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Love stories with Nazis and Jews? Pass the sick bucket

The centre of these romantic, sentimental stories is an obsession with Nazis

November 3, 2022 13:57
R&J Icarus
3 min read

He’s the ultimate bad boy. Moody, misunderstood and gorgeous in that oh-so-sexy uniform, which sets off his blond hair and smouldering blue eyes. He’s conflicted and confused, self-hating and traumatised by all the evil he’s seen and done, and desperately in need of redemption. Only a woman’s love can save him. Ideally a Jewish woman. Enter Romeo, star-crossed lover… and Nazi.

That probably wasn’t completely the vision of theatre director Max Lewendel when he decided to set Romeo and Juliet in Nazi Germany. In fact he told our reporter that the idea was sparked by “the increasing fascism in the world today”. But the casting call for the play told a different story, one that’s all too familiar from all kinds of media — books, films, fashion, music — flirting with fascism over the decades.

“Sun and moon shine down on star-crossed lovers as a Jewish girl falls for a member of Nazi Youth and the boy questions everything that he was taught to believe,” it gushed, sent out by a casting director who has since been sacked. “They hide their passion and sexuality from their warring families… misadventure, family pride and antisemitism abort and bury the most joyous of beginnings…”

We’ve heard and seen it all before. Remember David Bowie’s Thin White Duke persona, Nazi uniforms worn by glam rock bands on Top of the Pops and Nazi symbols displayed later by punk rockers? The early 1970s saw the sentimental The Summer of My German Soldier, a coming-of-age book written by an American Jewish woman which imagined a Jewish teenager caring for an escaped Nazi prisoner of war. The Night Porter was a film about twisted “love affair” between a concentration camp survivor and a former SS guard. Prince Harry — now reinvented as a soul-searching campaigner against racism — donned a Nazi uniform for a fancy dress party. Nothing says “rebel” and “edgy” better than a swastika armband.

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