Lucy Millowitsch


Lucy Millowitsch was a German stage-actress, screen star, stage director/producer, theatre co-owner/manager and dramatist.
Later she teamed up with her brother to run the Cologne Millowitsch Theatre, which became known at the time as a venue for "popular, low-brow comedies".

Life

Lucy Millowitsch was born in Chemnitz. She was born into a long-established theatrical dynasty. Michael Millowitsch, her great-great-great grandfather, had created a successful puppet theatre in Cologne as far back as the late eighteenth century. Her father was the stage actor and theatre impresario :de:Peter Wilhelm Millowitsch|Peter Wilhelm Millowitsch. Her mother, born Käthe Planck, came originally from Vienna. Her father's younger sister was the stage and screen performer :de:Cordy Millowitsch|Cordy Millowitsch. Lucy and her younger brother Willy Millowitsch were appearing on the stage with their father from an early age. In 1936, as the German economy recovered, and after several years without a permanent home for the family theatre company, their father opened a new theatre at the "Colonia House" building, a one-time dance hall, in Cologne's Aachener Straße, where the family theater company enjoyed great public success over the next few years. Brother and sister formed an effective on-stage partnership.
During the later 1930s Lucy Millowitsch started to accept film roles. In 1939 she appeared alongside her aunt :de:Cordy Millowitsch|Cordy Millowitsch in Kornblumenblau. Other films in which she appeared included :de:Trenck, der Pandur|Trenck, der Pandur, Komödianten, Mein Leben für Irland and Das große Spiel. However, as the war dragged on she withdrew from her film work to concentrate on the family theatre. Her father died on 14 January 1945.
The Millowitsch Theatre was less badly damaged by Anglo-American bombing during World War II than other city venues, and on 16 September 1945 it was re-opened, at the express request of Mayor Konrad Adenauer : "Die Leute sollen wieder wat zu lachen haben!". The Millowitsch siblings who had formally taken over responsibility for running the theatre, relaunched the venue by staging Das Glücksmädel. Public success quickly returned, and more well received productions followed.
On 27 October 1953 the NWDR transmitted a stage production of :de:Der Etappenhase|Etappenhase by :de:Karl Bunje|Karl Bunje from the Millowitsch Theatre. It was the first time a stage production had been broadcast on German television, and across West Germany it brought nationwide recognition to the theatre and to the company. Willy and Lucy Millowitsch acquired star status as did other lead actors in the production, most notably :de:Elsa Scholten|Elsa Scholten. The 1954 production of "Das goldene Kalb" showcased a play written by Lucy Millowitsch herself. Despite a focus on regional diversification, between 1949 and 1990 Cologne was, by many criteria, the most important and largest home to the West German television network: since 1953 more than 100 plays have been transmitted from the city's Millowitsch Theatre, many of them received with critical and public acclaim.
From 1948 Lucy Millowitsch also featured regularly in radio dramas produced down the road at the NWDR studios and with WDR. One example of her radio work was the lead female role which she took, playing alongside Erich Ponto in the 1948 NWDR and the 1962 WDR radio versions of Hans Müller-Schlösser's popular drama piece "Schneider Wibbel".
The success of the theatre during the 1950s enabled Lucy Millowitsch to indulge her taste for international travel. In particular, she became a frequent, visitor to Venezuela, engaging in efforts to improve conditions for ethnic groups who would have been identified in Germany at that time as "indigenous Indians". Another attraction of the country was that by this time her son Karl Peter, by this time in his 20s, was building a career there as a zoologist. In 1960 Lucy Millowitsch married the art collector Josef Haubrich on 27 April 1960. Although the two of them were both Cologners, it was in Venezuela that they met one another and in Caracas that the marriage ceremony took place. It was Haubrich's fifth marriage: he suffered a stroke and died unexpectedly in 1961.
After the death of her husband Lucy Haubrich-Millowitsch increasingly redirected her attention away from the theatre, despite still being one of West Germany's most popular television actresses. Instead her focus became her late husband's vast artistic estate. Josef Haubrich had been a shrewd and prolific collector of mostly twentieth century paintings. He told an interviewer, "I have almost never regretted buying a piece of artwork, but I have sometimes gone on regretting for years one that I did not acquire." The variety and extent of his collection powerfully corroborated that approach: The paintings acquired by Josef Haubrich while he was alive were of lasting interest to art lover after he died: today much of his collection remains on permanent display, notably as the core of the collection in the Museum Ludwig. In 1979 the Cologne city council even named a new city centre gallery "Josef-Haubrich-Kunsthalle".
Lucy Millowitsch died on 21 June 1990 aged 94 in Cologne. Her physical remains were placed close to the main Millowitsch family grave in the Melaten Cemetery.
The physical residua of her late husband and of his third wife, the pediatrician :de:Alice Haubrich-Gottschalk|Alice Haubrich-Gottschalk had already, in 1987, been removed from their former resting place in Cologne's massive West Cemetery and placed alongside the space assigned to be occupied by those of Lucy Haubrich-Millowitsch, following her death.

Filmography (selection)

Televised stage productions in Millowitsch Theatre (selection)