The villain also has spring 2

Chapter 1432 11431 Hitler’s Hollywood

Chapter 1432 1.1431 Hitler’s Hollywood

Standing side by side with "Garbo" Zari Rundle is "Dream Lover" Malika Rock.

Hungarian-German actress Marika Rkk was one of the most popular actresses in Germany during and after World War II. With her fun and positive personality and acting skills, she maintained a close relationship with top Nazis and was even banned from acting after the war. Ten years after her death, however, a classified document revealed her identity as a Soviet spy.

Malika was born in Cairo, Egypt, in 1913. Her mother, Maria Karoline Charlotte, and her father, Eduard Rkk, were engaged in the construction industry. In addition to his work as an architect, Eduard also owned a family. Construction company, and Marika has a brother, Ede Rkk, who is two years older than herself.

Malika, who comes from a well-off family, moved from Budapest to Paris at the age of 11 to receive professional ballet training. The next year, she got the opportunity to perform on Broadway in New York and other cities in the United States. Returning to Europe in 1929, he toured as a dancer and singer in Cannes, London, Paris and Hungary. After achieving certain success in musicals, Malika made her film debut when she was only 17 years old.

After signing a contract with the German UFA Film Company in 1934, Marika officially started her film career. Under the arrangement of the agency, Malika worked with many popular young actors, and filmed "Der Bettelstudent" (1936) with the most popular actor in Germany at the time, Johannes von Cleve. ), "Gasparone" (1937) and "Hi, Jenny!" (Hallo Janine!)" (1939), known as the "new dream couple" of German musicals. In 1940, he became one of the greatest movie stars of that era with "Kora Terry".

The characters created by Mallika have typical "Marika" characteristics. Most of them are geniuses who are misunderstood by the world. They struggle in adversity, persist in themselves, and finally win. Most of these characters have a positive and optimistic attitude towards life, just like Malika herself, they are funny and always laugh. Therefore, during the Third Reich, the Nazis repeatedly used the blonde actress and her charisma to convey the value of women in the family promoted by the Nazis, while beautifying the image of motherhood.

Between 1935 and 1944, Marika appeared in 15 films, which without exception became a tool for the Nazis to promote their values. In 1944, she was included in the Gottbegnadeten-Liste of the Third Reich's Ministry of Popular Enlightenment and Propaganda. Precisely because of Malika's close relationship with the Nazis, her charm not only fascinated countless Nazi soldiers, but at the peak of her career, Hitler personally presented flowers to her on stage.

After World War II, Malika and her director husband were banned from performing in Germany on suspicion of spying for the Nazis. In 1947, the Court of Honor of the Austrian Actors Association cleared her name and cleared her of suspicion. A year later, Marika returned to the screen, but her momentum was not as good as before. At the end of the 50s, Malika returned to her old career, gave up the film industry, and switched to song and dance dramas and musicals, and once again achieved great success in the German-speaking cultural area. Malika has been engaged in the singing, dancing and film industry throughout her life. At the age of 79, she held her last opera performance in her hometown of Budapest.

In 1981, Malika was awarded the Gold Film Award for her cultural activities in Germany, the Vienna Honorary Gold Medal in 1983, and the Bavarian Film Award in 1987. Died in Baden near Vienna on May 2004, 5 at the age of 16.

After Malika's death, her figure gradually disappeared from the public eye, but the identity of this popular German post-war actress as a Soviet agent was revealed after a top-secret intelligence document was declassified in 2014. Interestingly, Malika was also banned from performing after World War II because of her close relationship with the Nazis. In fact, she has been delivering Nazi intelligence to Moscow. It is said that it was her agent Heinz Hoffmeister who introduced Malika to become a member of the Soviet National Security Council "KGB", but the positions Malika assumed and the specific information she passed on were The content is unclear. Moreover, the predecessor of the Soviet National Security Council established on March 1954, 3 was the Red Sword of Punishment, the "founder of the KGB" - Feliks Dzerzhinsky (Feliks Dzeryński). The Russian Anti-Counterrevolutionary Committee "Cheka" and the State Security Service under the NKVD under Stalin. Rumor has it that Marika Roque and Lisa Stebe, the Signal's chief correspondent in Paris, are both affiliated with the Seventh Bureau.

It is also the same as all the important characters who appear in "The Great Battle" under the "cross-plot fusion time and space where the World War II-like plot fragments are similar and blended". In the plot of "Marika Rkk - Ja das Temperament", she played herself in her true colors.

The two bejeweled and popular female stars were ordered by the Propaganda Department of the Third Reich to come here from their respective filming studios to further boost the popularity of the premiere.

Following the welcome ceremony, the Berlin female celebrity delegation led by the two "First Ladies" and the Nazi female party member delegation came from the concentration camp platform, as well as the much-anticipated "National Glory: The Great Battle" star delegation. Entering the venue immediately pushed the atmosphere of the press conference to its first climax.

Taking advantage of the flashing spotlights, reporters took advantage of every opportunity to ask for any news of interest to the audience. Whether it was tidbits or gossip, the big stars lined up on the rostrum at the venue answered all questions. Their posture seemed to satisfy the curiosity of everyone present at once.

certainly. These are all small tricks and tricks necessary to occupy the page and grab the headlines. Being able to rise and fall in the Vanity Fair, you can stand out from countless beautiful girls with dreams of stardom. Only the big stars themselves know best the price they paid and the suffering they suffered for becoming famous overnight.

"Being full of food and thinking about lust". After satisfying the physical body, you will definitely want to satisfy the psychological state. What pleases the body must ultimately also want to please the spirit. When material wealth no longer provides enough stimulation, those who have climbed to the top of power will want to pick up the crown jewel - the top "life luxury".

For celebrities from all walks of life in the Third Reich and high-ranking Nazis, the top "luxury in life" was that the Film Law passed in 1934 stipulated that officials must participate in the entire process from the movie script to the selection of actors and the filming of the film, in order to " To prevent the emergence of plot themes that were contrary to the spirit of the country at that time." In 1936, film criticism was banned on the grounds of "showing Jewish character traits" and film criticism was redefined as "film observation". From then on, he officially became the highest-level producer of the Third Reich. The "shining" movie stars in "Hitler's Hollywood" created by Joseph Goebbels, the director's second-in-command.

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