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Ep 97 – The Sound of Music – Edelweiss and the Anschluss

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Description

This week on Rosie the Reviewer, we’re tackling The Sound of Music (1965), directed by Robert Wise and starring Julie Andrews and Christopher Plummer. On the surface, it’s a sweeping musical about love, family, and catchy songs you’ve known since childhood. But viewed through a World War II lens, it’s surprisingly sharp.

We revisit the Von Trapps’ romance, the Anschluss, and the film’s portrayal of Austrian opposition to Nazism.

The Sound of Music trailer

Historical context for The Sound of Music

The Sound of Music is often remembered as a sweeping Hollywood musical, but its final act is rooted in one of the most consequential political events of prewar Europe: the Nazi annexation of Austria in 1938. Understanding the historical reality of the Anschluss, Austrian resistance, and the real von Trapp family’s emigration adds crucial depth to the film’s closing scenes.

What Was the Anschluss?

The Anschluss refers to the annexation of Austria by Nazi Germany on 12 March 1938. German troops crossed the border unopposed, and within days Austria was absorbed into the Third Reich. Eventually, and quicker than expected, it ceased to exist as an independent state.

Although Austria’s depiction as “Hitler’s first victim” is true in some ways, the historical picture is more complex. There was genuine support for unification among Austrians, particularly in Vienna, where pan-German nationalism and antisemitism had deep roots. At the same time, significant groups opposed Nazi rule, including political dissidents, devout Catholics, communists, and conservative Austrian nationalists.

A referendum held in April 1938 reported overwhelming approval for union with Germany. However, the vote took place after mass arrests of political opponents, intense propaganda campaigns, and the dismantling of democratic structures. The result reflected Nazi control as much as popular will.

Austrian Resistance and Georg von Trapp

In the film, Captain Georg von Trapp refuses a commission in the German Navy after the Anschluss. Georg von Trapp was a decorated Austro-Hungarian submarine commander during the First World War and was awarded high military honours for his service. After 1938, he was offered a position in the German Navy, which he declined. The family was also invited to perform at events associated with the Nazi regime, including celebrations linked to Hitler’s birthday, which they refused. His son also refused a position as a doctor in a German hospital. 

It is also worth noting that Maria and Georg were married in 1927, more than a decade before the Anschluss. By 1938, they already had children together in addition to Georg’s seven children from his first marriage. The film compresses this timeline significantly, presenting their marriage as occurring on the eve of annexation to heighten the dramatic stakes.

The family’s refusal to cooperate with the regime fits within a broader pattern of Austrian opposition that is often overshadowed by the narrative of mass enthusiasm. While many Austrians accommodated or supported the new regime, others resisted. The film dramatises and streamlines events, but the von Trapp family’s opposition to Nazism was real.

How Did the Real von Trapp Family Escape Austria?

One of the most iconic scenes in The Sound of Music shows the family fleeing across the Alps into Switzerland. In reality, their departure was far less cinematic but no less significant.

The von Trapp family left Austria by train, travelling to Italy using Georg’s Italian passport. At the time of their departure, the border had not been closed, and their exit was legal. The dramatic mountain crossing in the movie was no doubt designed to heighten tension and mirror the film’s opening panning shots of te mountains.

The Trapp Family in America

After emigrating, the von Trapp family initially travelled to Italy, then to London, and eventually to the United States.

In America, the family faced financial uncertainty, particularly after losing much of their wealth during the Great Depression. They established themselves as a touring singing group, performing Austrian folk songs and sacred music. Over time, they built a modest yet stable career and eventually settled in Vermont, where they operated a music camp that later evolved into the Trapp Family Lodge.

Georg von Trapp died of lung cancer in 1947. Maria von Trapp outlived him by forty years and published her memoir, The Story of the Trapp Family Singers, in 1949. That memoir inspired the Broadway musical and, ultimately, the 1965 film adaptation that feels nothing short of meant to be.

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Support the podcast

Rosie the Reviewer is a passion project, built episode by episode. If you’d like to support what we do, you can help keep us on the air or pick up some Rosie merch. We’re working on more ways for you to get involved in the future.