der achte Wochentag/Ósmy dzien tygodnia/The eighth day of the week (Aleksander Ford, 1958).

Shelved by the government censors


Sonja Ziemann’s career changed direction with her serious role in the German-Polish post-war drama Der achte Wochentag/Ósmy dzien tygodnia/The eighth day of the week (Aleksander Ford, 1958) with Polish idol Zbigniew Cybulski. The film was based on a story by Marek Hlasko, who later became her second husband.

IMDb writes that it was “the record-breaker among Polish films shelved by the government censors. It waited 25 years for its Polish premiere. The reason for that was the pessimistic look at housing problems in 1950s Warsaw.”

This role was followed by parts in the serious dramas Hunde, wollt ihr ewig leben/Battle Inferno (Frank Wisbar, 1958) starring Joachim Hansen, and Nacht fiel über Gotenhafen/Darkness Fell on Gotenhafen (Frank Wisbar, 1959) with Erik Schumann.

Her later films included the all-star drama Menschen im Hotel/Grand hôtel (Gottfried Reinhardt, 1959) and the title role in the musical comedy Der Traum von Lieschen Müller/The Dream of Lieschen Mueller (Helmut Käutner, 1962). S

he also played in American productions like the Alistair MacLean adventure The Secret Ways (Phil Karlson, 1960) with Richard Widmark, and the war film The Bridge at Remagen (John Guillermin, 1969).

Ziemann was married three times. Her first marriage was with stocking manufacturer Rudolf Hambach from 1952 till 1956. They had one son, Pierre. In 1962 she married the Polish writer, Marek Hlasko. From then on she mostly appeared in the theatre and she was also regularly seen on TV. Tragically her second husband committed suicide in 1969.

Just seven months after the suicide of her husband, her only child, Pierre, died of cancer at the age of 16. In 1974 followed another drama, when her constant companion, Martinius Adolff, perished in an airplane crash. Ziemann was good friends with Pamela Wedekind. Three years after Wedekind's death, she married her husband, French actor and director Charles Regnier. Regnier died in 2001.

In 1984 she was honoured with the German film award Filmband in Gold and in 1998 she had published 'Ein Morgen gibt es immer. Erinnerungen' (There is always a tomorrow. Memoirs). Sonja Ziemann lived for a long time at the Tegernsee, a lake in Bavaria, and in Switzerland. IMDb notes that she later lived in a house for assisted living in Munich because she did not want to live alone in her big house at the Tegernsee. Sonja Ziemann died in a seniors residence in Munich, Germany, on 17 February 2020. She was 94.

Sonja Ziemann in Hollandmädel
German postcard. Photo: CCC (Central Cinema Company Film). Sonja Ziemann in Hollandmädel/Dutch Girl (J.A. Hübler-Kahla, 1953).

Sonja Ziemann in Das Bad auf der Tenne
German postcard. Photo: Arthur Grimm / CCC Film (Artur Brauner) / Schorcht. Sonja Ziemann in Das Bad auf der Tenne (Paul Martin, 1956).

Sonja Ziemann (1926-2000)
German postcard by Kolibri-Verlag, no. 721. Photo: J. Arthur Rank-Film.

Sonja Ziemann (1926-2000)
German postcard by Kolibri-Verlag, Minden/Westf., no. 1865. Photo: Real-Film / Lilo.

Sonja Ziemann
German postcard by Ufa, Berlin-Tempelhof, no. FK 4776. Retail price: 25 Pfg. Photo: Arthur Grimm.

Sonja Ziemann
German postcard by WS-Druck, Wanne-Eickel, no. F 168. Photo: CCC.

Sonja Ziemann
German postcard by Kolibri-Verlag G.m.b.H., Minden (Westf.). Retail price: 25 Pf. Photo: CCC / Schorchtfilm.

Sonja Ziemann
German promotion card by Lux.

Sonja Ziemann (1926-2000)
German promotion card by Lux.

Sonja Ziemann
Belgian postcard by Cox, no. 33.

Sonja Ziemann (1926-2000)
Austrian postcard by D. Hubmann, Wien (Vienna), no. 16. Photo: Arthur Grimm / UFA.

Sources: Filmportal.de, Haus der Geschichte (German), Wikipedia (German and English), and IMDb.

2 comments:

Bunched Undies said...

Quite a beauty! Thanks Bob

Paul van Yperen said...

She certainly was!