
Leni
The Life and Work of Leni Riefenstahl
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Narrated by:
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Henrietta Teifenthaler
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By:
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Steven Bach
About this listen
Known as “Hitler's Filmmaker,” Leni Riefenstahl directed two of the most innovative and effective propaganda documentaries ever made, Triumph of the Will (1935) and Olympia (1938), which glorified the Third Reich. In this definitive biography, Steven Bach illuminates the truths and lies regarding the self-proclaimed apolitical artist's involvement with Hitler and other Nazi leaders who financed and advanced her career.
Leni is a story of huge talent and even huger determination, the story of a woman who was unable to express remorse for the millions murdered by the Nazi regime she elevated to mythic proportions. Probing the sometimes-blurred borders that divide art and beauty from truth and humanity, Bach untangles the past and gives an objective but unsparing appraisal of a woman of spectacular gifts who was corrupted by ruthless personal ambition.
©2007 Steven Bach (P)2022 Phoenix BooksListeners also enjoyed...
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What listeners say about Leni
Average customer ratingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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Performance
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- Josiah Olsson
- 05-03-24
First Lady of the Third Reich
This was a very honest and informative account about the self-absorbed life of Leni. Even though she made many advancements in the early years of the filming industry, unfortunately she did many underneath one of the most evil governments in history and had more similarities with Hitler than she would have admitted. This work helps readers see through many of her contradictions and how film/art can be just as guilty of genocide as those who pull the trigger. Leni sold herself to the altar of pride, vanity, and success at any cost, and paid dearly for it. Great work on learning about her life!
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- Danielle M Brown
- 08-30-15
Leni biography
For years I wanted to know more about her life every since I saw her life story on the show Biography . This book answered all of my questions . Mrs Tiefenthalet performance was wonderful .
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Overall
- major
- 06-13-07
Good book bad narrator
I liked the book but I had trouble with the narrator. I am not sure what type of accent she has or if she has any training for speaking but it seemed to me she was awful. I struggled to understand her in some places and she mispronounces many common english words. She detracts from the story. I am not sure what qualifications she brought to the job as at least as an english speaker she is lacking.
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9 people found this helpful
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- george g evans
- 01-16-23
Narration is trying
I reduced the narrative speed to 7, I was able to finish the book. Content is worth it
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Performance
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- Hans
- 01-20-16
LISTEND TO THE FIRST 3 MINUTES AND HAD ENOUGH
This book wasn’t for you, but who do you think might enjoy it more?
A deaf person may enjoy this book..
Would you recommend Leni to your friends? Why or why not?
horrible narrator with accent too harsh for a long book..
Who would you have cast as narrator instead of Henrietta Tiefenthaler?
she is horrible.
Any additional comments?
Avoid this book
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1 person found this helpful
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Performance
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Story
- Mark
- 07-02-15
I Don't Know Who This Book Is Written For
What would have made Leni better?
Different narrator, better audio production, better book
What was most disappointing about Steven Bach’s story?
This book is really strange because if you are a fan of Leni's films it doesn't talk much about them, if you are a fan of the women it definitely paints her in a (deservedly) bad light, If you are a fan of a story of a driven woman succeeding in a business and time when women didn't/ couldn't do that this story will disappoint.
I read this in a class and one fellow student summarized a missed chapter perfectly with "lemme guess, Leni is mean to a bunch of people, she raises her stock by sleeping with someone, she uses her connection to Hitler to get what she wants THE END." We read the chapter and that was basically what happened! Leni is not a person I want to read about and even the interesting content about post WWI Germany that continues through the fall of the Third Reich couldn't save this book for me.
Terrible main character aside the author tries to hard to make every sentence sound like shakespeare and it comes off as arrogant and it sometimes makes facts hard to completely digest. All in all this book was hard to read and I can't think of who this book was written for.
Would you be willing to try another one of Henrietta Tiefenthaler’s performances?
No...just...no.
If you could play editor, what scene or scenes would you have cut from Leni?
That's very hard because as much as I did not like the book I could see that maybe someone might. I think everything in there is required material to paint the picture the author is trying to show.
Any additional comments?
I don't want to seem like just some angry reviewer but honestly this book was hated by everyone I knew who read it and I would not recommend it to anyone.
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1 person found this helpful
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Overall
- Erik
- 05-07-07
Disappointing Narrator
I was looking forward to this audio release after seeing positive reviews of the book. After several hours of listening, I find the book to be interesting but the quality of the narration to be terrible. The reader, Henrietta Tiefenthaler, is by a wide margin the single the weakest reader I've heard (and I've listened to more than a hundred titles). Her voice sounds entirely untrained, words are mispronounced, and it often sounds like the reader can't "get her mouth fully around the words". A big disappointment -- listen to an excerpt before purchasing if you can.
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7 people found this helpful