Marianne Bachmeier was born on June 3, 1950. She grew up in
Sarstedt, a small town near
Hildesheim,
Lower Saxony,
West Germany, where her parents had fled from
East Prussia after the
Second World War. was the
stereotypical authoritarian figure, a heavy
drinker who spent much of his time at a bar close to the family home. Their household was not pleasant, and drinking made her father more aggressive. Her parents divorced, and her mother later remarried. Bachmeier was perceived as a troubled adolescent by—what she described as—a dictatorial
stepfather, and her mother eventually kicked her out of the house. Bachmeier began dating the manager of
Tipasa, a
pub where she worked, in 1972. She became pregnant for the third time at the age of 22. On 14 November 1972, Bachmeier's third child, Anna, was born, and she raised her
alone. As a result, Bachmeier took Anna to work at the pub, and she was said to never feel a need to rush home after her regular hours behind the bar. In two 1984 documentary films,
No Time for Tears: The Bachmeier Case and ''
Anna's Mother'', Bachmeier was portrayed as a single mother who worked well into the night and then slept into the day, leaving her seven-year-old daughter on her own during the day. Bachmeier was aware of her problematic lifestyle and wanted to put Anna up for adoption. Friends later said that she treated Anna like a little
adult, and from a young age, expected her to take care of many things on her own. Anna frequently slept in the bar as her mother partied. According to a friend of Bachmeier, Anna was a vibrant youngster who never truly had a pleasant family life. ==Murder of Anna Bachmeier==