Auguste Crelinger Explained

Auguste Sophie Crelinger (widowed Stich, born Düring (7 October 1795 – 11 April 1865) was a German stage actress.

Life

Born in Berlin, Düring gained her first stage experience as a child with the theatre company Urania. On the occasion of one of these performances she also made the acquaintance of Princess Charlotte von Hardenberg (former actress Langenthal). The latter applied to the theatre director August Wilhelm Iffland for Düring and after her successful debut on 4 May 1812 as Margarete (Die Hagestolzen), she was engaged and remained a member of the royal court theatre there until her last performance.

In 1817, Düring married the actor Wilhelm Stich (1794-1824) and had two daughters with him: Bertha (1818-1876) and Clara (1820-1865), both of whom also went to the stage, and two sons, including Gustav (1822-1848), who died of liver disease at the age of 26 in Bombay, East India.

Stich died under tragic circumstances. Gebhard Bernhard Carl Blücher von Wahlstatt (1799-1875), a grandson of the famous Feldherrn, was a second lieutenant in the Guard Hussars and had a rendezvous with Auguste Stich on 6 February 1823, as he wanted to say goodbye to her before a long journey. In the stairwell, he met her husband, whom he injured with his dagger after a brief heated argument.[1] Blücher was sentenced to three years' imprisonment which he served at the Wisłoujście Fortress.[2]

Whether there was actually a sexual relationship between the officer Blücher and Auguste Stich is unclear.[3] When Stich returned to the stage as "Thecla" on 8 May of the same year, she was already pre-judged by the audience and booed as an adulteress. To escape this, she travelled to Paris with her husband in early 1824, where she met, among others François-Joseph Talma. According to statements by Ludwig Rellstab (Nothgedrungene Berichtigung), the actor Wilhelm Heinrich Stich died of an infected spleen.

In her second marriage, the widowed Auguste Stich married the railway and insurance entrepreneur in Berlin, whose parents - Johann Jacob Crelinger (1753-1837) and Henriette Wilhelmine Charlotte Catherina Crelinger (1774-1826), née Philippsborn -, had great reservations about this marriage.[4] Only after the death of Crelinger's mother in December 1826 was the couple able to become engaged on 31 January 1827; the marriage took place on 23 April 1827.

The relationship with Crelinger enabled the actress to go on educational trips, including to Paris and Saint Petersburg; their house in Berlin became a centre of socialising.

A daughter they had together from this marriage, Johanne Henriette Emilie Auguste Crelinger (1828-1900), married the lawyer and later district administrator of the in Silesia, Alexander Groschke (1821-1871). From the estate of the music teacher Clara Groschke, a now lost portrait Auguste Crelinger as the Maid of Orleans (1818) by Friedrich Georg Weitsch came into the Berlin Märkisches Museum in 1925.[5]

Around 1839/1840, Auguste von Bärndorf was a pupil of Crelinger.[6]

After Crelinger celebrated her 50th anniversary at the Berlin Hofbühne in 1862, she retired to private life. She died in Berlin in 1865 at the age of 69 and was buried in the Cemetery II of the Jerusalems- und Neue Kirche in front of the Hallesches Tor there. The grave is not preserved.[7]

Roles

Students

Auguste von Bärndorf, Elise Bethge-Truhn

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. [Karl August Varnhagen von Ense]
  2. Karl August Varnhagen von Ense: Blätter aus der preußischen Geschichte. Edited by Ludmilla Assing, vol. 2, Leipzig 1868, (Numerized).
  3. Antonius Lux (ed.): Große Frauen der Weltgeschichte. A thousand biographies in words and pictures., Munich 1963, .
  4. Karl August Varnhagen von Ense: Blätter aus der preußischen Geschichte. Edited by Ludmilla Assing, vol. 4, Leipzig 1869, pp. 154 f. (Numbered).
  5. Cf. the entry in the Koordinierungsstelle für Kulturgutverluste (Numbered).
  6. [Hugo Thielen]
  7. [Hans-Jürgen Mende]