Sunday, March 1, 2015

Duke of Windsor's collusion with Hitler: And The REAL Sound of Music Maria

 

 

 

 

The Sound of Music

The Sound of Music

 

Duke of Windsor's collusion with Hitler

And The REAL Sound of Music Maria

 

   

Edward the Nazi King of England: Princess Diana's biographer reveals the Duke of Windsor's collusion with Hitler… and a plot to regain his throne

  • The Duke of Windsor was willing to deal with Hitler to win back his throne
  • Revelations according to an extract of Andrew Morton's new book, published in the print edition of the Mail on Sunday
  • The Nazi leader would put the Duke back on the Throne as a puppet king
  • However, details of the secret deal were ordered destroyed after the war
  • Now, after more than 70 years, fresh evidence of this betrayal has surfaced

The extraordinary extent of King Edward VIII’s flirtation with Hitler and the determined efforts by the post-war British establishment to bury the evidence has been uncovered in a new book by the biographer of Princess Diana.

Author Andrew Morton says he spent years working through Nazi files to demonstrate Edward’s true sympathy with the Fuhrer - to the extent that Hitler planned to install Edward as a puppet king on the British throne.

Fearing the files were ‘an unexploded bomb’ which could bring down the House of Windsor, prominent figures including King George VI, Winston Churchill and even Allied Supreme Commander Dwight Eisenhower had demanded that all evidence of Edward’s dealings with the Nazis be destroyed.

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A sensational new book claims that Adolf Hitler, right, wanted to install the Duke of Windsor, left, as a Nazi puppet if his forces were able to crush British resistance during World War II

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A sensational new book claims that Adolf Hitler, right, wanted to install the Duke of Windsor, left, as a Nazi puppet if his forces were able to crush British resistance during World War II

The book claims that the Duke, center, was angered at being forced to abdicate the throne in 1936 because he wanted to marry American divorcee Wallis Simpson, left, and was willing to work with Adolf Hitler, right

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The book claims that the Duke, center, was angered at being forced to abdicate the throne in 1936 because he wanted to marry American divorcee Wallis Simpson, left, and was willing to work with Adolf Hitler, right

The Duke of Windsor, right, viewed Winston Churchill, left, as a war-monger and wanted peace with Germany

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The Duke of Windsor, right, viewed Winston Churchill, left, as a war-monger and wanted peace with Germany

According to an extract of the Seventeen Carnations - The Windsors, The Nazis and the Cover-Up published in the print edition of The Mail on Sunday, his disloyalty knew no boundaries.

Edward - or the Duke of Windsor as he became known after the abdication - thought his brother, the King, was ‘utterly stupid, that the Queen was an ‘intriguer’ and that Churchill was a ‘war monger’.

Only the continued heavy bombing of British cities, he believed, would bring the country to the negotiating table with Germany.

As to Hitler himself, the duke thought he was ‘a very great man’ and that it would be ‘a tragic thing for the world’ if the Fuhrer were overthrown.

Morton says the crucial documents in what became known as the Windsor Files were originally contained on microfilm, hidden in a battered metal canister and buried in a remote German woodland.

They were recovered by Allied soldiers, dubbed ‘the Documents Men’ days after the end of the fighting in 1945, and despite the best efforts of the British establishment, to suppress them, copies still survive.

Morton, who also had access to previously unpublished letters and historical documents, reveals how deeply Edward had felt ostracised and humiliated in the wake of his abdication in 1936, and had become dangerously outspoken in his criticism of Churchill and the war effort.

Military leaders had serious concerns about the Duke of Windsor, right,  and his wife Wallis Simpson, left

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Military leaders had serious concerns about the Duke of Windsor, right,  and his wife Wallis Simpson, left

The couple, pictured, married at a private ceremony on June 3, 1937 in France and honeymooned in Germany

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The couple, pictured, married at a private ceremony on June 3, 1937 in France and honeymooned in Germany

The Duke, pictured here making his abdication speech, believed Britain could be bombed to submission

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The Duke, pictured here making his abdication speech, believed Britain could be bombed to submission

Duke of Windsor marrying Wallis Simpson back in 1937

Before his abdication, Edward had gone so far as to send Hitler a telegram wishing him ‘happiness and welfare’ for his 47th birthday, a month after the dictator occupied the Rhineland in March 1936.

The duke spent his honeymoon in Austria before the war and visited Germany in October 1937 as Hitler’s honoured guest. When he accepted an invitation to take a 12-day visit to the Fatherland. in October 1937, he controversially gave a Nazi salute to Hitler and other leaders at Berchtesgaden, Fuhrer’s mountain retreat.

Morton’s book reports that, encouraged by Edward’s unguarded private utterances, the Germans promised to protect his rented houses and their contents in Paris and Cannes, and hatched a sinister plot to entice the Duke and Duchess to stay in Spain while they invaded and conquered Britain. The Duke would return home as the Fuhrer’s puppet king.

Before Edward’s abdication, Hitler had tried to marry him to a young German princess. When that failed, says the book, but he then flooded London with a slew of Nazi supporting aristocrats who were ordered to find out what their Royal cousins were thinking. Wallis Simpson, too, came under suspicion from the British authorities, says the author. It was thought she had conducted an affair with Nazi diplomat Ernst von Ribbentrop, who had sent her seventeen carnations daily, one for each night they had spent together - hence the title of the book. Some even suspected that Wallis was a Nazi spy.

Despite concerns, the Duke of Windsor made trips to the War Office, pictured, during the conflict 

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Despite concerns, the Duke of Windsor made trips to the War Office, pictured, during the conflict 

By September 1939, Edward and Wallis had been packed off by the British government to France.

Morton writes that there is strong circumstantial evidence that loose table talk from the Duke made its made its way from Paris back to Berlin and influenced Hitler’s military strategy.

When the former king was ordered to move to Spain, Hitler is said to have offered the former royals a small fortune and a palace in Ronda, in southern Spain, if they would stay there for the duration of the war. Edward was so tempted by the offer he telegraphed Churchill to ask if there was any need for a prompt return to London. Churchill promptly ordered that he be moved to Portugal.

Morton says the Nazis were so sympathetic to Edward, they regarded him as a virtual prisoner of the British secret services who longed to escape and join them.

German diplomats believed the Duke was ‘the only Englishman with whom Hitler would negotiate any peace terms, the logical director of England’s destiny after the war.’

How the dippy duke with a death wish was snared by Mrs Simpson, the 'sexual hypnotist': Royal biographer reveals Edward hated 'Princing' as much as he loved its top perk... other men's wives

  • Edward VIII hated 'princing' and felt he was living a lie as heir to the throne
  • But he did enjoy affairs with a string of women, some who were married
  • Prince's parents did not allow him to marry Lady Rosemary Leveson-Gower
  • He then fell madly in love with long-time mistress Freda Dudley Ward
  • Edward penned one lover a letter saying he was 'dippy to die with her'
  • Eventually met Wallis Simpson - a relationship which set throne tottering
  • Queen Mary, Edward’s mother, thought Wallis to be a 'sexual hypnotist'

Last week we revealed the extent of the shamed Edward VIII’s flirtation with Hitler, and how the Establishment mounted a desperate cover up.

Here, in the second and final extract of Andrew Morton’s new book 17 Carnations, illustrated with never-before-seen photographs, the author presents a devastating portrait of a boyish prince who was in reality a serial womaniser – until he gave up the throne for his domineering wife...

He was the first Royal sex symbol of the modern age. The wistful features of the Prince of Wales adorned the bedside tables and dormitory walls of thousands of schoolgirls and young women across Britain and the Empire. He may have sent his austere father, King George V, into despair but Prince Edward – David to his family – was the undisputed darling of the dominions.

However, they were worshipping a false god. It was all a monstrous charade played out before an innocent public. The immovable reality was that the prince did not believe either in himself or in his future position as sovereign. In moments of melancholy and self-doubt, which were frequent, he felt he was living a lie, trying to match an image that bore no relation to the real man.

He baulked at the very thought of becoming King and hated a daily existence of what he derisively called ‘princing’.

 

Clowning about: Edward - then King - fools around for a snap with Wallis Simpson during a beach visit on a 1936 Mediterranean cruise

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Clowning about: Edward - then King - fools around for a snap with Wallis Simpson during a beach visit on a 1936 Mediterranean cruise

At the heart of his darkness the gloomy Prince considered suicide. Returning from his wildly successful tour of North America in 1919, he said to his private secretary: ‘I loathe my job now... I feel I am through with it and long, and long to die.’

Like many men of his generation, he was generally bashful about the female form – ‘filthy and revolting’ was his description of naked prostitutes posing in a Calais brothel – and both ignorant of and timid about the act of coition itself.

Stories about his ambiguous, not to say confused, sexuality dogged him throughout his life. His one-time private secretary Anne Seagrim believed that his sexual ambivalence went to the heart of who he was. The cornerstone of his character, she said, was his ‘fundamental uncertainty about his sexuality and his ability to be a heterosexual man. He was fundamentally afraid of women’.

In July 1917, thanks to the efforts of his equerries, a French prostitute called Paulette helped him overcome his fears. A subsequent six-month affair with a Parisian courtesan named Marguerite Alibert gave the Prince a healthy appetite for sex that belied his boyish, almost effeminate countenance. As society belle Lady Diana Cooper crudely observed, from then on the Prince was ‘never out of a woman’s legs’.

Often those legs were married. His most famous relationship was with the twice-married American Wallis Simpson, whom he met at a weekend house party near Melton Mowbray, Leicestershire, in 1931.

From the outset, this rather plain American mesmerised Edward. He was besotted by her and the couple enjoyed a ‘50 Shades’ relationship, where he obeyed her every whim, even getting down on hands and knees to paint her toe nails.

Duke of Windsor marrying Wallis Simpson back in 1937

Sightseeing: With war imminent in 1938, Edward, Wallis and her lifelong friend Katherine Rogers holidayed in Italy

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Sightseeing: With war imminent in 1938, Edward, Wallis and her lifelong friend Katherine Rogers holidayed in Italy

Soon High Society was agog with lurid speculation about her various liaisons and exploits, including her time spent learning curious sexual techniques in the brothels of Shanghai, as well as a botched abortion during an affair with the Italian diplomat Count Gian Galeazzo Ciano, who later became foreign minister and Mussolini’s son‑in‑law.

Indeed, Wallis was widely seen as the ultimate temptress – Queen Mary, Edward’s mother, thought her a sexual hypnotist.

It was even thought that Wallis had seduced the Nazi diplomat Joachim von Ribbentrop, who had given her a bouquet of 17 carnations.

A chronicle of these sexual adventures is apparently contained in the infamous ‘China dossier’, which was prepared for Prime Minister Stanley Baldwin and King George V years later.

Even though 80 years have passed since that report was purportedly compiled, not a trace of it has been found in any official or unofficial record. The document retains a mythical status, like so much surrounding the girl from Baltimore. By the time they met, of course, Edward was by no means the ingenue that many supposed.

Indeed Wallis had been introduced to Edward by his mistress of two years, Viscountess Furness, the daughter of an American diplomat who was already on her second marriage, to Marmaduke Furness, 1st Viscount Furness, the head of the Furness Shipping Line. After seducing her, Edward invited Thelma Furness and her husband to join him on a safari to Kenya. Although they were chaperoned, the lovers managed to spend time alone.

‘This was our Eden,’ Thelma later wrote of their magical nights under canvas. ‘I felt content to let the Prince chart the course, heedless of where the voyage would end.’

Informal pose: Edward on a seaside break in shorts and beach shoes

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Informal pose: Edward on a seaside break in shorts and beach shoes

The accepted version of events is that Thelma met Wallis at the Ritz hotel and asked her American friend to look after ‘her little man’ while she was in New York visiting friends. When Thelma returned some two months later Wallis had, as Thelma acidly remarked in her memoirs, ‘looked after him exceedingly well’.

Long before he met Wallis, Edward’s freewheeling bachelor lifestyle had become a great concern to the King and Queen. They were already concerned about his bisexual brother Prince George, who had become addicted to cocaine and morphine thanks to his relationship with the American socialite Kiki Preston, known as the ‘girl with the silver syringe’.

On the subject of marriage, Edward told his cousin Louis Mountbatten: ‘I suppose I’ll have to take the fatal plunge one of these days, though I’ll put if off as long as I can, ’cos it’ll destroy me.’ This reticence did not stop him playing the field.

His first amour on home soil was in 1917 with Marion Coke, the wife of Viscount ‘Tommy’ Coke, heir to the Earl of Leicester.

The Prince spent so much time in her company that eventually her husband warned him to stay clear.

Simultaneously, he romanced his sister’s best friend, Lady Sybil ‘Portia’ Cadogan, and was thought by many to be heading for the altar.

In June 1917, when Portia sent a telegram to her parents and told them ‘Engaged to Edward’, they presumed they had a future queen in the family.

Actually she had ended her association with the Prince and accepted the hand of the Prince’s university friend, Lord Edward Stanley.

The next affair was with Lady Rosemary Leveson-Gower, a noted society beauty who was described by the Illustrated London News as ‘generous, cheery and kind, ready for any excitement, especially outdoor expeditions’.

After a whirlwind wartime courtship, the Prince asked her to marry him, but both his parents were against the match, Queen Mary explaining that there was ‘bad blood – a touch of madness – in one line of the Leveson-Gower family.’

The Prince, who felt ‘bitter and furious’ towards his parents, was incensed that they were preventing him from following his heart.

As Lady Rosemary’s friend Lady Paget said: ‘I don’t think he ever forgave his father. I also felt that from that time on, he had made up his mind that he would never make what might be called a suitable marriage to please his family.’

Even after Rosemary married William Ward, later the 3rd Earl of Dudley, in March 1919, the Prince continued to stay close, privately visiting his one-time paramour at her home, Himley Hall.

He was godfather to her eldest son, Billy, who became the 4th Earl.

Throughout his life, Billy was amused by the possibility that the Prince might have been his father.

 

From then on, Edward yo‑yo’d between grand passions and casual pursuits, invariably with compliant married women. In many ways his next lover and long-time mistress Freda Dudley Ward – the half-American wife of an MP who was vice chamberlain of the Royal Household – was, marital status apart, an eminently suitable choice. His family and friends pragmatically acknowledged that Freda – the daughter of a Nottingham lace manufacturer – whom Edward met by chance during an air raid at the end of the war, was a ‘good thing’ in his life.

She was much more than his lover, becoming his close confidante. When Winston Churchill, who treated the Prince like a surrogate son, travelled to Nottingham with the couple, Edward’s adoration was transparent.

Churchill said: ‘It was quite pathetic to see the Prince and Freda. His love is so obvious and undisguisable.’

Freda soothed and steadied Edward’s tormented soul.

Mountbatten observed that she was not just beautiful and charming, saying: ‘She’s absolutely been a mother to him, comforted and advised him, and all along he has been blind in his love to what the world is saying.’

At times their relationship degenerated into a mother with her baby rather than the cliche of an immature man seeking a mother figure. ‘I’m just DIPPY to die with YOU even if we can’t live together,’ was just one example of a burble of baby talk that issued from the princely pen.

The public saw nothing of the Royal romantic dramas, but as Edward showed no sign of weaning himself away from Freda Dudley Ward, and with the King’s health failing, Edward’s lack of a wife became of wider concern. There were plans for the Australian prime minister Stanley Bruce to impress on him that the ‘certainty of the succession… is not less than essential for the maintenance of the Empire.’

WALLiS SIMPSON'S MISSION TO SAVE HER BEDLINEN FROM THE NAZIS

The Duke was notorious for never tipping his golf caddies or settling his gambling debts, and for sliding out of paying restaurant bills.

However his extravagance towards Wallis knew no bounds, and he showered her with gems and designer clothes.

When they embarked on their honeymoon to an Austrian castle in June 1937, they took with them an equerry, a couple of Scotland Yard detectives, two cairn terriers – and 266 pieces of luggage.Wallis, pictured meeting Adolf Hitler, sent her maid to Nazi-controlled Paris to save her fine bedlinens

The amount of luggage that accompanied their every journey became a source of comment and fascination.

On a visit to America in 1941, the British ambassador Lord Halifax described as ‘ridiculous’ the amount of luggage they brought, chafing at the cost of hiring a lorry to transport it.

Media coverage of their baggage excesses became to be seen as a crucial factor in the plunge in his public reputation from Edward the Peacemaker, international statesman, to spoiled playboy socialite. His demand to be allowed to return to England after the abdication crisis was derailed by the simple observation to the effect that he would have to pay income tax.

During the war, Edward secretly approached the Nazis to guard his rented homes in Paris and the south of France.

Wallis, concerned that their fine bedlinens be protected, sent her maid to Nazi-controlled Paris to save them.

When he was appointed Governor of the Bahamas, Edward refused to sail there unless Churchill, then grappling with the fallout from the Dunkirk evacuation, agreed to allow two soldiers to be released from Army service to act as his man servants.

He also insisted that they first sail to New York – so that his wife could go shopping along Madison Avenue.

The London-based Australian diplomat RG Casey informed Bruce: ‘I hear pressure is steadily being kept on the Prince of Wales with regard to his marriage. There is some little anxiety, I believe, with regard to the amount of heart he would find himself able to put into it – as it would, of course, be a marriage de convénience.’

Mountbatten drew up a list of 17 eligible young royals. Princesses Margarita and Theodora of Greece were possible candidates, but for a time the front runner was 18-year-old Princess Ingrid of Sweden, who arrived in London in 1928 in the hope of snagging the Prince of Wales, but there was little chemistry between her and the 34-year-old prince.

In many ways the most serious contender was promoted by the newly elected German Chancellor, Adolf Hitler. As part of his grand diplomatic strategy after he became Chancellor in 1933, Hitler encouraged marriage between German aristocrats and their European counterparts in order to improve the international position of the Fatherland. His eye fell upon the Prince of Wales and Princess Friederike, the 17-year-old daughter of Duke Ernst August III of Brunswick.

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Although ‘petrified’ Wallis found Edward to be ‘truly one of the most attractive personalities' when they first met

Friederike’s pedigree was impeccable. As a descendant of King George III, she would have been 34th in line to the throne had the First World War not led to Germany’s nobles being stripped of British rank and honours.

But unknown to Hitler, Edward’s heart beat faster when he was facing west towards America rather than east to Germany. And if the women he coveted were married, and seemingly unattainable, so much the better.

In the summer of 1929 he met Viscountess Furness in the incongruous setting of an agricultural show in Leicestershire. She became his hostess, companion, and lover. He often stayed at Burrough Court, the Furnesses’ country home near Melton Mowbray. There, in 1931, he met a woman nursing a heavy cold.

Wallis Warfield Simpson and her husband, Ernest, were last-minute additions to the house party. Wallis later recalled striking up a conversation when she was seated next to Edward at lunch.

Although ‘petrified’,’ by the time dessert arrived, she found him ‘truly one of the most attractive personalities I have ever met’. And so began an acquaintance that within five years would set the throne tottering.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The REAL Sound of Music Maria was a woman who never skipped singing across the hills

  • Maria von Trapp was criticised by son Johannes in a new book
  • 75-year-old revealed his mother was very complex with lots of insecurities
  • Daughter Rosmarie added that she was forced to go on stage
  • Maria married Georg von Trapp in 1927 after becoming his governess

It is one of the world's best loved musicals - the true story of a novice nun who falls in love with a widower and his seven children.

From Julie Andrews waltzing through the Alps to seven children behaving perfectly, The Sound of Music might look like it portrays the family everyone wants.

But Andrews' real life counterpart - Maria Kutschera - was far from the idealized mother the popular film portrays.

In fact she was a difficult Austrian woman plagued by insecurities.

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Maria Kutschera (centre) was far from the idealized mother The Sound of Music portrays, her son has revealed in a new book

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Maria Kutschera (centre) was far from the idealized mother The Sound of Music portrays, her son has revealed in a new book

Whereas Julie Andrews (above) waltzed carelessly through the Alps in the 1965 film, Maria was described by her son Johannes as 'incredibly strong' with 'literally an indomitable will'

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Whereas Julie Andrews (above) waltzed carelessly through the Alps in the 1965 film, Maria was described by her son Johannes as 'incredibly strong' with 'literally an indomitable will'

Her son Johannes has now revealed all in a new book written by Tom Santopietro.

He said: 'She was incredibly strong with a formidable will, literally an indomitable will.

'And sometimes running into that will was not so pleasant.'

The 75-year-old added that his mother was very complex and admitted that she was unhappy as a child.

Maria was born in 1905 while travelling from her parents' village in Tyrol to a hospital in Vienna, Austria, on a train.

By the time she was ten both of her parents had died and she was sent to live with a violent uncle.

Maria escaped from him and in 1926 she was a schoolteacher at the Nonnberg Abbey, in Salzburg, intending to become a nun.

But while there she was asked to take a job as a governess at the home of a widowed man, who was left with seven children after his first wife Agatha died of scarlet fever.

That man was Georg von Trapp. They would quickly become married and have three more children.

Georg von Trapp was previously the commander of Austrian submarine U5. He is pictured with his fiancée Agathe Whitehead

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Georg von Trapp was previously the commander of Austrian submarine U5. He is pictured with his fiancée Agathe Whitehead

The Von Trapp family are pictured in 1939. Top row: Werner and Rupert; Second row: Dr. Franz Wasner, Johanna, Martina, Maria and Georg, Johannes, Hedwig, Maria; Bottom: Agathe, Rosmarie and Eleonore

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The Von Trapp family are pictured in 1939. Top row: Werner and Rupert; Second row: Dr. Franz Wasner, Johanna, Martina, Maria and Georg, Johannes, Hedwig, Maria; Bottom: Agathe, Rosmarie and Eleonore

The family, including Andrews (centre), perform a song in the film. Rosmarie, one of Maria and Georg's children who does not feature in the film, said: 'We never went running in a field and singing songs like that'

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The family, including Andrews (centre), perform a song in the film. Rosmarie, one of Maria and Georg's children who does not feature in the film, said: 'We never went running in a field and singing songs like that'

Maria Von Trapp immortalised in iconic film The Sound of Music

It was not long before Maria founded a family choir. Although the children sang together before she joined them, they remember her particularly pushing public performances - especially after Georg lost his fortune.

Rosmarie, one of Maria and Georg's children, often found her mother particularly difficult.

She said it got worse after her father died in 1947.

'I was not happy on stage. I was made to do it,' Boudicca Fox-Leonard of the Sunday People reported her saying.

The now 87-year-old said: 'We never went running in a field and singing songs like that. We had a hard life. It was a struggle.'

In real life, after fleeing the country in 1938 the von Trapp's came to rely on their musical performances for money 

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In real life, after fleeing the country in 1938 the von Trapp's came to rely on their musical performances for money

She also recounts Maria sending her for shock therapy after she had a breakdown and said she locked step-daughter Johanna in a room for announcing she was getting married.

After fleeing the country in 1938, the family - known as the Trapp Family Singers in the US - came to rely on the performances for money.

The popular film was made after Broadway found a book detailing the family's adventurers.

Maria later sold the rights to Hollywood for £3,000.

But director Robert Wise rebuffed her attempts to act as an adviser. He admitted in an interview: 'She was bossy, I didn't like that about her.'

Even director Robert Wise rebuffed Maria's attempts to act as an adviser. He admitted in an interview: 'She was bossy, I didn't like that about her'

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Even director Robert Wise rebuffed Maria's attempts to act as an adviser. He admitted in an interview: 'She was bossy, I didn't like that about her'

Only three children, none of which feature in the film, survive. The last surviving von Trapp singer died in early 2014.

Four of the couple's great-grandchildren are still attempting to keep the tradition alive.

Sofi, Melanie, Amanda, and their younger brother August have revived the family's musical heritage and are singing together.

They can remember little of their great-grandmother. 

Sofi said: 'We know she was a little impulsive, but without her the family would never have survived as a single group.

'The Captain would have been taken off to war if it wasn't for the singing.'

'Our lives have really interwoven with each other': Fifty years on from The Sound Of Music the actors who played the von Trapp children have remained lifelong friends

  • The 1965 Oscar-winning film adaptation of the Rodgers & Hammerstein musical The Sound Of Music is celebrating turning 50 this year
  • The actors who starred as the von Trapp children have remained close friends over the five decades since they traveled to Austria together
  • 'We're beyond friends. We're second family,' said Kym Karath, who played the youngest von Trapp, Gretl

The seven young actors who became part of cinematic history when they were cast as the von Trapp children in Rogers & Hammerstein's The Sound Of Music in 1965 have grown to become lifelong friends in the fifty years since the famous film's release.

Known as The SoM 7, they formed their own sort of family over the months of making the musical. Their parents befriended one another as the young performers traveled to Austria for filming, and the actors themselves have remained close for decades.

'We're beyond friends. We're second family,' said Kym Karath, who played the youngest von Trapp, Gretl. 'As adults, we were deeply bonded, so our lives have really interwoven with each other.'

As The Sound Of Music celebrates its 50th anniversary, here's a look at what the SoM 7 are doing now:

The 1965 Oscar-winning film adaptation of the Rodgers & Hammerstein musical The Sound Of Music, starring Julie Andrews and the actors who played the von Trapp children, is celebrating its 50th anniversary this year

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The 1965 Oscar-winning film adaptation of the Rodgers & Hammerstein musical The Sound Of Music, starring Julie Andrews and the actors who played the von Trapp children, is celebrating its 50th anniversary this year

The seven young actors who became part of cinematic history when they were cast as the von Trapp children in Rogers & Hammerstein's The Sound Of Music have grown into lifelong friends (2012 photo)

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The seven young actors who became part of cinematic history when they were cast as the von Trapp children in Rogers & Hammerstein's The Sound Of Music have grown into lifelong friends (2012 photo)

 

Chairmian Carr, who played the role of Liesl, is now 72 and sells custom furniture that she designs Carr lives in Southern California and regularly sees her Sound Of Music sisters

 

Chairmian Carr, who played the role of Liesl, is now 72 and sells custom furniture that she designs

LIESL: Now 72, Charmian Carr played the eldest von Trapp daughter and has published two books about her experience making the film: Forever Liesl and Letters To Liesl.

She maintains a website where she sells the custom furniture she designs, as well as autographed photos from her Sound of Music days.

Carr lives in Southern California and regularly sees her Sound Of Music sisters.

 

Angela Cartwright, who played the role of Brigitta is now 62 and works as a photographer, painter and writer in Los Angeles Cartwright traded acting for other artistic pursuits after having children.

Angela Cartwright, who played the role of Brigitta, is now 62 and works as a photographer, painter and writer in Los Angeles

Iconic film The Sound of Music celebrates 50 years

BRIGITTA: Angela Cartwright, who started performing at age 3, went on to star in the TV series Lost in Space and Make Room for Granddaddy after playing Brigitta in The Sound Of Music. She traded acting for other artistic pursuits after having children.

Now 62, Cartwright works as a photographer, painter and writer in Los Angeles. Her most recent book was released last year: Styling The Stars: Lost Treasures From The Twentieth Century Fox Archive.

 

This undated photo provided by Twentieth Century Fox Home Entertainment shows, actor Duane Chase, who plays the role of Kurt, in the film, Chase switched gears in college, earning a bachelor's and master's degree in geology and working as a software engineer

Duane Chase played the role of Kurt, in the film. Now 64, he worked as a software engineer and is now considering retirement

KURT: Duane Chase, who played little brother Kurt von Trapp, continued acting until his teens, including an appearance in the 1966 Kurt Russell film, Follow Me, Boys!

Chase switched gears in college, earning a bachelor's and master's degree in geology and working as a software engineer.

Now 64, he recently went on sabbatical and is considering retirement. He lives near Seattle with his wife and their two cats.

 

Nicholas Hammond played Friedrich in the film and at 64 now lives in Australia where he works as an actor, writer and director Hammond continued to collect film and TV credits as he pursued an English literature degree at Princeton

Nicholas Hammond played Friedrich in the film and at 64 now lives in Australia where he works as an actor, writer and director

FRIEDRICH: For Nicholas Hammond, who portrayed the eldest von Trapp son, The Sound Of Music came early in a still-thriving entertainment career.

Hammond continued to collect film and TV credits as he pursued an English literature degree at Princeton. Now 64, he lives in Australia and works as an actor, writer and director.

 

Kym Karath was only 5 years old when she played Gretl. Now 56, she is returning to her entertainment career as an actress and writer Karath quit acting for high school and college at USC, and focused on parenting rather than performing when her son was born with disabilities

Kym Karath was only 5 years old when she played Gretl. Now 56, she is returning to her entertainment career as an actress and writer

GRETL: Kym Karath was only 5 years old when she played Gretl von Trapp. She quit acting for high school and college at USC, and focused on parenting rather than performing when her son was born with disabilities.

Along with other parents, Karath helped establish the Aurelia Foundation, which provides services for special-needs individuals once they finish high school.

Now 56, Karath is returning to her entertainment career as an actress and writer.

 

Heather Menzies played Louisa, in the film. Now 65, she runs the nonprofit organization she established after her husband died from a rare form of cancer The Robert Urich Foundation provides funding for cancer research and to help families relocate for specialized treatment

Heather Menzies played Louisa, in the film. Now 65, she runs the nonprofit organization she established after her husband died from a rare form of cancer

LOUISA: The Sound Of Music was Heather Menzies-Urich's first movie. She continued acting after she wed actor Robert Urich, but stopped when their children were born.

Now 65, Menzies-Urich runs the nonprofit organization she established after her husband died from a rare form of cancer.

The Robert Urich Foundation provides funding for cancer research and to help families relocate for specialized treatment.

 

Debbie Turner played Marta and the 58-year-old now runs her own floral-design business in Minnesota She recently was called on to provide flowers for a wedding in Salzburg, Austria, at a palace that inspired the sets of The Sound Of Music

Debbie Turner played Marta and the 58-year-old now runs her own floral-design business in Minnesota

MARTA: Debbie Turner was as much an athlete as an actress as a child, and she opted for sports after playing Marta von Trapp. A lifetime of skiing earned the 58-year-old a knee replacement earlier this year.

Turner owns a floral-design business in Minnesota. She recently was called on to provide flowers for a wedding in Salzburg, Austria, at a palace that inspired the sets of The Sound Of Music.

The 1965 Oscar-winning film adaptation of the Rodgers & Hammerstein musical The Sound Of Music, staring Christopher Plummer as the children's father, above, is celebrating turning 50 this year

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The 1965 Oscar-winning film adaptation of the Rodgers & Hammerstein musical The Sound Of Music, staring Christopher Plummer as the children's father, above, is celebrating turning 50 this year

 

 

 

 

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