The news on
February 16th that Bruno Ganz had died transported me back to another February ten
years ago. We were living in Italy at the
time and had come up to Berlin for the International Film Festival. We were staying in a shabby chic hotel in Charlottenburg,
a bourgeois, leafy (but not at that time of the year!) residential neighborhood
that was spared the worst WWII bomb damage.
It boasts its own eponymous Schloß,
commissioned in 1695 by Sophie Charlotte, wife of Friedrich the Great.
Like the
hotel, its owner was a Frau of a
certain age who had also seen better days.
She was dressed in ‘60s thrift shop, rather heavily made-up, and coiffed
in a towering blond beehive (definitely not her real hair color). At all times she was flanked behind the
reception desk by two unfriendly white poodles.
Needless to say, we set out early that first February morning in search
of a nearby café before heading off to our first film.
The hotel
was within blocks of Lietzensee, a small lake set in a park with mature trees. These were probably planted after the end of
WW II. During the war and until the
Berlin Airlift, trees in Berlin were cut down for fire wood, there being no
coal for cooking or heating. By Lietzensee,
at the corner of Witzlebenstraße, we saw what we were looking for: Manstein Café. Across from this croissants and Milchkaffee destination, was a large, very-imposing-indeed
stone building which wrapped around the corner.
I announced somewhat flippantly to my husband, who had been trying for
some time to get me to move to Berlin, “Well, if I could live here, you might
be able to convince me to move.” No sooner had the words left my lips than serendipity
struck. Lo and behold, there was a sign in
the courtyard advertising an apartment for rent. I took a picture of the sign with my phone. When we returned to Italy, we called the
rental agency, made an appointment, flew back, and signed a one-year lease--as just
an experiment, mind you.
Only after
moving in did we discover that the building was the former highest military
court of the Third Reich. Talk about wrong
way feng shui! We
were living in the courthouse where members of the Resistance had been condemned
to their deaths between 1936 and 1943. A
plaque outside the entrance reminds residents of the victims of the National
Socialist “justice” system. There is an apocryphal story
that von Stauffenburg, who was part of an officers’ plot to kill Hitler in 1944,
was tried here. That can’t be right, though,
because the dates of his death and the courthouse’s use don’t square up. Nonetheless, von Stauffenburg was convicted
and executed by firing squad at the Benderblock military headquarters in Berlin,
not far from this former courthouse. And
he is buried in the cemetery behind our current apartment. Lots of bad juju in Berlin. More on that in a future post.
But now
back to Bruno Ganz. As I started across icy Witzlebenstraße toward
Manstein Café that February day 10 years ago, I was stunned to see my first
festival star! It was none other than Bruno
Ganz, with his navy blue cashmere overcoat’s collar turned up against the
biting cold, hurrying toward me with rosy cheeks, completely oblivious to my
star-struck presence. As he quickly passed
to the other side of the street, I mouthed to my husband, “Did you see who that
was? BRUNO GANZ!” And so from there it was love, actually, with
Berlin at first sight of Bruno.
Keep it real!
Marilyn


And café Manstein to this day remains a favourite place for a coffee and scone or a crisp Riesling outside at one of the few sidewalk tables on a warm summer late afternoon.
ReplyDeletelove reading about how you came to be there! I feel like everyone ends up in Berlin by chance and ends up falling in love with it!
ReplyDelete-Phoebe (didn't realise it would publish me as anon)
DeleteHaving sat at one of those outdoor tables with you, and contemplated the ominous building across the street, this account holds special charm for me.
ReplyDeleteAliamulFxira Wendy Young https://serenemusic.wixsite.com/serenecheam/profile/lindinelizalina/profile
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