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You think I’m wild? You should see my mother: The Jewish roots of Marianne Faithfull

In the swinging ’60s, Marianne Faithfull lived a life of sex, drugs and rock and roll, and almost ended up paying the ultimate price. But, as she reveals, she wasn’t the first wild child in her extraordinary Jewish family

June 5, 2008 23:00
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French actor Alain Delon, English singer and actress Marianne Faithfull, and English singer Mick Jagger at a meeting with film director Jack Cardiff to discuss his film 'The Girl on a Motorcycle', 1967. (Photo by Express/Hulton Archive/Getty Images)

ByStephen Applebaum, Stephen Applebaum

4 min read

Marianne Faithfull was raised as a Catholic, but the husky-voiced singer says she has her Jewish roots to thank for her acclaimed renditions of the songs of Bertholt Brecht and Kurt Weill. People were astounded when they first heard her perform their work, she recalls — which started her wondering why she had such an innate flair for their music.

“What I decided is that it must be something genetic,” she says. “Like alcoholism or drug addiction.” Her Hungarian grandmother was Jewish and, she says, music by Weill, a cantor’s son, is “very much the tonic scale from the temple”. Faithfull has never been to synagogue or heard the music played there. “But I think there must really be some genetic memory of my Jewish background,” she says wistfully.

English singer Marianne Faithfull releases her new album 'Faithless', March 1978. (Photo by Evening Standard/Hulton Archive/Getty Images)Getty Images

To the anger of both their families, Faithfull’s grandmother married an Austrian aristocrat, Baron Sacher-Masoch (a relative of the author of the notorious masochistic novel, Venus in Furs), when she was 18 years old, and converted to Christianity — a not uncommon occurrence at the time. She says she still attended synagogue on High-holy days. And were it not for her husband’s intervention, she would have had to wear a yellow star after the Nazis came to power in Austria. As someone who thought of herself as a Hungarian patriot, first and foremost, she was as shocked as any other Jew by the Nazi racial laws.

The horrors and degradations of the Second World War did not end when the Russians entered Vienna. The liberators were “hell-bent on rape, destruction, and pillage”, according to her 2007 memoir, Memories, Dreams and Reflections. When a soldier discovered her mother Eva, then a young girl, and her grandmother hiding in a room, he raped her. Her mother then picked up a gun and shot him before he could do the same to her mother.

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Music