- Emmy Hennings
Emmy Hennings (
February 17 ,1885 –August 10 1948 ) was a performer and poet. She was also the wife of celebratedDada istHugo Ball . Despite her own achievements, it is difficult to come by information about Hennings that is not directly related to her relationship with Hugo Ball.Life and Work
Hennings was born in
Flensburg ,Germany . She was a performer at theCabaret Simplizissimus inMunich , when she met Ball in 1913. At the time, Hennings was already a published poet, whose works had appeared inleft-wing publications called "Pan" and "Die Aktion". In 1913 she also published a short poetry collection called "Ether Poems", or "Ather Gedichte" in German. Later, Hennings was a collaborator to the magazine "Revolutions", which was founded by Ball andHans Leybold .Hennings and Ball moved to
Zurich in 1915, where they took part of the founding of the Cabaret Voltaire, which marked the beginning of the Dada movement. Hennings was a regular performer at the Cabaret Voltaire. Her performances included a role in "Das Leben des Menschen" (the Life of a Man), in which she appeared with Ball. This the German premiere of the play byLeonid Andreev . Hennings also performed in a piece written by Ball, called "Krippenspeil". After the Cabaret Voltaire ended, Hennings and Ball toured, performing mostly in hotels. Hennings sang, did puppetry, and danced to music composed by Ball. She also recited her own poetry. In 1916 Ball and Hennings created Arabella, their own ensemble troupe, where Hennings performed under the name Dagny. Hennings married Ball onFebruary 21 ,1920 . Although they had no children together, Hennings had a daughter, Annemarie, from a previous relationship. Hennings, who outlived Ball by two decades, died inSorengo-Lugano ,Italy .Role as Artist
In "The Magic Bishop: Hugo Ball, Dada Poet", author
Erdmute Wenzel White writes that Hennings “was admired by expressionists as the incarnation of the cabaret artist of her time... The shining star of the Voltaire, according to the "Zuricher Post" (Zurich Post ), her role in Dada has not been adequately acknowledged.” (p. 11).White also cites a poem by
Johannes Becher which he uses as evidence that Emmy served as a muse for other artists of the time:"(It was in Munich, at the Café Stefanie,Where I recited for you, Emmy, poemsThat I dared tell only you,"Poetry
The following poem is an example of Hennings' poetry:
Tänzerin
Dir ist als ob ich schon gezeichnet wäre
Und auf der Totenliste stünde.
Es hält mich ab von mancher Sünde.
Wie langsam ich am Leben zehre.
Und ängstlich sind oft meine Schritte,
Mein Herz hat einen kranken Schlag
Und schwächer wird's mit jedem Tag.
Ein Todesengel steht in meines Zimmers Mitte.
Doch tanz ich bis zur Atemnot.
Bald werde ich im Grabe liegen
Und niemand wird sich an mich schmiegen.
Ach, küssen will ich bis zum Tod.
Dancer
To you it's as if I was already
Marked and waiting on Death's list.
It keeps me safe from many sins.
How slowly life drains out of me.
My steps are often steeped in gloom,
My heart beats in a sickly way
And it gets weaker every day.
A death angel stands in the middle of my room.
Yet I dance till I'm out of breath.
Soon lying in the grave I'll be
And no one will snuggle up to me.
Oh, give me kisses up till death.
ources
*"Flight Out of Time: A Dada Diary", by Hugo Ball
*"The Magic Bishop: Hugo Ball, Dada Poet" by Erdmute Wenzel WhiteExternal links
* [http://www.the-artists.org/ArtistView.cfm?id=8A01F5CE-BBCF-11D4-A93500D0B7069B40 The-artists-org short bio,links]
* [http://poly.polyamory.org/~howard/Poetry/dancer.html Dancer poem with translation]
* [http://www.salisbury.edu/schools/fulton/theatre/Dada/Emmy%20Hennings.htm Salisbury Theatre University short bio]
* [http://www.peak.org/~dadaist/English/Graphics/hennings.html Links to some poems]
* [http://sdrc.lib.uiowa.edu/dada/letzte_freude/index.htm Facsimile of Hennings' poem collection, Die letzte Freude (in German)]
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