Wartime Wednesday:
Sonja Henie
Sonja at the height of her career |
Long before there were boy-bands and teenaged celebrities,
there was Sonja Henie. Born in Oslo, Norway in 1912, Sonja was adept at many
sports, but settled on ice skating as her first love. By age fourteen, she won
her first world championship, and captured the title for the next nine years.
In a sport dominated by men, where women’s competitions were an afterthought,
she burst onto the scene and captured the hearts of audiences. After a
successful amateur skating career, she transitioned to Hollywood star with
seemingly little effort.
Credited with being the first female skater to wear short
skirts, white boots, and use dance choreography, Sonja’s skating techniques
were groundbreaking. Her glamorous persona transformed the sport and its place
in the Olympic games. However, she was not without controversy.
Henie with Hitler in 1936 |
The 1936 Olympics were held in Berlin, Germany, and Hitler
was in attendance. Reports indicate Sonja skated into the rink at full speed
and skidded to a stop in front of where Hitler was sitting. She raised her arm
and declared, “Heil, Hitler.” Her colleagues were stunned, and the newspapers
had a field day questioning “Is Sonja a Nazi?” According to her brother Leif,
Sonja claimed, “I don’t even know what a Nazi is.”
However she may have learned during the lunch she had with
Hitler at his nearby hideaway, Berchtesgaden. She kept up her Nazi connections
after her movie career started. Joseph Goebbels personally handled the released
of her film “One in a Million,” in Germany. During Germany’s occupation of
Norway, troops reported that Hitler’s autographed photo resided on the piano in
the Henie living room. As potential proof of her collaboration, none of the
Henie property was damaged or confiscated during the occupation. Although
supportive of the Allied cause through appearances in USO shows, Sonja never
made any negative comments against the Nazis during the war.
Was she political? Did she have Nazi leanings? According to
Dick Button, two time gold Olympic gold medalist, “She was an opportunist…I don’t
think she could have cared less who Hitler was, except for whatever power he
had and what it would do for her career.”
Whatever her connection to Germany, Americans loved her in
film and on ice. Her Hollywood career was so successful, her estate was valued
at more than $45 million at the time of her death in 1969 at the age of 57.
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