Karl-Eduard von Schnitzler

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Karl-Eduard von Schnitzler
File:Bundesarchiv Bild 183-41751-0001, Karl-Eduard v. Schnitzler.jpg
Karl-Eduard von Schnitzler (1956)
Born 28 April 1918
Dahlem (Berlin), Germany
Died 20 September 2001
Zeuthen, Brandenburg, Germany
Nationality German
Occupation Journalist
Television presenter
Political party SED
Spouse(s) Marlis Hoeres (1940)
Inge Keller (1952)
Christine Laszar (1958)
Marta Rafael (1960)
Children Stephan (von) Schnitzler
Barbara Schnitzler
Karin Schnitzler

Karl-Eduard von Schnitzler (April 28, 1918 – September 20, 2001) was an East German journalist and host of the television show Der schwarze Kanal (German: The Black Channel) from March 21, 1960 to October 30, 1989.

Early life

Schnitzler was born in Berlin the son of German vice consul Julius Eduard von Schnitzler, scion of a Cologne banking dynasty, who had been ennobled by the state of Prussia in 1913. Karl-Eduard attended a boarding school at Bad Godesberg and joined the Sozialistische Arbeiter-Jugend youth organisation of the Social Democratic Party of Germany in 1932. After receiving his school-leaving qualification in 1937 he began studying medicine at the University of Freiburg.

Career

Abandoning his medical studies, Schnitzler trained for a business career in Cologne and became a merchant.

When the Second World War broke out in 1939, Schnitzler was drafted into the Wehrmacht, but was taken prisoner by British forces in 1944, following the Battle of Normandy. After his capture, he began to work for the British Ministry of Information and for the German-language service of the BBC, where his talents as a broadcaster were soon recognised. After his release in 1945, he returned to the British Zone of Allied occupied Germany and became an employee of the British controlled radio station Nordwestdeutscher Rundfunk (NWDR) in Hamburg. He was transferred to their Cologne studios on 1 January 1946, where he was assigned to the post of Associate Director and Head of the Politics Department. His political bias soon became apparent to his superiors and he was removed from his position in Cologne and returned to the NWDR's Hamburg offices until his eventual dismissal in 1947, after being accused of spreading communist propaganda.

Schnitzler moved to the Soviet occupation zone, where he worked for the Berliner Rundfunk and the Deutschlandsender program of the Rundfunk der DDR. He joined the Socialist Unity Party in 1948. During the 1950s, he contributed to a number of smaller television shows before the first broadcast of Der Schwarze Kanal on 21 March 1960. The programme was originally designed as East Germany's answer to the short-lived West German anti-Communist programme Die Rote Optik ("The Red View", ARD, 1958-1960). From 1969 on, though, Schnitzler's main antagonist in the west was Gerhard Löwenthal's "ZDF Magazin" (ZDF, 1969-1987), which focused on human rights issues in East Germany.

As host of Der Schwarze Kanal, which ran for 20 minutes every Monday night, Schnitzler edited together extracts of Western television footage and recorded caustic, virulently anti-Western commentary over it. The show was particularly derisive towards West Germany and what Schnitzler perceived as Western imperialism across the world. His vitriolic style earned him the nickname Sudel-Ede - "Botch Eddie". Schnitzler joined the central committee of the Society for German–Soviet Friendship in 1978. In that same year, he also became a professor at the University of Film and Television in Potsdam-Babelsberg. He became known among other communist politicians as a hardliner.

In the course of the 1989 Wende in East Germany the Kanal was canceled. Schnitzler pre-empted his exclusion from the reformed communist Party of Democratic Socialism by quitting and joining the German Communist Party. He published several articles in the satirical magazine Titanic, before he retired to Zeuthen, where he died of pneumonia on September 20, 2001.

An interview with Schnitzler can be found in the book Stasiland by Anna Funder.

See also

References

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External links