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Martin Miller and Hannah Norbert-Miller Archive

Martin Miller.jpg
Martin Miller and Grete Hartwig (MILLER 3/1/1)

Martin Miller, actor and director, was born Rudolf Müller in Kremsier, Moravia. He trained in Vienna and Prague, and spent the early years of his career in theatre and cabaret in Austria and Czechoslovakia. A member of the Jewish League of Culture in Berlin in 1938-39, he emigrated to Britain in March 1939. In London he co-founded the celebrated emigré cabaret and theatre at the Austrian Centre, the Laterndl, where he made his name above all through his Hitler parodies, and which he was soon asked to reprise as part of the BBC German Service's propaganda campaign. His English film debut came in 1940 in the comedy Let George Do It, featuring George Formby. Not long after, Miller also made his debut on the English stage, in Alec Clunes's Awake and Sing (1942), appearing in the same year in the role of  Dr Einstein in Arsenic and Old Lace, which ran until 1946. This firmly established Miller in British theatre and film, an achievement few other emigré actors were able to match, and he enjoyed a highly successful theatrical career here. As well as his English-language work, however, he continued his work in the German language for the BBC's German and Austrian services, which he served as author, actor, presenter and producer for the rest of his life.

Hanne (later Hannah) Norbert (originally Nussbaum), later known as Norbert-Miller trained at the Reinhardt Seminar and embarked on a promising acting career in Austria that was interrupted by the Anschluss. She arrived in Britain just before the outbreak of war, and joined the Laterndl company at the Austrian Centre. She too was soon recruited by the BBC German Service to assist in its propaganda broadcasting. She married Martin Miller in 1946. In the post-war years, Hanne carved out a distinguished broadcasting career for herself in the BBC World Service, and performed in a number of radio and television plays and films (among them Sunday, Bloody Sunday).

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