peers. In the words of one music critic, Otto Reitzel, Bruno Heydrich’s
YO U N G R E I N H A R D
17
appearance as Siegfried at the Cologne City Theatre in 1896 was distin-
guished by ‘musical infallibility’, while another critic praised his perform-
ance as Fra Diavolo in Brunswick in 1901 as ‘an utterly perfect
impersonation’.11 Success bred success and in 1895, the same year that he
met Bruno Walter, Heydrich was offered the lead role in Hans Pfitzner’s
Der arme Heinrich
in Mainz. Pfitzner had become acquainted with
Heydrich in Cologne and was so impressed by his ‘musically and intel-
lectually alert’ performance as Siegfried that he offered him the lead role
in his new opera.12
Alongside his professional activities as an opera singer, Bruno increas-
ingly devoted himself to composition, ultimately writing no fewer than
five operas:
Amen
(1895),
Frieden
(
Peace
, 1907),
Zufall
(
Chance
, 1914),
Das
Leiermädchen
(
The Lyre Child
, 1921) and
Das Ewige Licht
(
The Eternal
Light
, 1923). Bruno’s works were not among the finest compositions of
the late nineteenth and early twentieth century, but the staging of several
operas in the homeland of classical music, alongside the works of
composers like Beethoven, Mendelssohn, Wagner and Strauss, signified
considerable success in itself. In terms of style and content, his composi-
tions were inspired by the towering example of Richard Wagner, the
leading avant-garde artist of his time, whose four-part music drama
The
Ring of the Nibelung
(1876) had revolutionized the international opera
scene, taking musical romanticism to new and potentially insurmountable
heights. The major themes of Wagner’s compositions – love, power and
the eternal clashes between good and evil, which he developed most
powerfully in his last musical dramas,
Tristan, Die Meistersinger
and
Parsifal
– deeply impacted on Bruno Heydrich’s own work, as became
evident when his first opera,
Amen
, premiered in Cologne in September
1895 to great critical acclaim.13
Like Wagner’s heroes Siegfried and Tristan, the protagonist of
Amen
,
Reinhard, is an ultimately tragic figure tested by fate and by the devious
deeds of the opera’s villain, the peasant leader Thomas, representing the
threatening rise of Social Democracy in Imperial Germany. In contrast to
Thomas, the crippled villain who kills Reinhard through a callous stab in
the back, Reinhard is a Germanic hero figure equipped with great moral,
intellectual and physical gifts – sufficiently so for Bruno to name his eldest
son after him.
The opera’s success brought national recognition and a certain degree of
material security, allowing Bruno to marry the daughter of his mentor,
Professor Krantz, in December 1897. Reinhard Heydrich’s mother,
Elisabeth Anna Amalia Krantz, was twenty-six at the time of the wedding,
and, in many ways, the extreme opposite of her husband. An imposingly
tall and slightly overweight figure with black curly hair, Bruno was jovial
18
HITLER’S HANGMAN
and entertaining, punctuating his speech with wild theatrical gestures,
whereas Elisabeth was small and of slight build, her bearing strict and well
disciplined.14 Moreover, Elisabeth was raised as a Catholic and was there-
fore a member of a religious minority. Catholics accounted for 36 per cent
of the empire’s population and inter-confessional marriages were rare.
Elisabeth’s mother, Maria Antonie, herself the daughter of a wealthy busi-
ness family in Bautzen, had brought her children up fully cognizant of
their social status as a wealthy upper-middle-class family. Her two sons
were sent to London to train as merchants and acquire foreign-language
skills, while Elisabeth was educated in a Catholic convent in Lugano
before training as a pianist in her father’s Conservatory. Such an
upbringing was common for the daughters of wealthy families: in order to
support the social aspirations of their husbands, especially in the educated
middle classes, wives were increasingly expected to have a well-rounded
education, artistic talent and musical abilities.15 Despite the couple’s
different upbringings and characters, the Heydrich marriage was a love
match. They shared a deep passion for music and their mutual affection
was strong enough to overcome the considerable differences in social
status, wealth and religious upbringing.
Encouraged by the success of
Amen
, Bruno Heydrich harboured ambi-
tious plans for his second opera,
Frieden
, which he wanted to be staged at
the Berlin Court Opera as a sign of royal endorsement. Official distinc-
tions and royal patronage mattered a great deal in Imperial Germany, but
Bruno’s high-flying plans came to nothing. Instead,
Frieden
premiered in
Mainz on 27 January 1907 to honour the forty-eighth birthday of Kaiser
Wilhelm II. The Kaiser’s lack of interest in Bruno’s opera was partly due
to its content: set in the sixteenth century, the three-act opera had a
strongly religious subtext and revolved around Catholic notions of sin and
redemption – not exactly a drawcard for the head of the German
Protestant Church.16 The mixed public reception of
Frieden
was a disap-
pointment for Heydrich and his stage appearances became less frequent.
But although a major breakthrough as a composer was to elude him, he
left behind an extensive oeuvre, including five operas, several piano
compositions, choral works, lyrical triplets and chamber music pieces:
sixty compositions altogether by the outbreak of the Great War, securing
him a more than negligible place in the history of early twentieth-century
German music.17
Bruno’s greatest success, however, was as a teacher of music. After his
marriage into the Krantz family, and aided by the substantial inheritance
left to Elisabeth by her father upon his early death in 1898, the Heydrichs
moved to the city of Hal e – the birthplace of Georg Friedrich Händel –
where Bruno founded the Hal e Choir School, an institution based on the
YO U N G R E I N H A R D
19
famous model of Carl Friedrich Christian Fasch’s international y acclaimed
Prussian Sing-Akademie. Although long established as one of Germany’s
finest university towns, and home to international y renowned academics
such as the economist Gustav Schmol er (1845–1917) and the Leopoldina,
Germany’s oldest academy for science, Hal e had been a sleepy medium-
sized provincial town with no more than 50,000 inhabitants for most of the
nineteenth century. By the time the Heydrichs arrived, however, it had
become one of Germany’s booming cities whose prosperity was based on a
rapidly expanding mining and chemical industry, as wel as a growing
number of regional banks that transformed Hal e into the sixth-largest
German city with a population of 156,000.18
Of the many beneficiaries of this radical transformation process, the
middle classes prospered most. With their growing wealth, the social
status attached to a distinct bourgeois culture of
Bildung
– education and
cultivation through engagement with literature, music and the fine arts –
increased. For all the backwardness of its political elite, Imperial Germany
was a country with a hyper-modern cultural scene, a country in which
these arts where widely cherished and officially promoted.19 By the time
Bruno Heydrich opened his business in Halle, music had become a
middle-class commodity which formed an essential part of a bourgeois
education. Its representative medium was the piano, which became an
affordable asset of many middle-class living rooms in the late nineteenth
century. With the shift in piano manufacture from craft shop to factory by
the mid-ninteenth century, the production of pianos increased eightfold
in Germany between 1870 and 1910. Their cost was accordingly cut by
half and the piano became the centrepiece of middle-class cultivation.
Hausmusik
or simple compositions for amateur players was a central
feature of middle-class entertainment and culture.20
In 1901, Bruno Heydrich’s small Choir School became a fully fledged
conservatory specializing in piano and singing lessons. It was the first
establishment of its kind in Halle. Progress was swift in the following
years. The citizens of the increasingly wealthy and fast-growing city were
well able to afford to send their children to the Conservatory. Several
times a year Bruno’s pupils staged public concerts, which soon became an
important feature of Halle’s cultural life.21 Parallel to his professional
success, Bruno Heydrich managed to integrate himself fully into Halle’s
social circles. As in other European cities at the time, clubs and associa-
tions in Halle remained the preferred framework for middle-class social
interactions. The Halle registry of 1900 listed 436 private clubs and asso-
ciations, many of them learned societies that catered for the interests of
the university-educated and wealthy middle classes, and arranged litera-
ture evenings, concerts, balls and similarly edifying social events. One of
20
HITLER’S HANGMAN
the most socially influential of these organizations was the Freemason
lodge of the Three Sabres, whose membership included both university
staff and members of the wider business community. It is unclear when
Bruno Heydrich joined the lodge, but he repeatedly organized concerts on
its premises in the first years of the twentieth century.22
Bruno was also one of the founders of the Halle branch of the
Schlaraffia society, an all-male organization founded in Prague in 1859
with the purpose of advancing the arts, conviviality, and friendship across
national borders. Membership of the Schlaraffia was not atypical for an
artist like Bruno Heydrich. More eminent contemporaries such as the
famous Hungarian composer Franz Lehár and the Austrian poet Peter
Rosegger were members of the society, which operated across Central
Europe. As a local celebrity, Bruno was also made an honorary member of
several of the town’s musical societies such as the Hallesche Liedertafel, a
men’s choir founded in 1834. At the Liedertafel’s seventy-fifth anniversary
in 1909, he composed a ‘Hymn to the Men’s Choir’ and repeatedly staged
choral performances involving both members of the Liedertafel and
students from his Conservatory.23
Meanwhile, the Halle Conservatory continued to thrive. The number of
students grew rapidly, from 20 in 1902 to 190 in 1904, requiring eleven
permanent teachers, four teaching assistants and a secretary. At this point,
the Heydrichs could also afford to employ two maids and a butler.
Elisabeth ran the financial and administrative side of the family business,
holding together what would otherwise have soon disintegrated had it
been left in the hands of her artistically talented but financially inept
husband, who spent money more quickly than he earned it. Bruno’s
musical talents and social skills, combined with his wife’s fortune, secured
the Heydrich family a respected place in the Halle community. They
cultivated personal relationships with the Mayor of Halle and the editor
of the local newspaper, the
Saale-Zeitung
. Another close family friend was
Count Felix von Luckner, who would rise to fame during the Great War
as one of Germany’s most celebrated naval war heroes.24
Reinhard Heydrich was therefore born into a family of considerable
financial means and social standing, a family that endeavoured to lead an
orderly life characterized by regularity and hard work, as was typical for
an upwardly mobile German bourgeois family at the turn of the century.
While Heydrich’s mother devoted herself entirely to the household and
the children’s wellbeing, occasionally working as a piano teacher in her
husband’s Conservatory, his father Bruno primarily gloried in his profes-
sion as a director. The gender-specific distribution of roles in the Heydrich
household was normal for the time: the father was the unchallenged head
of the family and made all important decisions concerning child-rearing
YO U N G R E I N H A R D
21
and education, while the mother – together with governesses in the case
of the Heydrich family – looked after the children’s everyday needs. Girls,
including Reinhard’s elder sister Maria, were prepared for their antici-
pated roles as mothers and wives, whereas boys were raised as future