Book description
Agnes Bernelle, one of Ireland's best-loved stage performers, was
born Agnes Bernauer in Berlin in 1923, the daughter of a renowned
Jewish-Hungarian theatre impresario. In this sparkling, intimate
memoir she recounts her early years in Germany, her family's flight to
London after Hitler came to power, her anti-Nazi broadcasts to the
land of her birth, her turbulent loves and family life and the
blossoming of her career in film and theatre - from wartime refugee
cabaret to the West End. In 1943 she married Irish Spitfire pilot
Desmond Leslie, cousin to Winston Churchill, on the first day of
peace. Inventive and resourceful, Agnes performed impromptu cabaret in
Barcelona, befriended cat burglars, summered in Cannes and received
the affections of, among others, Claus von Bulow and King Farouk. In
1956 she became the first 'non-stationary nude' in London theatre. Her
original satirical cabaret, based around the work of Brecht and Weil,
became the first solo show at Peter Cook's Establishment in Soho, and
later had a three week run in the West End. In 1963 Agnes and Desmond
moved finally to Ireland, where they found themselves facing into a
troubled decade. 'She brings to us what seems a full century's worth
of inimitable anecdote: theatre, politics, social contretemps, the
joys and miseries of an "open" marriage, the miseries and
joys of life in Weimar Germany, Hitler's Germany, England in World War
II, the Riviera and (of course) Ireland. How many of us know how
exiled German theatre-folk practised their art in London during the
1940s? Or have heard of the way young actresses were slotted into the
war-effort by the U. S. military? Or can guess what it was like to try
to finance stage-shows and films in the post-war years of austerity?
Agnes knows: she was there, and she did it. ... In short, the
widest-ranging, most instructive, most appealing theatrical/personal
memoir one could possibly imagine.' - John Arden 'An expansive tale
spanning both the most turbulent years of our century and an intensely
personal odyssey. - Stephen Dodd, Sunday Independent 'What comes
across is the warmth and generosity of her personality and a wonderful
capacity for survival.' - Fergus Linehan, The Irish Times