While Ava Brown was hidden away as Hitler’s secret companion, another woman was living as the actual first lady of Nazi Germany, hosting Mussolini, presiding over state dinners, and letting lion cubs pad through rooms decorated with looted art.

But Emmy Gurring wasn’t born into power or politics.

She was a middling provincial actress who never landed a leading role on any major stage.

And yet she pulled off the greatest performance of her life, playing the gracious queen of a criminal regime so convincingly that she spent the next 28 years insisting it wasn’t acting.

The chocolate king’s daughter, Emmy Sonamon, was born on 24th of March 1893 in Hamburg.

The daughter of a wealthy chocolate manufacturer.

It was a solidly bourgeois beginning.

the kind of comfortable, predictable upbringing that makes everything that followed feel like a casting era.

She trained as an actress and spent the next two decades working theaters across Hamburg, Munich, Vienna, Stoutgart, and VHimar.

She married a fellow actor named Carl Kustlin in 1916, divorced him by 1926, and by her late 30s had settled into the life of a competent but unremarkable provincial performer.

No breakthrough role ever came, no critical acclaim, no trajectory toward anything larger than regional theater and polite applause from small audiences.

So when she met Herman Guring at a social gathering in VHimar in 1932, she wasn’t a naive young woman swept off her feet by a powerful man.

She was a 39-year-old professional performer who had spent her entire adult life reading rooms, studying audiences, and learning how to hold attention.

She recognized the audition of a lifetime.

And she took the part without hesitation.

The wedding that was a weapon.

On April [music] 10th, 1935, Emmy and Herman married in the Berlin Cathedral.

Adolf Hitler stood as witness.

Tens of thousands of uniformed Nazi formations lined the streets outside while military aircraft roared overhead in formation.

The B ceremony was broadcast nationwide carried into living rooms across Germany as though it were a state occasion because that’s exactly what it was.

This wasn’t a wedding.

It was a propaganda deployment designed to present the Nazi leadership as cultured, legitimate, and worthy of admiration.

Emy’s farewell performance at the Prussian State Theater came that same year.

Guring had already named her a Prussian state actress in 1934, a title that carried both prestige and a generous pension.

She told the press she was retiring from the stage.

But that wasn’t quite true.

She hadn’t stopped acting.

She’d simply moved to a much bigger stage with a far larger audience and stakes that went well beyond a curtain call.

Every day from that point forward, her role was the same.

To make the Third Reich look civilized.

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The Fantasy Kingdom.

This is where Emmy Guring’s daily life stops resembling anything a viewer might expect.

She spent most of her time at Karenhole, Herman Guring’s sprawling hunting estate in the Schawhider forest north of Berlin.

Named after his first wife, Karen, who had died in 1931, the estate was enormous and deliberately theatrical.

Contemporary accounts describe massive halls filled with antlers and hunting trophies.

Rooms decorated with what post-war investigators confirmed were looted artworks.

Old masters stolen from Jewish collections across occupied Europe.

Paintings that had once hung in private homes and galleries now served as background decor for dinner parties.

Herman had installed a gigantic model railway that he and guests played with for hours, crouching over miniature landscapes like children while the real world outside burned.

He dressed in velvet and fur outfits that shifted between medieval fantasy and oporatic costume, robes, embroidered jackets, jeweled daggers tucked into silk sashes, and then there was the private zoo.

Lion cubs padded through the terraces and salons like household pets, sprawling across furniture and nudging guests for attention.

When Bonito Mussolini visited Karenhole, Emmy and Herman presented a lion cub as casually as another couple might offer a cocktail.

One contemporary observer noted the zoo required enough meat to feed an entire village.

All while wartime rationing squeezed ordinary German families into ever tighter portions.

But Karen Hall was only one piece of the fantasy.

The couple rotated between Guring’s Berlin residences, a luxury yacht called Karen II, a gift from the German automobile industry, and a thatched holiday house on the fashionable island of Silt.

Emmy moved between these settings like an actress between stage sets.

Always dressed for the part, always ready for the next audience.

None of this was personal eccentricity.

It was regimefunded spectacle built on systematic theft and Emmy was its lead performer every single day.

She woke each morning inside a world assembled from the possessions of people who had been robbed, deported, or worse.

and her job was to make it all look elegant.

The regime’s leading lady, Emmy didn’t just live in this world.

She curated it into a quasi royal persona.

Staff were required to address her as hoame, meaning high lady.

She was chauffeurred between residences in motorcades.

She dressed for every reception as though it were a coronation, and she treated the role with the discipline of a performer who had finally landed the part she’d always wanted.

But her daily routine had a dimension most viewers won’t expect.

Starting in 1936, Emmy chaired the Emmy Guring Klashdong, a foundation that oversaw a retirement home for aging theater artists in VHimar.

This meant daily correspondence, administrative decisions, and filtering petitions from artists across Germany who were hoping for financial support or professional patronage.

She reviewed these requests, made decisions in the cultural sector, and submitted them to her husband in his capacity as the regime’s overlord of theater and opera.

Herman Guring controlled Prussia’s state theaters, and Emmy served as his gatekeeper.

This wasn’t a vanity title on fancy letterhead.

It was a lever of real cultural influence and she pulled it every single day.

She decided who received help and who was ignored.

A quiet but meaningful kind of power.

And there was a deeper structural reason why her daily routine mattered so much to the regime.

Ava Brown was Hitler’s companion.

But the German public had no idea she existed.

Hitler kept Ava hidden because he believed his bachelor image was politically useful.

The idea that he was married to Germany itself, devoted entirely to the nation.

But someone had to fill the void at public events.

And Emmy stepped into it naturally.

She appeared at receptions, theater premieres, charity gallas, and state ceremonies as the regime’s public feminine face.

Foreign dignitaries visiting Berlin encountered Emmy, not Eva.

Press photographs featured Emmy, not Eva.

She was in every functional sense the first lady of the Third Reich.

And she embraced the role completely.

This is what made her routine so valuable to the regime.

Every gracious handshake with a foreign ambassador, every glamorous photograph in the newspapers, every warm smile at a state reception helped present Nazi leadership as sophisticated, cultured, and normal.

She turned mass theft into background decor and made a criminal government look civilized.

That wasn’t an accident.

That was the performance she delivered every single day, the price of a coffee remark.

But behind the glamour, there were teeth, and they were sharp.

Shortly after the lavish 1935 wedding, an opera singer named Helen vonvineman made an off-hand remark to acquaintances.

She’d known Emmy back in the provincial theater days, back when Emmy wasn’t the great lady, and was available for a cup of coffee and two shilling 50.

It was a casual, almost affectionate jab.

The kind of remark old colleagues make about someone who’s risen far beyond expectations.

But in Nazi Germany, casual remarks about the powerful had consequences.

That single sentence cost Binman everything.

She was denounced, arrested, and beaten during interrogation.

A court sentenced her to 3 years in a penitentiary.

She wasn’t released until 1943, and by then she was gravely ill from years of imprisonment.

Whether Emmy personally pushed for the prosecution or merely benefited from a climate where criticizing Nazi grandees was swiftly and brutally punished remains genuinely unclear in the historical record.

No document directly ties her to the denunciation, but the result was identical either way.

The woman who chaired a foundation dedicated to helping theater artists did absolutely nothing to protect a fellow artist destroyed for telling the truth about her past.

That silence tells you everything about the kind of first lady Emmy Gurring actually was.

And it reveals the iron underneath the velvet.

The feud that got her exiled.

Emy’s claim to the first lady title didn’t go unchallenged.

It put her on a collision course with two women who had their own reasons to resent her.

Magda Gerbles, who harbored ambitions for that same role as the wife of the propaganda minister, and Eva Brown, whom Emmy persistently and openly snubbed.

Emmy treated Eva with naked condescension at every encounter.

She refused to acknowledge Eva’s status as Hitler’s companion.

She behaved by multiple accounts as though Eva simply didn’t rank, as though being the most powerful man in Europe’s romantic partner was somehow beneath notice.

At [snorts] gatherings where both women were present, Emmy conducted herself like royalty, greeting a servant.

She made no effort to hide her disdain, and the people around her noticed.

But Emmy had miscalculated badly.

She had spent years reading audiences, judging which performances landed and which fell flat.

And yet she completely misjudged the one audience she couldn’t afford to offend.

Hitler personally intervened, ordering Herman Guring to make his wife treat Ava with respect.

It was a direct command from the head of the regime delivered through her own husband.

And when Emy’s behavior still didn’t change to Hitler’s satisfaction, the consequence was swift and devastating.

Emmy was frozen out of invitations to the Burghoff, Hitler’s mountain retreat, the inner social court where real influence was brokered over tea, mountain walks, and late night conversations.

The woman who had built her entire public identity as the regime’s leading lady was quietly expelled from the only stage that actually mattered.

She could still host dignitaries at Karen Hall.

She could still chair her foundation and smile for photographers.

But the inner circle, the place where decisions were made and loyalties tested, was closed to her.

The irony is extraordinary.

Emmy lost her position not because of politics, not because of the war, not because of any moral reckoning, but because she couldn’t stop looking down on the woman Hitler loved.

A trained actress who had spent decades reading rooms and calibrating her performance misjudged the one relationship that could end her career.

The curtain falls.

As the war turned against Germany, the fantasy kingdom disintegrated piece by piece.

Karen Hall was evacuated in early 1945.

The looted art was packed onto trains and scattered across hiding places in southern Germany.

The estate itself was blown up to keep it from the advancing Soviets.

Herman Guring ordering the destruction of the palace that had defined his image for a decade.

Emmy fled south with her young daughter, Eda, born in 1938 during the height of the regime’s power.

American forces arrested them in May 1945, and Emmy spent the following months in various internment camps.

But even in custody, she couldn’t let go of the role.

Camp staff reported ongoing quarrels because Emmy kept putting up a photograph of Herman in her quarters and demanding its stay.

She was mostly bedridden with sciatica, insisting on medical treatment befitting her former status, telling anyone who would listen that she was being persecuted simply for being married to a prominent man.

The fantasy kingdom was rubble.

Her husband had been convicted of war crimes at Nuremberg and swallowed a cyanide capsule hours before his scheduled execution.

And yet the performance continued without interruption.

In 1948, a denatification court classified Emmy as an active national socialist.

The tribunal confiscated 30% of her remaining assets, credited her internment as time served for a 1-year labor camp sentence and banned her from the stage for 5 years, effectively ending any hope of returning to acting.

She retreated to a small fifth floor apartment in Munich, nursing chronic pain and surviving on a modest pension supplemented by old acquaintances who remembered the family’s former glory.

The woman who had once been addressed as High Lady now shared a hallway with strangers and climbed five flights of stairs to reach a home that could have fit inside one of Karen Hall’s guest rooms.

The performance that never ended.

And here is where the final act begins.

A long, slow curtain call that lasted a quarter of a century.

Emmy spent her remaining 25 years replaying and romanticizing her former life.

In 1967, she published a memoir called Andeset Miners Manor, My Life with Guring.

The book portrays both Emmy and Herman as essentially apolitical estates who loved art, culture, and each other.

It makes no mention of Guring’s role in founding the Gestapo.

It emits his central involvement in the persecution of Jews and the plunder of an entire continent.

It reads like the memoir of a woman married to a misunderstood patron of the arts rather than one of the most powerful criminals in European history.

Her own words captured the delusion with painful clarity.

She wrote that high politics had not occupied her much, as with most women, and that she was merely an actress who served an apolitical stage art.

A German court had already ruled otherwise, classifying her not as a passive follower, but as an active participant in the regime she now claimed had nothing to do with her.

Emmy Guring died in Munich on the 8th of June, 1973 at the age of 80.

Her daughter Eda would spend the rest of her own life defending her father’s memory, petitioning courts for confiscated property, attending gatherings of former Nazi officials, and refusing until her death in 2018 to acknowledge what her parents had been part of.

The performance, it seemed, was inherited.

So, what did Emmy Gurring actually do all day? She woke in a palace decorated with stolen art.

She was addressed as high lady by servants.

She played with lion cubs in rooms where looted.

Masterpieces hung on the walls.

She hosted foreign dignitaries who left thinking the Nazi regime was sophisticated and refined.

She ran a cultural foundation while a fellow artist who mocked her rotted in prison.

She feuded with Ava Brown until Hitler himself had to intervene.

And when it all collapsed, she spent nearly three decades insisting none of it was political.

Emmy Guring’s daily routine wasn’t harmless.

It was the regime’s most convincing argument that everything was normal, delivered by a trained actress who never once broke character, not even after the curtain came down.

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