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Germany 2000, rubbing nose so successfully in defeat, that a later nation converts

There are not many stamps displaying erotic dancing girls. Throw in one where the local girl is dancing to service someone suddenly thrust into power by defeat and it becomes one in a million. So slip on your smoking jacket, fill your pipe, take your first sip of your adult beverage and sit back in your most comfortable chair. Welcome to todays offering from The Philatelist.

I mentioned in the stamp yesterday that the situation self corrected when the Stasi came in the night and removing the statue of Stalin. The situation on this stamp ended abruptly as well when the Gestapo sent Weill packing.  As of yet the fond remembrance of Weimar degeneracy has gone unchallenged in Germany. We will see if that continues.

The stamp today is issue A1000, a 3 Mark stamp issued by Germany on February 17th, 2000. The stamp honored Kurt Weill, a composer of musical plays. According to the Scott Catalog, the stamp is worth $1.75 used. The value beats yesterday’s East German stamp 5 fold but the denomination on the stamp is 15 fold higher. Perhaps Germany’s reputation for tight control of inflation is slipping.

Kurt Weill was born in Saxony in 1900. After the war in 1918 the old order was discredited and the people that had been in opposition were now in power. Their opposition was not just to militarism  but the basic rules of Church and family. People like Weill gathered in Berlin and were free to produce for each other works that broke boundaries both sexually and politically. The post war deprivations meant that many Germans like the dancing girl on the stamp had to go along with it to get by. Imagine the sadness of fathers, brothers, and potential husbands at the tawdry display.

Kurt Weill’s most famous work was on the political “3 Penny Opera” a reworking of the old English “Beggers Opera”. The play contained Weill’s most famous song “Mac the Knife”. In 1933 Weill moved to the USA to avoid arrest. He continued work in America including working with Langston Hughes, the far left black activist and composer. Weill also collaborated professionally with his frequent wife Lotte Lenye. They married and divorced in Germany and the reunited and remarried in the USA. You may remember her from her portrayal of Rosa Kleb in “From Russia with Love”

In talking of those who collaborated with Weill I have so far left out Bertoit Brecht. Remember on yesterdays stamp, the noted architect Hermann Henselmann was convinced by Brecht to stay and work in the Eastern sector of postwar Germany. Brecht collaborated with Weill both in Weimar Germany and later in the USA. Weill did not however join Brecht when he returned to Berlin, despite himself being a Communist from the Eastern sector. Weill died in the USA in 1950 as a naturalized citizen.

Well my drink is empty and I may have a few more while pondering the snearing of the East while the earlier depravity of Weimar is now celebrated. People like boundary breakers, even if it leads to alone, depraved, and purposeless people. Hope you enjoyed the two parter, you can find the first part below this article if you scroll down. Come again tomorrow for another story that can be learned from stamp collecting.