After Hitler dismissed his previous chef (over alleged
Jewish ancestry) in early 1944, the director of the Bavarian sanatorium ordered Manziarly to prepare Hitler's meals, which were driven to the nearby
Berghof on a daily basis. On 3 April 1944, Manziarly confided to her father and sister that the job made her uneasy, but she hoped it would last no longer than six months or it would prevent her from starting her career as a full-time teacher. She observed that "Any resistance would only lead to be me taken to court," comparing her situation to having "one foot in the grave". The long and irregular hours on her feet contributed to poor circulation to Manziarly's lower extremities as well as
gum recession, which was treated by Hitler's dentist,
Hugo Blaschke. Hitler refused to hire assistant chefs to avoid an appearance of excess. Manziarly asked her family to send several basic clothing items and
ration cards for
darning thread, as she was not generally otherwise provided for. In September 1944, the female staff was amused when Hitler gifted them all thick gray
stockings, which they found unfashionable. As of November 1944, Hitler's secretary
Traudl Junge regarded Manziarly as too new to be part of Hitler's "inner circle". The next month, Manziarly accompanied Hitler to
Bad Nauheim, where he led an unsuccessful offensive (the
Battle of the Bulge).
Berlin, 1945 ''s rear exit (1947) On 16 January 1945, Hitler began residing in the
Führerbunker, the newer and lower air-raid shelter of the
Reich Chancellery bunker complex. Manziarly prepared his meals in the kitchen of the
Vorbunker, the older upper bunker where she also slept. Manziarly also prepared sandwiches to be set out on a tea wagon for high-ranking
Nazi Party personnel and generals reporting to Hitler. No letters from her are known from 1945, with her last known phone contact with her father taking place that March. From 21 April on, Manziarly accompanied
Eva Braun and Hitler's secretaries Junge and
Gerda Christian to his downsized tea parties. Despite the gloomy atmosphere, some in the bunker nicknamed Manziarly "Miss
Marzipani". On 22 April, Hitler personally requested Manziarly to leave Berlin, along with Junge and Christian. All three women instead volunteered to stay with the dictator and were each provided a
cyanide capsule from
SS physician
Ludwig Stumpfegger's supply in case they decided to end their own lives. The women learned from Hitler in the early hours of 30 April that he intended to
shoot himself that day. Around noon, Hitler confirmed his intent to his private secretary
Martin Bormann. Manziarly, Junge and Christian were present for Hitler's last meal at the usual time of 1 p.m. After lunch, Hitler's adjutant SS-
Sturmbannführer Otto Günsche told the secretaries that Hitler wanted to bid everyone farewell. According to Junge, Manziarly cooked a posthumous meal for Hitler so others without direct knowledge of his death would not become suspicious. On 1 May, Manziarly left the bunker in the first of ten breakout groups, which was led by SS-
Brigadeführer Wilhelm Mohnke. Evading the
Soviet Red Army troops, they made their way north to a German Army holdout in the cellar of the Schultheiss-Patzenhofer Brewery on Prinzenallee. The group included Junge, Christian, Bormann's secretary
Else Krüger, and SS surgeon
Ernst-Günther Schenck. Early on 2 May, several of the group were captured by Soviet soldiers. Mohnke tasked the four women with trying to deliver his written report to Hitler's successor,
Karl Dönitz. The women walked out of the brewery courtyard and made their way into the Soviet occupied area of Berlin. Christian and Krüger stayed at a water supply area, while Manziarly left Junge standing by so she could try to replace her
Wehrmacht jacket with civilian clothes. At this point, Junge alternatively stated (in a 1947 letter to Manziarly's father) that, having been dogged by Soviet patrols about the jacket, Manziarly went with a man who offered her some clothing or (in an unpublished manuscript) that she "wandered over towards a group of women". Junge wrote that she later saw Manziarly being taken by two Soviet soldiers towards a
U-Bahn subway tunnel. She tried to intervene, but the soldiers pushed her back. Manziarly reassured Junge that "They want to see my papers." Shooting broke out, forcing Junge to quickly hide in a house. Junge wrote to Manziarly's father that his daughter had said she would have used her poison capsule before letting a
soldier rape her; Junge also stated consolingly that many women (especially those found wearing manlike clothing) were purportedly sent off to
Russian work camps and "relatively well off". ==Legacy==