Deutsches Theater
Our editors will review what you’ve submitted and determine whether to revise the article.
Deutsches Theater, private dramatic society founded in Berlin in 1883 by the dramatist Adolf L’Arronge in reaction to outmoded theatrical traditions. It presented plays in the ensemble style of the influential Meiningen Company. In 1894 it was affiliated with the Freie Bühne (“Free Theatre”) under Otto Brahm, who promoted the new naturalistic style of production. The company experienced another revival under the direction of Max Reinhardt from 1905 and again during the 1920s with Bertolt Brecht. The society was disbanded after World War I but was revived in 1934 by Heinz Hilpert, who was acting there and who had succeeded Reinhardt in 1937. Hilpert, who also directed the Deutsches Theater at Göttingen, maintained the integrity of the society throughout the reign of Adolf Hitler until he resigned his post in 1944.
Rechristened the National Theatre of East Berlin in 1946, the society was home to Bertolt Brecht’s Berliner Ensemble from 1949 to 1954.