Hermann Schramm Explained

Hermann Schramm (1871–1951) was a German tenor who sang at the Oper Frankfurt in the 1920s and made several recordings for HMV Germany.[1]

Although he was Jewish he escaped the deportation and subsequent fate of his colleagues at the Oper Frankfurt, Richard Breitenfeld, Magda Spiegel, bass Hans Erl and violinist Moses Slager, since he was married to an "Aryan" wife, and his children had been raised as Christians. Hans Meissner, head of the opera, intervened personally for Schramm with the mayor in 1933 when Erl and others had to be dismissed from the opera.[2] A chance anecdote reveals Schramm, then 72, as a witness in the 1950 trial of low-ranking Gestapo officer Heinrich Baab who scoured the streets of Frankfurt after 1940 looking for Jews. Schramm was witness to the arrest of a Jewish woman caught with a tramway ticket in her handbag – evidence of her using public transport. Schramm attempted to intervene and was repeatedly struck in the face by Baab, but not himself arrested.[3]

Recordings

Notes and References

  1. His Master's Voice: the German catalogue : a complete numerical catalogue of German gramophone recordings made from 1898 to 1929 in Germany, Austria, and elsewhere by the Gramophone Company Ltd.
  2. Theater oder Propaganda?: die Städtischen Bühnen Frankfurt am Main 1933–1945 Bettina Schültke Waldemar Kramer, 1997 -p 73,74,105 "Meissner setzte sich beim Oberbürgermeister am 23.6.1933 für Schramm ein: „Der Opernsänger Hermann Schramm hat dem Spielkörper der Frankfurter Oper 34 Jahre angehört. Er hat sich in der Vergangenheit außerordentlicher Beliebtheit"
  3. Zeitungs-Artikel Herbert Küsel p174 1973 "Da fand Baab ein Straßenbahnkärtchen in der Handtasche; sieh mal an, eine Jüdin, die trotz dem Verbot mit der Straßenbahn fuhr. ... Es ist der alte Opernsänger Hermann Schramm, Ehrenmitglied der Städtischen Bühnen "