Martin Miller and Hannah Norbert-Miller Archive
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- Creator
- Miller, Martin (1899-1969) actor
- Miller, Hannah Norbert- (1916-1998) actor
TitleMartin Miller and Hannah Norbert-Miller Archive
Held atUniversity of London, Institute of Languages, Cultures and Societies
Reference codeMiller
Dateundated [15th century], 1897-1996
Scope and ContentThis collection contains photographs, publicity material, press reviews, correspondence and audio recordings, as well as scripts, poems and source material created or collected by Martin Miller (MM) and Hannah Norbert-Miller (HNM) in the course of their work in theatre, film, television and radio. A substantial amount of the material relates to the theatrical and radio work of the German-speaking exile community in London during the Second World War, above all those by the Austrian exile theatre company, the Laterndl, of which there are photographs, scripts, reviews and theatre programmes (although most of the latter are photocopies). This material includes multiple draft scripts of MM's Hitler parody sketches, written for the Laterndl and BBC radio, as well as scripts by other Laterndl writers in exile in the UK and by Jura Soyfer, an Austrian cabaret writer who died in Buchenwald in 1939.
There are also photographs, scripts, press reviews and publicity material relating to other aspects of the careers of MM and HNM in the performing arts and broadcasting. In the case of MM this material consists mainly of newspaper cuttings and a small number of photographs of his early acting and directing work in theatres in Czechoslovakia and Austria in the 1920s and 1930s; programmes and photographs from his four-month engagement at the Jüdischer Kulturbund in Berlin in 1938-1939; and a larger number of photographs, publicity material and press reviews relating to his wartime and post-war career in theatre, film, television and radio broadcasting mainly in the UK. In the case of HNM, the material is weighted towards her early career success in theatres in Vienna, Innsbruck and Biel-Solothurn in Switzerland, and includes press reviews, programmes and photographs. From the wartime and post-WW2 period there are scripts relating to HNM's career in radio broadcasting, as well as a large number of studio photographs.
Amongst the correspondence (most of which is incoming) there are letters from notable British theatre and television actors and directors, including Richard Attenborough and Michael Redgrave, and from Austrian and German exiles known for their cultural or intellectual achievements, such as Erich Fried, Hugo Garten and Franz Theodor Csokor. The audio recordings are mainly of BBC German Service programmes featuring MM or HNM, and include the first of MM's Hitler parodies, broadcast in April 1940, as well as an episode of the anti-Nazi "Kartenstelle" series. There is also a recording of a public reading by MM in 1957 of Karl Kraus's "Die letzten Tage der Menschheit", and a small number of miscellaneous recordings, including a copy of a gramophone recording of the Austrian actor, Josef Kainz, from 1902.
The collection also contains a small number of personal documents and personal photographs, and various miscellaneous items. Amongst the latter is a set of autographed photographs of mainly late 19th- and early 20th-century German and Austrian actors and singers, as well as a series of watercolours inscribed and signed by Hermann Hesse.
One item, a fifteenth-century parchment manuscript leaf, is of a substantially earlier period than the rest of the material, and a few items dating from the later 19th and early 20th century (the Kainz recording, some of the autographed photographs, and one of the personal documents). The rest of the material, pertaining to the lives and careers of the Millers themselves, dates from between 1921 to 1969 in MM's case (of which the 1920s material is mainly photocopies), and 1935 to 1996 in HNM's case.
There are also photographs, scripts, press reviews and publicity material relating to other aspects of the careers of MM and HNM in the performing arts and broadcasting. In the case of MM this material consists mainly of newspaper cuttings and a small number of photographs of his early acting and directing work in theatres in Czechoslovakia and Austria in the 1920s and 1930s; programmes and photographs from his four-month engagement at the Jüdischer Kulturbund in Berlin in 1938-1939; and a larger number of photographs, publicity material and press reviews relating to his wartime and post-war career in theatre, film, television and radio broadcasting mainly in the UK. In the case of HNM, the material is weighted towards her early career success in theatres in Vienna, Innsbruck and Biel-Solothurn in Switzerland, and includes press reviews, programmes and photographs. From the wartime and post-WW2 period there are scripts relating to HNM's career in radio broadcasting, as well as a large number of studio photographs.
Amongst the correspondence (most of which is incoming) there are letters from notable British theatre and television actors and directors, including Richard Attenborough and Michael Redgrave, and from Austrian and German exiles known for their cultural or intellectual achievements, such as Erich Fried, Hugo Garten and Franz Theodor Csokor. The audio recordings are mainly of BBC German Service programmes featuring MM or HNM, and include the first of MM's Hitler parodies, broadcast in April 1940, as well as an episode of the anti-Nazi "Kartenstelle" series. There is also a recording of a public reading by MM in 1957 of Karl Kraus's "Die letzten Tage der Menschheit", and a small number of miscellaneous recordings, including a copy of a gramophone recording of the Austrian actor, Josef Kainz, from 1902.
The collection also contains a small number of personal documents and personal photographs, and various miscellaneous items. Amongst the latter is a set of autographed photographs of mainly late 19th- and early 20th-century German and Austrian actors and singers, as well as a series of watercolours inscribed and signed by Hermann Hesse.
One item, a fifteenth-century parchment manuscript leaf, is of a substantially earlier period than the rest of the material, and a few items dating from the later 19th and early 20th century (the Kainz recording, some of the autographed photographs, and one of the personal documents). The rest of the material, pertaining to the lives and careers of the Millers themselves, dates from between 1921 to 1969 in MM's case (of which the 1920s material is mainly photocopies), and 1935 to 1996 in HNM's case.
NotesThis archive forms one of the Exile Studies collections acquired through the Research Centre for German and Austrian Exile Studies at the Institute for Modern Languages Research.Some of the material in the Miller Archive is still in copyright; responsibility for gaining permission to use such material rests with the user.
Conditions governing accessOpen. At least 48 hours' notice is required for research visits.
Extent14 standard archival boxes; 1 oversize box; 1 small photographic negatives box
System of ArrangementWhen the collection was transferred to the Institute of Germanic Studies in 2001, the correspondence, photographs and exile-related material (including the records of the Laterndl theatre company) were extracted from the rest of the collection and filed in separate boxes. The present system loosely follows this arrangement. There are separate series for each of the following types of material: scripts, plays, source material and production notes (series 1); correspondence (series 2); photographs (series 3); personal documents (series 4); publicity material and publications (series 5-7); audio recordings (series 8) and professional agreements and financial documents (series 9). Publicity material and publications have been arranged into three series: series 5 relates to the activities of the exile community as a whole (most notably including those of Das Laterndl); series 6 relates to the work activities of Martin Miller (other than those undertaken with the exile community) and series 7 to those of Hannah Norbert-Miller (other than those undertaken with the exile community).
Finding aidsCatalogued online (click on the "contains" icon below). A pdf copy is attached to this description.
There are some papers relating to Martin Miller's work for the Jüdischer Kulturbund (1938-1939) in the Jüdischer Kulturbund collection at the Akademie der Künste (AdK), Berlin. An overview of the collection of the Jüdischer Kulturbund is available on the AdK website (at http://www.adk.de/de/archiv/archivbestand/). Some records of the Laterndl theatre (including a small number not in the Miller papers at the University of London) are available to view on microfilm at the Wiener Library (http://www.wienerlibrary.co.uk/) in London. Further material (including Laterndl programmes and a recording of Matin Miller's Hitler parody on BBC radio) is held at the Deutsches Kabarettarchiv in Mainz. Additional material on the activities of the Laterndl, particularly relating to Jura Soyfer, is held at the Jura Soyfer Archiv (http://www.soyfer.at/deutsch/archiv.htm) and the Dokumentationsarchiv des österreichischen Widerstandes (http://www.doew.at/) in Vienna. Additional material deposited by Hannah Norbert-Miller from Fritz Gross to Martin Miller is in the University of London's Exile Studies Archive (reference EXS).
Level of descriptionfonds