Gisela Getty Explained

Gisela Getty
Birth Name:Gisela Martine Schmidt
Birth Date:3 April 1949
Birth Place:Kassel, Hessen, U.S.-occupied Germany
Alma Mater:Kassel Arts Academy
Spouse:
    Children:2; including Balthazar Getty

    Gisela Martine Getty (née Schmidt; born 3 April 1949) is a German photographer, film director, designer, and author. She is known for her involvement in the German '68-movement, along with her late sister, Jutta Winkelmann.[1] [2] [3]

    Life

    Early years

    Getty was born Gisela Martine Schmidt in 1949 in Kassel, West Germany.[3] [4] Her father, Julius Schmidt, was a writer and military historian. Her mother, born Ruth Winzenburg, was a teacher who left her job in an agricultural college to care for her family.[3] Gisela attended the Waldorf school in Kassel[5] with her sister Jutta. There, she studied graphic arts, fashion, film, and photography at the Kassel Arts Academy between 1966 and 1970.[6]

    In 1968, the sisters partnered with Adolf Winkelmann and Gerhard Büttenbender to form the Kassel Film Collective.[7] In 1969, they won first prize at the International Short Film Festival in Oberhausen. Their 31-minute film, Heinrich Viel, about a production line worker, was filmed in the Volkswagen factory in Baunatal.[3] [8]

    Also in 1969, Gisela Schmidt married Gerhard Büttenbender. Jutta married Adolf Winkelmann shortly afterward.[9]

    Berlin, Rome, and California

    Gisela initially came to public attention during the 1968 student protests of the West German government. The years that followed, she was active in the demonstrations in Kassel and West Berlin. Getty's marriage with Büttenbender ended, and in 1970 she relocated to Berlin with Jutta. During this time, Getty and Jutta began friendships with actor Rolf Zacher and Rainer Langhans.[10] [11] Sources are inconsistent when a group including Jutta, Gisela, and Rolf Zacher moved to Rome. At around the same time, Gisela married Zacher. The marriage was brief, but it lasted long enough to produce a daughter, Anna, born towards the end of October 1972.[12] the lifestyle that Gisela was leading in Rome[13] was not conducive to safely bring up a new baby, and Anna was quickly sent to Kassel to be looked after by the family.

    During the early part of 1973, she met the teenager John Paul Getty who a few months later, still in Rome, became the victim of a very widely publicized 'Ndrangheta kidnapping. Getty had been expelled from his Rome-based international school the previous year, following the death of his stepmother, therefore becoming a teenage drop-out. Soon after he first set eyes on the twins the three of them became inseparable, living together in a shared basement apartment in Rome-Trastevere, sharing the bed as a threesome and "convinced that we could achieve anything we wanted".[14] Nevertheless, as Gisela later told an interviewer, at that stage "... there wasn’t more than holding hands".[3]

    Following the kidnapping, Gisela and Jutta fell under suspicion and were briefly detained by the authorities in Rome.[15] By the time the kidnapping took place, during July 1973, the relationship with Getty had intensified. Following the child's release after five months (believed to have been in return for a large ransom payment from an enraged grandfather) Gisela Zacher and Paul Getty were in love.[15] They married towards the end of 1974.[13] Getty was disinherited by his grandfather who had some time previously stipulated that the boy should not marry before reaching the age of 22 or 23 (sources differ).[16] Balthazar Getty, the young couple's son, was born towards the end of January 1975.[3] [16] Many aspects of the kidnapping incident remain unknown or undisclosed; however, media speculation has proliferated.[17]

    By the time Balthazar was born, Gisela and her husband were in California, initially living together in Los Angeles and subsequently — in San Francisco. Gisela and Jutta had become media personalities through their involvement in the 1968 protests. The tragic events of 1973 and the marriage to Paul Getty greatly enhanced Gisela's media profile. By the time she left Rome for California she and her husband were part of a social network of arts-world celebrities that included Dennis Hopper, Leonard Cohen, Bob Dylan, Carlo Ponti and Federico Fellini.[1] [18] [14]

    The kidnapping had inflicted levels of intense trauma on each of them that would remain with both. In California, Gisela was separated from her sister, but the "wild child" lifestyle continued in other respects. Sources relate how her husband found refuge but also dependency through intensification of his drug habit. There are reports that it was to get them away from the excesses of the lifestyle she and her husband shared, that Gisela eventually took the children away from their home together to live in a state of "relative normality" in San Francisco. Here she became professionally involved with the Magic Theatre Company and wrote plays. Matters took a turn for the worse in 1981 after a medically prescribed combination of drugs – allegedly intended to reduce his dependency issues – sent Paul Getty into a coma. Physically, his recovery was never more than partial: his sight was permanently impaired, and he was required to use a wheelchair for the rest of his life.[3] The couple had separated in 1980 and following "the accident" in 1981 Gisela Getty returned to the Federal Republic, settling in Munich.[19] Gisela and Paul remained friends: divorce followed only in 1993.[3]

    Membership of "The Harem"

    Jutta and Gisela had met Bob Dylan for the first time during his European tour in 1966: a certain mutual attraction had been sparked by the encounter. When they realized that the threesome they enjoyed in Rome would not last forever and that Gisela was going to marry Paul Getty, the twins agreed that Jutta would "hold out for Bob Dylan".[3] In 1976 she teamed up with the film-maker and former communard Rainer Langhans, the photographer Anna Werner and the Photo-model Brigitte Streubel to form a new "principally spiritually oriented self-discovery commune" in Munich. They were joined in 1978 by the filmmaker and journalist Christa Ritter, and by Gisela Getty in 1991. The press soubriquet "Harem", which the media-savvy members were content to adopt, was an obvious response to the gender imbalance. "The Harem" has received significant levels of media attention over the years.[20] Gisela Getty "brought money and illustrious contacts" when she joined, and for a time may have distorted the dynamics of the Harem community, but that risk appears to have receded more recently.[21]

    Timothy Leary

    Timothy Leary was a psychology professor at Harvard University with a close interest in psychedelic drugs. His dismissal from Harvard in 1963, followed by frequent arrests during the next couple of decades in connection with his enthusiastic endorsement of (probably illegal) aspects of the drug culture, turned him into a media celebrity. President Nixon helpfully described Leary as "the most dangerous man in America".[22] In the early 1990s Leary turned his attention to death. During his later years Leary suffered from prostate cancer, and after accepting that his own death was becoming imminent, Leary agreed that Gisela Getty and Jutta Winkelmann might make a documentary film on the subject. The twins spent a considerable amount of time with Leary and his partner, Aileen Getty, preparing their documentary during 1992 and 1993. (Aileen was a sister of Gisela's husband.) The result was a television documentary "Der Tod steht ihnen gut" (loosely, "Death suits them well") which appeared in 1994. Critics were underwhelmed that the resulting movie was presented as a "normal" television documentary, without any disclosure that the twins were long-standing friends and admirers of the "High priest of the drug culture". There was much about the things Leary represented that had fallen out of public favor since the 1970s, and although the film was duly screened on one of the more obscure German television channels, it has subsequently been largely overlooked.[23] Nevertheless, as is pointed out in the biographical note on Gisela Getty's web page, "Der Tod steht ihnen gut" did win the bronze medal in the "History and Society" category at the 1995 The New Yorker Festival.[24]

    Literary engagement

    Gisela Getty's public profile was much diminished after she and Paul Getty divorced in 1993. Nevertheless, she continues to feature in contemporary reports, both in recollections of her wild years and on account, more recently, of her literary work. In 2008 she published "Die Zwillinge oder Vom Versuch, Geld und Geist zu küssen" (loosely, "The twins: on the attempt to embrace mammon and spirit" ) jointly with her sister, Jutta Winkelmann and the Kassel-born writer-journalist Jamal Tuschick.[25] It appeared online five years later.[8] For Jutta and Gisela the book is a confessional autobiographical work, dealing with aspects of the twins' lives, as part of the '68 generation, in Kassel, Berlin and Rome.[25] Critical reactions were mixed, although the power of the book to stimulate overblown prose in others was on shameless display in the reviews. Rainer Moritz shared with readers of the Neue Zürcher Zeitung his opinion that the book was "interesting principally as a historical record of deluded narcissism" ("...vor allem als historisches Dokument eines verblendeten Narzissmus interessant").[26] Writing in Der Spiegel, Matthias Matussek had clearly had more fun with the book: "... a devilish cocktail of drug-fueled delirium, gangsterly insanity and sex in the beds of artists ... The twins have a sexual gangsterism and a sadomasochistic sophistication that is still compelling even at the second reading".[2]

    "Unter dem Cherrytree" appeared in 2013 and was reviewed in Die Welt. Matthias Matussek was on hand again. He seems to have been perplexed, describing the little book as "a personal mythology ..., half Japanese manga, [and] half a blend of Indian mythology, apocalypse and the eternally spinning wheel of life".[27]

    Notes and References

    1. Web site: Wilde Zwillinge und ihre Nacht mit Bob Dylan. 20 February 2008. Sven Michaelsen. Axel Springer SE (Welt), Berlin. 2 July 2020.
    2. Web site: Zweimal Exzess, bitte! . Der Spiegel (online). 68er-Ikonen Getty und Winkelmann ... Jung, ephebenhaft, unwiderstehlich: Gisela Getty und Jutta Winkelmann waren die Sirenen der 68er-Revolte – jetzt haben sie ihre Memoiren geschrieben. Ein teuflischer Cocktail aus Drogendelirien, Gangster-Irrsinn und Sex in Künstlerbetten. . Matthias Matussek. 10 March 2008. 2 July 2020.
    3. Web site: The Virtually Unknown Saga of Gisela Getty and Jutta Winkelmann, It Girls on a Bumpy Ride . As the tale of John Paul Getty III's kidnapping resurfaces, it's worth taking a look at the lives of Gisela Getty and Jutta Winkelmann, twins who frolicked and tripped with him through a wild decade. . Mark Rozzo. 30 April 2018 . 2 July 2020.
    4. Web site: Kommune, Geiselnahme und Symbiose: Zum Tod von Jutta Winkelmann. Gebürtige Kasselerin. 24 February 2017 . Verlag Dierichs GmbH & Co KG: Hessische/Niedersächsische Allgemeine (HNA) . 2 July 2020.
    5. Web site: Wilde Zwillinge der 70er über Drogen und Sex. 6 February 2010 . Dagmar von Taube. Wir waren doch total verklemmt. Axel Springer SE (Welt), Berlin. 2 July 2020.
    6. Web site: Jutta Winkelmann: Mein Leben ohne mich. book review. events.at. 2 July 2020.
    7. Web site: In grellen Bildern und mit radikalen Texten kämpft Hippie-Ikone Jutta Winkelmann, die an Krebs leidet, gegen Schmerzen und Ohnmacht.. 22 November 2016. Caroline Rosales. Jutta Winkelmann kämpft mit einem Comic gegen die Wut. Berliner Morgenpost. 2 July 2020.
    8. Book: Gisela Getty. Jutta Winkelmann. Jamal Tuschick. Erste Ehemänner. Das Kasseler Filmkollektiv. Die Zwillinge: oder vom Versuch, Geist und Geld zu küssen . 18 December 2013 . weissbooks . 978-3-86337-056-5 . 95.
    9. Book: CineGraph – Lexikon zum deutschsprachigen Film.. Adolf Winkelmann – Filmmacher, Regisseur.. Peer Moritz . 5 September 2023 . 978-3-86916-222-5 . edition text+kritik im Richard Boorberg Verlag GmbH & Co KG, München. 2 July 2020.
    10. Web site: Lena Kappei . 4 May 2018 . Was erwartete Gisela Getty von Berlin? "Revolution natürlich!" . 2 July 2020 . It-Girl der 68er Jahre . Axel Springer SE (B.Z.), Berlin.
    11. Web site: Lebensdaten und Werke von Rainer Langhans . 2 July 2020.
    12. Web site: Zwillinge teilen Drogen und Männer. Das bewegte Leben der Zwillingsschwestern Jutta Winkelmann (l.) und Gisela Getty. .... Aus der Kurzehe mit Schauspieler Rolf Zacher hat Gisela Getty eine Tochter.. Axel Springer SE (Welt), Berlin. 2 July 2020.
    13. Web site: Es kann nicht sein, dass du einfach verlischst . Axel Springer SE (Welt), Berlin. 27 August 2013 . Getty-Twins . Dagmar von Taube . 2 July 2020.
    14. Web site: Alain Elkann . 19 August 2018 . Gisela Getty . 3 July 2020 . Fighting the Hitler within.....
    15. Web site: Ikonen der Hippie-Ära. 1 March 2008. Sie waren die Ikonen der Hippie-Ära: Die Zwillingsschwestern Gisela Getty und Jutta Winkelmann haben die Geschichte ihrer wilden Jahre aufgeschrieben. Ein Buch über Drogen, Sex und Männer – und die Suche nach Geist und Geld.. Stern, Hamburg. Irmgard Hochreither. 3 July 2020.
    16. Web site: Getty-Entführung ... Fünf Monate in Todesangst: 1973 wurde der Millionenerbe John Paul Getty III. in Rom entführt. Weil sein milliardenschwerer Großvater sich weigerte, das Lösegeld zu zahlen, griffen die Entführer zu brutalen Mitteln. . "Lass nicht zu, dass ich getötet werde". 10 July 2013. Der Spiegel (online). 3 July 2020.
    17. Web site: Wife of John Paul Getty III claims she was held by Mafia BEFORE kidnapping . ExpressDigest . 3 July 2020.
    18. Web site: "Wir wollten einfach intensiv leben". 28 April 2010. Die Zwillingsschwestern Gisela Getty und Jutta Winkelmann waren Ikonen der 70er Jahre. In einem Fotoband gewähren sie nun Einblick in ihre wilde Zeit. Ein Gespräch über Gleichberechtigung, Groupies und die 68er-Generation. . Annika Kuhlmann. Verlag Der Tagesspiegel GmbH, Berlin. 3 July 2020.
    19. Web site: Die Zwillinge der Revolte . Bild, Berlin . 18 July 2010 . 3 July 2020.
    20. Web site: 'Das ist eine utopische Situation'. Die Welt (online). 'Big Brother' ist eine konsequente Fortsetzung von '68, meint Rainer Langhans, Begründer der Kommune 1 – Gespräch . 6 November 2000. Christa Ritter. 3 July 2020.
    21. Web site: Im Harem ist die Hölle los. 30 March 2003. Barbara Nolte. Verlag Der Tagesspiegel GmbH, Berlin . 3 July 2020.
    22. News: Mansnerus . Laura . Timothy Leary, Pied Piper of Psychedelic 60s, Dies at 75 . Obituary . The New York Times . 1 June 1996 . 3 July 2020.
    23. Web site: Familiäre Wackelbilder. „Der Tod steht ihnen gut". 7 July 1994 . 14 . taz Verlags u. Vertriebs GmbH, Berlin. 3 July 2020.
    24. Web site: gisela getty .... biography . Gisela Getty photography. 3 July 2020.
    25. Book: Die Zwillinge oder Vom Versuch, Geld und Geist zu küssen. Gisela Getty. . Jamal Tuschick. 2008. 978-3-86337-056-5. Weissbooks, Frankfurt am Main.
    26. Web site: Offenbarung am Strand. 9 September 2008. «Ab nach Kassel» – diese Aufforderung ist keine Sympathieerklärung. Der derart in die nordhessische Wüste Geschickte soll rasch aus dem Blickfeld verschwinden, und nicht leicht ist es, diese Einöde wieder hinter sich zu lassen.. Neue Zürcher Zeitung. 4 July 2020.
    27. Web site: Logbuch einer Abenteuerreise ins Ungewisse. 5 March 2014. . Axel Springer SE (Welt), Berlin. 4 July 2020.