Last week on March 27th the stars of the Sound of Music reunited in Hollywood to celebrate the milestone of the 1965 musical that has become an enduring classic kicking off the TCM Festival and featuring a screening at the Chinese Theater in Hollywood. Julie Andrews now 79 told The Associated Press that she couldnt pinpoint the overriding reason that the film has been so popular for so many years but added They all came together to make I guess a joyous family film thats the best way I can describe it. In honor of the anniversary celebration a five-disc Blu-ray DVD collection has been released along with the soundtracks re-release and four new books about the film. The movie opens in over 500 theaters in April.
I believe the actual reason is a much deeper one - no other film that is so entertaining also reveals the mentality of support and opposition to the Nazis and demolishes many of the liberal myths about the Left and the working class.
The story of how Hitlers only major diplomatic defeat prior to World War II was handed to him by the close alliance between two fascist leaders Mussolini and Dollfuss sheds further light on how shallow the Right/Left model of politics is. When the Austro-Hungarian Empire was shattered as a result of World War I and the Versailles Peace Treaty most observers believed that the tiny new Austrian Republic could hardly survive. With the establishment of Austrian independence in 1919 it was often referred to as the state nobody wants and expressly forbidden by treaty to unite with Germany.
Adolf Hitler born in Austria was a stranger in Germany. Like Napoleon who was born in Corsica and regarded as a rough foreigner Hitler had to prove himself as a pan-German nationalist. On the very first page of Mein Kampf he proclaimed the necessity of union (Anschluss) between Germany and Austria and immediately after his election as Chancellor in 1933 listed the annexation of the land of his birth as his number one priority in foreign policy.
The world economic crisis of the 1930s convinced many Austrians that the country was doomed to financial ruin unless it became part of a larger German state. Nevertheless a minority of dedicated patriotic Austrians became aware that the nationalist mirage and siren call of a Greater Germany would only plunge Austria into another disastrous world war. Today many people are unaware that Austrias conservative leaders often labeled as clerico-fascists in the 1930s opposed the local Nazi attempts at a coup and more actively combated the threat of German expansionism than anywhere else in Europe certainly more than the liberal democracies" that had already decided on following a policy of appeasement.
The Nazis were handed their first major political defeat by the resistance of Austrian Christian and Social Democrats who together accounted for 77 percent of the popular vote in the national elections of 1930. Both parties stood unequivocally for national independence and against Nazi-inspired racial antisemitism. Chancellor Engelbert Dollfuss outlawed the Austrian Nazi Party and confiscated all its assets in June 1933. Dollfuss admired Mussolini and imitated various aspects of the Italian fascist system yet both these fascist leaders initially adamantly refused to be bullied by Hitler and the Nazis.
It was Mussolini who most clearly recognized the value of Austrian independence its important economic and cultural links with the Mediterranean and Catholic Church and correctly argued and predicted in 1934 that:
- Austria is politically essential to the preservation of Europe.
- The day Austria perishes and is swallowed up by Germany the break-up of Europe begins.
- Austria must survive culturally too because it is a bastion of Mediterranean culture.
