Just hours after Adolf Hitler committed suicide on April 30th, 1945,
former fashion model and Vogue correspondent, Elizabeth (Lee) Miller was
photographed taking a bath in his tub. Miller had been accredited into
the U.S. Army as an official war correspondent for Condé Nast
Publications and upon the American liberation of Munich, she entered the
city with the 45th division and LIFE photographer David E. Scherman at
her side. Lee and David began to explore the crumbling city and by
chance, happened to wander into an apartment in a building at number 16
Prinzenregentplatz. Incredibly, the pair had stumbled upon Hitler’s
abandoned Munich apartment.
”Almost anyone with a medium income and no heirlooms could have been
the proprietor of this flat,” Miller wrote in her diaries, “The place
was in perfect condition, including electricity and hot water and heat
available and [an] electric refrigerator. It wasn’t empty enough to be
‘sub-let’ as it stood, but a quarter of an hour’s clearing cupboards
would have made it ready for any new tenant who didn’t mind linen and
silver marked AH.”
The photograph was taken by David. Allegedly there is also a photograph
taken by Miller of David in the bath. But with the former model looking
like she did, it was the photograph with Miller as the subject that
became the iconic image from their collaboration during World War II. “I
looked like an angel on the outside. That’s how people saw me,” wrote
Miller. “But I was like a demon inside. I had known all the suffering of
the world since I was a very little girl.”
There are many questions surrounding Miller’s decision to disrobe in the
Nazi leaders private bathroom and bathe herself, possibly using his
flannel. The pair reportedly spent up to three nights in his apartment
together, sitting at his desk, even sleeping in his bed, “using Hitler’s
toilet and taking his bath and generally making ourselves at home,”
wrote Miller. They had just come from Dachau, and with those
double-buckled boots that sit in front of the bath, Miller had walked
through the horror of the death camp only a few hours earlier. In the
midst of controversy following the photograph’s publication in Vogue,
Miller said that she had merely been trying to wash the odors of Dachau
away.
In a letter to her Vogue editor, Audrey Winters, Miller recounts her
stay in Hitler’s home:
“I was living in Hitler’s private apartment when his death was
announced, midnight of Mayday … Well, alright, he was dead. He’d never
really been alive to me until today. He’d been an evil-machine-monster
all these years, until I visited the places he made famous, talked to
people who knew him, dug into backstairs gossip and ate and slept in his
house. He became less fabulous and therefore more terrible, along with a
little evidence of his having some almost human habits; like an ape who
embarrasses and humbles you with his gestures, mirroring yourself in
caricature. “There, but for the Grace of god, walks I.”
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