Waldtraut Lewin


Waldtraut Lewin was a German writer, dramaturge and stage director.

Life

Waldtraut Lewin was born in Wernigerode, a small town on the northeastern flank of the Harz Mountains, roughly equidistant between Hanover and Leipzig. Her mother was a singer. On leaving school she enrolled at the Humboldt University of Berlin where till 1961 she studied Germanistics, Latin and Theatre studies.
She worked between 1961 and 1973 as a music-dramaturge and stage director at the Regional Theatre in Halle, in a team that also included Horst-Tanu Margraf and :de:Rudolf Heinrich |Rudolf Heinrich. Her daughter :de:Miriam Margraf|Miriam Margraf, subsequently notable in her own right as an author and music critic, was born during this period in 1964. Another achievement during the time she worked in Halle involved the translation of the libtretti of sixteen Handel operas from Italian. She was awarded the city's Handel Prize in 1970. Lewin moved in 1973 to the Rostock People's Theatre, taking a position as an opera producer and chief dramaturge for music theatre. Between 1977 and 1979 she wrote the libretto for :de:Rosa Laub|Rosa Laub, East Germany's first rock opera, which had its premier at Rostock, although by this time Lewin was no longer among the theatre's permanent staff, having turned freelance in 1977.
She published her first novel in 1973. "Herr Lucius und sein Schwarzer Schwan" is, like many of her subsequent books, an historical novel. Her next book, also an historical novel, was :de:Die Ärztin von Lakros|Die Ärztin von Lakros, and appeared in 1977. The focus of her professional career was as a freelance author after 1977. Her own website, consulted shortly after her death, stated that she had published around 70 titles, including twelve written jointly with :de:Miriam Margraf|her daughter. There were several biographies, notably of George Frideric Handel and of Julius Caesar. As her writing career progressed she increasingly specialised in works for younger adults and teenagers. There were also radio plays, libretti, and screen plays. Her published translations took in works previously accessible in French, Russian or Italian.
Waldtraut Lewin died in May 2017 in Berlin. She had celebrated her 80th birthday "still in good health, in Israel" a few months earlier.
During the closing days of the East German dictatorship officers of the Ministry for State Security took frantic steps to destroy the records that the ministry had accumulated during the previous forty years. Angry protesters took steps to prevent the destruction of the records, which were believed to evidence forty years of domestic espionage by a principal East German government agency devoted to controlling and monitoring people in the name of "security". The Stasi were diligent in their record keeping: there were a lot of files. Many survived. It is not known how many were destroyed. The Stasi files are preserved by the Stasi Records Agency, headquartered in Berlin, accessible to scholars, journalists and others interested. Search of the Stasi archives disclosed that Between 1975 and November 1988 Waldtraut Lewin was one of several hundred thousand Stasi informers. The code name by which she is identified in Stasi files is "IM Wald". A sympathetic commentator observes dryly in an obituary piece that Waldtraut Lewin would undoubtedly have been able to come up with a better code name for herself, had she been invited to do so. The same commentator quotes another sympathetic source insisting that it abundantly is clear from the thick Stasi files on Waldtraut Lewin that no one suffered damage because of her reports on them. Nevertheless, a number of major publishers stopped publishing her works after receiving reports of her Stasi connections.

Personal

Both Waldtraut Lewin's children, :de:Miriam Margraf|Miriam Margraf and Niklas Lewin, are writers.

Awards and honours (selection)