Hildegard Knef, Ninotchka in Porter's Silk Stockings, Dead at 76 | Playbill

Related Articles
Obituaries Hildegard Knef, Ninotchka in Porter's Silk Stockings, Dead at 76 Hildegard Knef, the husky-voiced singer and actress who sang the role of Communist official Ninotchka in Cole Porter's Silk Stockings, drily dimissing "the urge to merge with the splurge of the spring," died Feb. 1 in a Berlin hospital, after a long illness.
//assets.playbill.com/editorial/57c87acc9f322729e889df483469b563-ne_108251.gif
Hildegard Knef (in foreground) with Don Ameche and other cast members of Silk Stockings Photo by Photo courtesy of the Cole Porter Trust

Hildegard Knef, the husky-voiced singer and actress who sang the role of Communist official Ninotchka in Cole Porter's Silk Stockings, drily dimissing "the urge to merge with the splurge of the spring," died Feb. 1 in a Berlin hospital, after a long illness. Ms. Neff, 76, who was also known as Hildegarde Neff (as material for the 1955 musical indicates), introduced Porter's "Paris Loves Lovers" (with Don Ameche), "It's a Chemical Reaction, That's All," "Without Love" and "As On Through the Seasons We Sail."

AP reported that officials at the Heckeshorn Lung Clinic said Ms. Knef suffered from emphysema and died of a lung infection. She had emergency lung surgery in 2001.

The German-born Ms. Knef appeared in the first German film following World War II, "Murderers Among Us," in which she played a former concentration camp inmate. The native of Ulm took classes at Babelsberg Film Institute and was a stage actress in Berlin when the war ended.

AP reported that Ms. Knef reportedly turned down a Hollywood studio contract after being told she would have to change her name and say she was Austrian, not German.

A nude scene in the 1951 German film, "The Story of a Sinner," shocked the Roman Catholic Church. She also appeared as Pirate Jenny in a film version of "The Threepenny Opera," and appeared in "The Snows of Kilimanjaro."

Ms. Knef became a concert singer in 1960s and penned an autobiography. She is survived by her husband, Paul von Schell, and her daughter, Christina Antonia.

 
RELATED:
Today’s Most Popular News:
 X

Blocking belongs
on the stage,
not on websites.

Our website is made possible by
displaying online advertisements to our visitors.

Please consider supporting us by
whitelisting playbill.com with your ad blocker.
Thank you!