Born Dorothea Gerson into a
Jewish family in
Berlin, Gerson began her career as a touring singer and actress in the Holtorf Tournee Truppe alongside actors
Mathias Wieman and
Ruth Hellberg in Germany, where she met and married her first husband, film director
Veit Harlan. The couple married in 1922 and divorced in 1924. Harlan would later direct the anti-Semitic Nazi
propaganda film Jud Süß (1940), supposedly at the insistence of Nazi
Propaganda Minister Joseph Goebbels. In 1920, Gerson was cast to appear in the film
Auf den Trümmern des Paradieses (On the Brink of Paradise), an adaptation of the
Karl May-penned novel
Von Bagdad nach Stambul, and later followed that same year in another May adaptation titled
Die Todeskarawane (Caravan of Death). Both films included Hungarian actor
Béla Lugosi in the cast and are now believed to be
lost films. Gerson continued performing as a popular cabaret singer throughout the 1920s and acting in films. By 1933, when the
Nazi Party came to power in Germany, the German-Jewish population was systematically stripped of rights, and Gerson's career slowed dramatically. Blacklisted from performing in "Aryan" films, Gerson began recording music for a small Jewish record company. She also began recording in the
Yiddish language during this time, and the 1936 song "Der Rebe Hot Geheysn Freylekh Zayn" became highly regarded by the Jews of Europe in the 1930s. Gerson's most memorable recordings from this era were the German-language songs "Backbord und Steuerbord", and "Vorbei" (Beyond Recall), which was an emotional ballad memorializing pre-Nazi Germany: In 1936, Gerson relocated with relatives to the
Netherlands, fleeing Nazi persecution. She married her second husband Max Sluizer (b. 24 June 1906). In 1938, she dubbed the voice of the
Evil Queen in the German language film release of the 1937 American animated
Walt Disney Productions film
Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs for the German theatrical release in Amsterdam. However, the film was not shown publicly in Germany until 1951. ==Death==