Sojourn in Berlin The autobiographical novel recounts writer Christopher Isherwood's sojourn in
Jazz Age Berlin and describes the pre-Nazi social milieu as well as the colourful personalities he encountered. At the time, acquaintances described a young Isherwood as indifferent to the growing spectre of
fascism, and he had moved to Berlin in order to avail himself of boy prostitutes and to enjoy the city's orgiastic
Jazz Age cabarets. While residing in the city, Isherwood socialised with a blithe
circle of expatriates that included
W. H. Auden,
Stephen Spender,
Edward Upward, and
Paul Bowles. As a gay man, he also interacted with marginalised enclaves of Berliners and foreigners who would be at greatest risk from
Nazi persecution. Isherwood based the novel's most memorable character—the "divinely decadent"
Sally Bowles—on 19-year-old flapper
Jean Ross with whom he shared lodgings at
Nollendorfstraße 17 in
Schöneberg. Much like the character in the novel, Ross was a sexually liberated young woman and a
bohemian chanteuse in
lesbian bars and second-rate cabarets. Isherwood visited these dingy nightclubs to hear Ross sing and described her singing ability as mediocre. "She had a surprisingly deep, husky voice. She sang badly, without any expression, her hands hanging down at her sides," Isherwood recalled. "Yet her performance was, in its own way, effective because of her startling appearance and her air of not caring a curse of what people thought of her." Stephen Spender likewise described Ross' singing as underwhelming and forgettable: "In my mind's eye, I can see her now in some dingy bar standing on a platform and singing so inaudibly that I could not hear her from the back of the room where I was discreetly seated."
Ross' abortion Although Isherwood occasionally had sex with women, Ross—unlike the fictional character Sally Bowles—never tried to seduce Isherwood, although they did share a bed whenever their tiny flat became overcrowded with visiting revelers. Instead, a 27-year-old Isherwood settled into a same-sex relationship with a 16-year-old German boy named Heinz Neddermeyer, while Ross entered into a variety of heterosexual liaisons, including one with the blond musician
Peter van Eyck, the future star of
Henri-Georges Clouzot's
The Wages of Fear. After her separation from van Eyck, Ross realised she was pregnant. As a favour to Ross, Isherwood facilitated an abortion procedure. Ross nearly died as a result of the botched abortion. Following her abortion, Isherwood visited Ross in the hospital. Wrongly assuming he was the father, the hospital staff despised him for impregnating Ross and then callously forcing her to have an abortion. These tragicomic events inspired Isherwood to write his 1937 novella
Sally Bowles and serves as its narrative climax. While Ross recovered from the abortion, the political situation
rapidly deteriorated in Germany. As Berlin's daily scenes featured "poverty, unemployment, political demonstrations and street fighting between the forces of the
extreme left and the
extreme right," Isherwood, Ross, Spender, and other British nationals realised that staying in Germany would be perilous. "There was a sensation of doom to be felt in the Berlin streets," Spender recalled. Isherwood commented to a friend: "Adolf, with his rectangular black moustache, has come to stay and brought all his friends.... Nazis are to be enrolled as 'auxiliary police,' which means that one must now not only be murdered but that it is illegal to offer any resistance." Two weeks after the
Enabling Act cemented
Adolf Hitler's power, Isherwood fled Germany and returned to England on 5 April 1933. Afterwards, most of Berlin's seedy cabarets were shuttered by the Nazis, and many of Isherwood's cabaret friends fled abroad or perished in
concentration camps. These factual events served as the genesis for Isherwood's Berlin tales.
Later events Following her departure from Germany, Ross became a devout
Stalinist and a lifelong member of
Harry Pollitt's
Communist Party of Great Britain. She served as a
war correspondent for the
Daily Express during the subsequent
Spanish Civil War (1936–39), and she is alleged to have been a propagandist for
Joseph Stalin's
Comintern. A skilled writer, Ross also worked as a film critic for the
Daily Worker, and her criticisms of early
Soviet cinema were described by critics as ingenious works of "
dialectical sophistry". She often wrote political criticism,
anti-fascist polemics, and manifestos. For the remainder of her life, Ross believed the public association of herself with the naïve and apolitical character of Sally Bowles occluded her lifelong work as a professional writer and political activist. Ross particularly resented how Isherwood depicted Sally Bowles expressing
antisemitism. In the 1937 novella
Sally Bowles, the character laments having sex with an "awful old Jew" to obtain money. Ross' daughter,
Sarah Caudwell, said such racial bigotry "would have been as alien to my mother's vocabulary as a sentence in
Swahili; she had no more deeply rooted passion than a loathing of racialism and so, from the outset, of
fascism." Due to her unyielding dislike of fascism, Ross disliked that Isherwood depicted her as allied in her beliefs "with the attitudes which led to
Dachau and
Auschwitz". In the early 21st century, some writers have argued the antisemitic remarks in "Sally Bowles" are a reflection of Isherwood's own much-documented racial prejudices. According to biographer Peter Parker, Isherwood was "fairly anti-Semitic to a degree that required some
emendations of the Berlin novels when they were republished after the war". Although Isherwood's stories about the Jazz Age nightlife of Weimar-era Berlin became commercially successful, Isherwood later denounced his writings. He lamented that he had not understood the suffering of the people which he depicted. He stated that 1930s Berlin had been: == Critical reception ==