Thursday, April 20, 2023

A Birthday For Adolf



Yes, today is Der Fuhrer's birthday. We remember him only as the last century's foremost mass murderer, challenged only by Mao Zedong, and followed by runners-up, Vladimir Lenin, Joseph Stalin, and Pol Pot.





We could remember Der Fuhrer by listing his atrocities which remain well documented and commemorated in western culture. I choose to build on that foundation through the forms of humor we know as satire and parody. Both have been described as most effective forms of ridicule by far and a staple in public discourse and entertainment beginning with the Greeks 2500 years ago.

In our time the film industry has produced some wonderful examples of humor applied to Der Fuhrer. For some it is difficult to understand. In a 2018 National Public Radio interview, Mel Brooks, the comic who brought us The Producers (1967 and 2005) explained his motivations for making the original film:

. . . Listen, get on a soapbox with Hitler, you're gonna lose — he was a great orator. But if you can make fun of him, if you can have people laugh at him, you win. . . . The comedy writer is like the conscience of the king . . . . He's got to tell him the truth. And that's my job: to make terrible things entertaining.

I would add the terrible things not only become entertaining but also allow us to survive, understand, and accept their reality. Yes, there is healing in this humor.

Here are four examples of satire and parody at work from Charlie Chaplin's, The Great Dictator (1940), Mel Brooks's, The Producers (1967), and the British Ministry of Information's Schichlegruber Doing The Lambeth Walk (1942). 











Horrible voice, bad breeding, vulgar manners, you have everything you need to be a politician.

                                      Aristophanes 






Sources

Photos and Illustrations:
Hitler pin cushion figurine, World War II era, OTR personal collection

Text:
NPR Morning Edition interview with Susan Stamberg, April 26, 2018, https://www.npr.org/2018/04/26/605297774/mel-brooks-says-its-his-job-to-make-terrible-things-entertaining

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