On 14 May 1945, according to his wife, George was arrested for the first time by Soviet officers with the words "He won't stay long" and was released the next day. He was given meat and wine for his family. A week later he was imprisoned again for one day, and on 26 May for the third time for five days. He is said to have told his interrogators "Please shoot me" and his wife reported in her memoirs (1956/1986) that he said: "They should take away everything I have, starve me and humiliate me. But if they forbid me to act, I will die". On 31 May, George received a certificate from the mayor of
Charlottenburg stating that he was not allowed to be involved in clean-up work "as he must be available to the authorities for questioning at any time". In the beginning of June, the Soviet city commander for Berlin
Nikolai Berzarin issued him a letter of protection which appeared in his KGB file as a "passport" confiscated during his last arrest. George was arrested again, after the death of Berzarin on 16 June, when his motorcycle collided with a truck convoy near his office in Berlin-
Friedrichsfelde. George's KGB file includes an undated report from five informers, three of them with legible signatures. The letter states: "Just 14 days before the Red Army liberated us from the Nazi yoke, he made himself available to the NSDAP and tried to incite Berliners to active resistance in the form of a call in the Berlin press. The entire German people can stand as a witness against George. If George were put on any German stage, in our opinion he would be lynched." A Lieutenant Bibler reported to his boss Pyrin on 28 July 1945 that George was “one of the most respected fascist artists" who "contributed to the continuation of the war through his pro-fascist agitation in radio and newspapers". The day before, Bibler's Soviet colleague had ordered George's transfer to the
NKVD special camp in Hohenschönhausen, citing NKVD Order No. 0016 of 11 January 1945. George managed to set up a prison theater at the camp and put on a production of
Faust. His wife was allowed to speak to him at the gate once a week for five minutes and also bring him textbooks and music. On 6 December he was allowed to hug his son Götz; it was the last time his wife saw him. In February 1946, communist writer
Friedrich Wolf (the father of the later
Stasi head
Markus Wolf) tried to facilitate George's release; other attempts by his theater friends to get him released were unsuccessful. George was transferred to the
NKVD special camp Nr. 7 in Sachsenhausen. According to a fellow prisoner, George continued to perform at the camp in front of 12,000 prisoners and the Soviet guards. The once massive man lost weight rapidly - a record from February 1946 documented a weight loss of 80 pounds (40 kilograms) - and was now completely exhausted. On 22 September, during preliminary rehearsals for a dramatization of the ballad
Death of Tiberius, George went to the internal medicine outpatient clinic, according to a fellow prisoner. The examining doctor diagnosed
appendicitis. The next morning he was taken to the hospital on a stretcher by the paramedics. As a result of the appendix operation, George died on 25 September 1946. The death certificate, signed by Soviet and German doctors, shows the diagnosis as "
laparotomy,
bronchopneumonia, cardiac atrophy." The cause of death is given as "bronchopneumonia and
heart failure". However, his cause of his death may have been starvation, despite official reports. Through the intercession of one of the camp staff who admired his acting, George was buried in an individual grave at the camp rather than in the customary mass grave. According to a fellow prisoner, his bones were found in an overgrown forest near Sachsenhausen in 1994. The remains were identified using DNA from his two sons and his body was moved to Berlin to the
Zehlendorf Cemetery. His tombstone is topped by a bronze bust and an inscription commemorating his wife who died in 1987. In 1995, the
Senate of Berlin declared the grave an
Ehrengrab des Landes Berlin (Honorary Grave). ==Personal life==