Advertisement

We need your help now

Support from readers like you keeps The Journal open.

You are visiting us because we have something you value. Independent, unbiased news that tells the truth. Advertising revenue goes some way to support our mission, but this year it has not been enough.

If you've seen value in our reporting, please contribute what you can, so we can continue to produce accurate and meaningful journalism. For everyone who needs it.

This 100-year-old Berlin dance hall holds ghosts of German history

Not literally (perhaps) but Claerchens Ballhaus is marking a centenary of surviving two world wars – and as location for Inglorious Basterds and Valkyrie films.

image

Image: hillman54/Flickr/CreativeCommons

image

Image: AP Photo/Franka Bruns

The two images are of rooms within Claerchens Ballhaus – one used in a more traditional way; another for a club night.

IT HAS SURVIVED two world wars, communist spies and a Quentin Tarantino movie production and at the ripe age of 100, Berlin’s most legendary dance hall is also among its most unlikely success stories.

As Claerchens Ballhaus (Claerchen’s Ballroom) prepares to fete its centenary next month, the fabled venue still sees hordes of party-goers young and old queue up in front of its crumbling facade.

White-haired ladies in tiaras and dancing shoes wait to gain entry with hipsters in skinny jeans in a courtyard under a canopy of mature trees, strings of lights and a giant mirrored disco ball.

“Under the kaisers, the chancellors and the chiefs of the (communist) state council, in times of upheaval and social experiments, divided and united again – everybody on one and the same dance floor of history – every political system left its traces,” Marion Kiesow writes in her new book timed for the anniversary, Berlin Dances at Claerchen’s Ballroom.

Kiesow argues that in a city that has seen a century of turmoil and reinvention, Claerchen’s is a remarkable constant.

Decades of relics – Nazi military maps, sepia photos, love letters

Combing through the building from the basement to the attic, she uncovered decades of relics including love letters, sepia photos and even ripped military maps left behind by Nazi officers during World War II to help her tell Claerchen’s unique story.

In the heyday of German ballrooms around the turn of the last century, Berlin alone had about 900 venues like Claerchen’s, fixtures of every neighbourhood.

Many were destroyed during World War II air raids and those remaining fell out of favour in the 1970s and 1980s as revellers flocked to discos and later the techno clubs that cropped up in the city’s abandoned industrial spaces.

Only three of the imperial-era ballrooms in the city centre remain and Claerchen’s is seen as the most authentic, with nightly dancing.

Nazis banned ‘un-German’ dance styles

The venue opened on September 13, 1913, named Buehler’s Ballroom after its first owner, but later became known as Claerchen’s after the nickname of his widow Clara.

Clara Buehler was a tough Prussian farmer’s daughter who became one of the first women in Berlin to earn a driving licence.

When business suffered after World War I, she rented the building out for then-banned sabre duels popular among students and staged widows’ balls.

After she herself lost her husband, Claerchen remarried, took the name Habermann and kept the venue afloat.

Under the Third Reich, “un-German” dance styles such as tango were outlawed, but the parties went on, often drawing the Nazi brass.

Propaganda chief Joseph Goebbels briefly banned public dancing during the war, and Claerchen’s finally closed in 1944.

image

Details of the ornate ceiling survive. Pic: oh_colleen/Flickr/CreativeCommons

Life behind the Berlin Wall

Life behind the Berlin Wall turned the place into something of a dive, where cheap beer drew rowdy soldiers, factory workers and travelling salesmen, some coming from West Berlin for the bargain and the dance hall’s reputation for “loose women”.

The snappily dressed cloakroom attendant since the 1960s, Guenter Schmidtke – whose mother and late wife also worked at Claerchen’s – said there were fist fights several times a week between revellers.

And as it attracted West Germans, it also became a den of Stasi spies, and more-or-less discreet prostitutes.

When her stepdaughter Elfriede Wolff took over in 1967, the severe-looking Claerchen still sat at a reserved table at the end of the buffet to keep an eagle eye on her livelihood.

Wolff held the reins until the year the Wall fell in 1989.

Reunification brought soaring rents and an influx of boutiques and galleries along Auguststrasse, the street where Claerchen’s is situated.

Reopening of pre-war ballroom

Theatre impresarios David Regehr and Christian Schulz took over the venue in 2005 and changed as little as possible, apart from reopening a “Sleeping Beauty” upstairs ballroom for the first time since the war.

They say it would be “crazy” to renovate the pockmarked exterior, which wears its war damage and the patina of the last century like a badge of honour.

image

The pock-marked exterior. Image: colinmford/Flickr/CreativeCommons

Claerchen’s has parlayed that flair into use as a film set for Valkyrie with Tom Cruise and Quentin Tarantino’s Inglourious Basterds with Brad Pitt and Michael Fassbender. This still from Inglorious Basterds shows the banquet hall in use as a location in the scene where Melanie Laurent’s Shoshanna meets Joseph Goebbels (Sylvester Groth, left).

image

Lotta Weigl, 39, leads swing dance classes in the once-opulent upstairs banquet hall, with its cracked mirrors and chipping paint.

“It’s a little like ‘Harry Potter’ – you think there are ghosts who are having some fun and dancing along with us,” she said.

The thing I love most about this place is its spirit – it’s a spirit you find not only in the building itself but also in the people who have worked here for so long. It’s part of the Berlin tradition and about survival.

Ulrich Linser, 58, from East Frisia in northern Germany, expertly twirls his wife Beate, 60, around Claerchen’s dance floor every time they are in Berlin visiting their son.

“It’s very international here, you can speak Spanish or English and it’s such a broad mix of ages too — there’s a 15-year-old here and a 90-year-old there,” Ulrich said.

“You feel like you’re part of a long tradition and it’s wonderful.”

- © AFP, 2013

Nazi war dossier reveals plans to invade Ireland>

Author
View 8 comments
Close
8 Comments
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Dessie Curley
    Favourite Dessie Curley
    Report
    Dec 1st 2016, 7:05 AM

    It was burning. ‘She later used it a second time’. I put my hand in the fire. It burned. I took it out and ran it under a cold tap. I thought this was normal. I stick my hand in again. I s*^t you not. It started to burn again

    235
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Alan Kennedy
    Favourite Alan Kennedy
    Report
    Dec 1st 2016, 12:48 PM

    @Dessie Curley: Given the product was a chemical skin peel it would be reasonable to expect some sensation.

    Also, you know if you stick your hand in a fire you’ll be injured. It’s a reasonable expectation that of a expert you have paid recommends a product to you that it won’t cause extensive and lasting skin damage.

    46
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Drew TheChinaman :)
    Favourite Drew TheChinaman :)
    Report
    Dec 1st 2016, 6:46 AM

    Every last one of these cosmetic products carry a warning on the packet to ‘apply a test patch’ or ‘discontinue use if skin irritation occurs’ not that isn’t just basic common sense…

    175
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Cheeky Charlie
    Favourite Cheeky Charlie
    Report
    Dec 1st 2016, 7:26 AM

    With company out of business – who pays the €37K. Genuine question.

    161
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Drew TheChinaman :)
    Favourite Drew TheChinaman :)
    Report
    Dec 1st 2016, 7:58 AM

    Retroactive claim from the liability insurance policy held by the business at the time of the incident.

    They wouldn’t bother suing a wound down Ltd. company and joining the list of creditors.

    72
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute john Appleseed
    Favourite john Appleseed
    Report
    Dec 1st 2016, 7:26 AM

    But she didn’t have a facial. She opted for a chemical peel that works by burning off the top layers of your skin. BURNING OFF. Total rubbish. She didn’t deserve a penny.

    124
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Ciaran O Shea
    Favourite Ciaran O Shea
    Report
    Dec 1st 2016, 8:15 AM

    The beauty therapist told her she had sensitive skin and then recommended the product. Clearly at fault. The amount awarded seems high to me though.

    77
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Get Lost Eircodes
    Favourite Get Lost Eircodes
    Report
    Dec 1st 2016, 8:43 AM

    Saw a photo of her on another site. Poor woman looks destroyed :)

    47
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Tammylee Murphy
    Favourite Tammylee Murphy
    Report
    Dec 1st 2016, 12:17 PM

    about 20% of white Irish women have rosacea. I could have an extra 35k now if only I’d the cop on!!! Was the Groupon facial!

    13
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Tom the Bomb
    Favourite Tom the Bomb
    Report
    Dec 1st 2016, 12:44 PM

    Exactly – if she’d been diagnosed with contact dermatitis or some allergic response I’d say fair enough, but rosacea is a common condition of unknown cause.

    8
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Alan Kennedy
    Favourite Alan Kennedy
    Report
    Dec 1st 2016, 12:49 PM

    @Tom the Bomb: A common condition which she didn’t have before she used the recommended product.

    26
Submit a report
Please help us understand how this comment violates our community guidelines.
Thank you for the feedback
Your feedback has been sent to our team for review.
JournalTv
News in 60 seconds