The Lonely End of Helmut Berger: The Actor Who Tried To Be A Noble HT
There is a photograph of Helmet Burger from the 1990s. He is sitting alone at a cafe table in Vienna, a half empty glass in front of him, wearing a suit that was once expensive. His face still carries the sharpness that made him one of the most talked about men in European cinema. But his eyes look somewhere far away.
He does not look like a man waiting for someone. He looks like a man who has stopped expecting anyone to show up. To understand why he ended up there, you have to go back to the very beginning. The boy from Bad Isel. Helmet Steinberger was born on May 29th, 1944 in Bad Isel, a spar town in the Austrian Alps that had once been a favorite retreat of Emperor France Joseph I.
It is the kind of place where old aristocratic photographs still hang in hotel lobbies and where the air carries a faint memory of a world that no longer exists. His father ran a restaurant there. The family was modest, workingass, solidly rooted in the ordinary rhythms of postwar Austrian life.
But Helmet grew up in that town full of faded imperial grandeur, surrounded by the architecture and atmosphere of a social world he had not been born into. And from a young age something about the distance between what he saw and what he was seemed to disturb him deeply. He was a restless teenager.
School held little interest for him. What he wanted, though he could not have articulated it precisely at the time, was transformation. He wanted to become someone who matched the grandeur of the world around him rather than someone who served it. By his late teens, he had left bad Isel and begun drifting through Europe, London, Florence, Geneva.
He worked various jobs, none of them for very long. He studied briefly at drama schools but never completed formal training in any serious sense. He was absorbing something though. The mannerisms, the aesthetic codes, the social languages of the wealthy European world he kept brushing up against. And then in Florence in the mid 1960s, he met Luchino Viscanti.
Lucino Viscanti was already by this point one of the great figures of Italian and European cinema. He came from genuine Italian aristocracy, the house of Viscanti, one of the oldest noble families in Lombodi, and he moved through the world with the total confidence of someone who had never once doubted his own position within it.
He was also a man of extraordinarily refined aesthetic taste. Someone who believed that beauty in all its forms was something to be found, cultivated, and celebrated. When Viscanti saw Helmuch Steinberger, he saw exactly that, something beautiful, and something raw. The story of how they met has been told in various ways over the years.
What is not disputed is that Viscanti was immediately and completely drawn to the young Austrian and that the feeling, whatever its precise nature, was mutual enough to reshape both of their lives. Viscanti gave him a new name, or rather a shortened version of the one he already had. Helmet Steinberger became Helmet Burger.
Shorter, cleaner, more memorable. the name of a film star and Viscanti began methodically and with great care to make him one. What Viscanti was constructing in Burger was not simply an acting career. He was constructing a persona, an image of aristocratic European masculinity that had very little to do with the restaurant owner’s son from Bad Isel and everything to do with the world Burger had always wanted to inhabit.
He taught him how to carry himself, how to dress, how to speak in the social registers of the cultured European elite. He introduced him to everyone who mattered in the Italian and international film world. He was also, by all accounts, shaping Burger into a version of the kind of man Viscante himself was most fascinated by, someone at once beautiful and doomed, magnetic and self-destructive.
The first film they worked on together, The Damned, in 1969, made that fascination visible to the whole world. And what happens in that film is something that even audiences who had no idea who Helmet Burger was before would not easily forget. The Damned. And a star is born. The Damned, released in 1969, is a film about the destruction of a wealthy German industrial family during the rise of national socialism in the 1930s.
It is dark, oporatic, and deliberately excessive. Very much in the style of Viscanti’s most ambitious work, Helmut Burger plays Martin von Essenbeck, the grandson of the family patriarch, a character who is simultaneously the film’s most disturbing presence and its most magnetic one. Martin is weak, perverse, driven by appetites he cannot control, and ultimately transformed by the political horrors around him into something truly monstrous.
It is not an easy role. It demands an actor willing to go to very uncomfortable places very publicly. Burger went there without hesitation. There is a sequence in the damned in the early portion of the film at a family gathering where Burger appears in full female costume performing a cabaret routine in the persona of Marlene Dietrich.

He is completely committed to it. There is something both deeply unsettling and strangely mesmerizing about watching him. The precision of the performance, the sheer physical confidence of it. It is the kind of scene that makes audiences lean forward in their seats without quite knowing why.
The film was a major event in European cinema. It was nominated for an Academy Award for best writing. Critics across Europe and the United States wrote about it at length and embedded in almost every discussion of it was the name Helmut Burger. Overnight he became someone, not just an actor in a film, someone.
His face appeared in magazines. Interviews were requested. The mythology began building itself around him almost before he had time to participate in it. And the mythology, it must be said, suited him perfectly because Burger was not simply playing a doomed aristocrat on screen. He was in his daily life increasingly living like one.
He and Viscanti were by this point a couple in everything but official acknowledgement. They lived together, traveled together, worked together. Viscanti’s world, which included the grandest apartments in Rome and Milan, summers on Iskia, friendships with the most celebrated cultural figures of postwar Europe, became Burger’s world.
He wore it with complete naturalness, as if it had always been his. He spent money with the total abandon of someone who had grown up with it, which he had not. He demanded the finest hotels, the finest restaurants, the finest of everything. He cultivated an air of absolute certainty about his own taste, his own judgment, his own importance.
People who met him during this period often described the experience in almost identical terms. He was dazzling and slightly alarming, magnetic and already somehow faintly precarious, like a perfect object placed too close to the edge of a table. More films followed. The garden of the Fininsy Contines was released in 1970, directed by Victoriao Dika with Burgger in a supporting role.
Then came Viscanti’s Ludvig in 1972 in which Burger played King Ludvig II of Bavaria, the mad king, the builder of fairy tale castles, the man who retreated so completely into his own fantasy world that the real world eventually came and dragged him out of it. It was not a coincidence that Viscanti chose Burger for that role.
Ludvig gave Burger the chance to do something he had not fully done before. to carry an entire major film as its central figure for nearly 4 hours of screen time. The film was long, slow, and achingly beautiful, all hallmarks of late Viscanti. It received a mixed critical response at the time, but Burer’s performance was widely noted.
There was something genuine in how he inhabited Ludvig. The grandiosity, the isolation, the absolute refusal to compromise with a world that did not meet his standards. Whether that was great acting or simply something very close to Bur’s own personality given room to breathe depended on who you asked.
In any case, by the early 1970s, Helmet Burger was at the height of whatever he was ever going to reach. Famous, admired, attached to one of the greatest directors in the world, living a life that looked from the outside like the most lavish kind of dream. And underneath all of it, the foundations were already beginning to show cracks.
The weight of Viscanti. The relationship between Helmet Burger and Luchino Viscanti is one of those that is almost impossible to describe with any simple word. It was a creative partnership. Certainly, it was a romantic attachment in some essential sense. It was also, and increasingly so, as the years went on, a relationship defined by a fundamental imbalance between a man who knew exactly who he was and had always known, and a man who was still beneath all the acquired polish, figuring that out. Viscanti was 23 years older than Burger. He had come from actual nobility, the kind that did not need to be performed because it was simply there, built into the family name, the childhood home, the way the world had always deferred to him. Burger had constructed his version of
that world piece by piece, and however expertly he had assembled it, Viscante was the keystone. Without Viscanti, the structure looked very different. In the early years, this dynamic worked in Burgger’s favor, at least professionally. Viscanti championed him, directed him, introduced him, argued for him.
But as time went on, the dependence that had been useful, began to become something more complicated. Burger, by his own account in later years, struggled in this period with questions about what he actually was and who he actually belonged to. The relationship with Viscanti was from all available accounts intensely possessive on both sides but unevenly so.
Burger wanted freedom, the freedom to pursue his own life, his own connections, his own choices. Viscanti wanted perhaps something more like permanence. There were also by the early 1970s growing signs that Burger’s relationship with alcohol and other substances was becoming something beyond casual indulgence.
In the social world he inhabited, drinking heavily was commonplace, even expected. But for Burger, it was already beginning to tip into something less controlled, something that would over the following decade take on a life of its own entirely separate from the life he was trying to live.
Then in 1971, Viscanti suffered a severe stroke. He survived, but he was left significantly weakened. He continued to work. His final film, The Innocent, was released in 1976. But the man who emerged from that illness was not the same man who had entered it. He was partially paralyzed, reliant on others for basic functions, and aware presumably that his time was running out. Burger stayed.
He remained at Viscanti’s side through the illness, the rehabilitation, the long, slow decline. By many accounts, this period was genuinely difficult. Watching someone who had been such a towering presence in your life become physically diminished is hard under any circumstances. And for Beer, who had oriented so much of his identity around Viscanti’s world and Viscanti’s judgment, there was something additionally destabilizing about watching the man who had in many ways invented him gradually disappear.
Luchino Viscanti died on March the 17th, 1976 in Rome. He was 70 years old. He left behind an extraordinary body of work, films, theater productions, opera stagings, and he left behind Helmet Burger, who was 31 years old and suddenly, without the person who had, for more than a decade been the gravitational center of his existence.
What happened next was not a sudden collapse. It was something slower and in some ways more painful to watch. A gradual yearslong unraveling that no single event caused but that many things contributed to after the director. In the years immediately following Viscanti’s death, Burger continued to work.
He appeared in a number of European and American productions through the late 1970s. thrillers, dramas, the occasional international co-production designed to leverage his European fame for wider markets. In 1979, he appeared in The Godfather Part Three. Wait, this is sometimes confused in various retellings. Burger did not appear in The Godfather Part Three.
He appeared in the 1979 television minisseries Ariadi Gratzier. And in The Godfather Part Three in 1990, he played the character Frederick Kinesig, a Swiss banker with ties to the Vatican, a small but visible role that marked something of a return to wider attention, albeit briefly. More consistently in the late 1970s and 1980s, he worked in European productions that received limited international distribution.

None of them had the impact of his viscante work. None of them made the world lean forward the way the damned had. Part of this was simply the nature of careers. Very few actors sustain the intensity of an early breakthrough across decades, but part of it was also something more specific to Burger’s situation.
He had been to a significant degree a creation of Viscanti’s singular vision. The roles that Viscante had found for him, the tortured aristocrats, the beautiful self-destroying men, had fit him so perfectly because Viscanti had understood exactly what he was and what he could do. Without that guiding intelligence at the center of his career, finding material that matched his particular qualities proved much harder.
He also continued to spend money at the rate he always had, which is to say a great deal of it, and with no particular thought for the future. The hotel suites, the clothes, the social world he maintained, all of it required resources that his post Viscante career was increasingly unable to sustain, and the drinking intensified.
People who knew Burger during the 1980s describe a man who was still in social settings capable of being utterly compelling, charming, funny, sharp, full of stories about Viscanti and the golden years of European cinema. But there was also increasingly a volatility to him. He could be generous and warm and then without warning harsh and contemptuous.
He had always been demanding. Now he was sometimes simply difficult. He gave interviews periodically throughout this period and in them he was unfailingly willing to talk about Viscanti, about his career, about his opinions on cinema and culture. He had strong views on everything and expressed them without softening.
He said things that other people in his position might have chosen not to say publicly. Whether this was courage or simply a lack of filtering was a matter of interpretation. One theme that ran through many of these interviews explicitly or implicitly was money. Burger was by the 1980s not financially comfortable in the way his lifestyle suggested.
The inheritance he had received from Viscanti’s estate, a matter that was itself complicated and contested, did not resolve his situation permanently. He had no savings of the conventional kind, no properties in his own name that could anchor him. He had spent his decades of high income with the assumption, conscious or otherwise, that there would always be more. There would not always be more.
The long downward slope. The 1990s were not kind to Helmet Burger, not in any particular sudden way. No single catastrophic event defined the decade for him, but in the slow grinding way that extended financial procarity combined with heavy substance use tends to work on a person. He continued to appear in productions when work came, but the work came less frequently and was less prestigious.
He did television. He did lower budget European films. He showed up in places where 15 years earlier he would not have shown up. Not because he was desperate exactly, but because the gap between the life he wanted to live and the income he was generating had become impossible to bridge any other way.
The social world that had defined him for so long, the world of Roman apartments and Venetian film festival parties and lunches with major directors, was still accessible to him, but only partially. He was recognizable enough to still be invited places, but he was also increasingly someone that people in that world were careful around.
His behavior had become unpredictable in ways that made certain doors close quietly. In the mid 1990s, he made a decision that in retrospect captures something essential about where he was psychologically. He filed a legal claim against the estate of Luchino Viscanti. The Viscante estate was controlled by the director’s family, his siblings, and their heirs, who had in the years since his death managed his artistic legacy and the considerable assets associated with it.
Burger’s claim was that he deserved a larger share of what Viscanti had left behind, that the nature of their relationship and his role in Viscanti’s life and work entitled him to more than he had received. The claim was not successful in any significant way. What it did do was generate a considerable amount of press coverage, most of it uncomfortable.
The Italian and European entertainment press covered the story in detail, and it dredged up the full history of the Burger Viscante relationship for public examination, not always in ways that were flattering to either party. For Burger, the outcome of the legal effort was not simply professional humiliation, though it was that, too.
It was the closing of a particular door. the door that led back to the world of Viscanti, the world in which his identity and his value had been most securely grounded. Whatever claim he had been making, it was not only a legal one. Throughout the late 1990s and into the early 2000s, his public appearances became more sporadic.
When he did appear at retrospectives, at festivals where his old films were being screened, he could still be extraordinary. There were photographs from this period of him at events in Rome and Vienna, where he looked for all the years and everything that had happened remarkable. The bone structure remained, the presence remained.
Something about him still commanded attention in a room. But the interviews he gave during this period were often marked by a quality that journalists who conducted them sometimes struggled to describe, a kind of grievance, diffuse and pervasive that colored everything he said. He had been treated unjustly.
The world had not given him what it owed him. He had been someone extraordinary and had not been sufficiently recognized as such. Whether these feelings were justified or not is almost beside the point. What matters is that they were clearly the lens through which he understood his own life, and that lens made it very difficult to find peace with any of it. Desperate measures.
By the mid 2000s, the situation had become genuinely acute. Burger was in his early 60s, largely without income, and living in circumstances that bore no resemblance to anything he had known in his years with Viscante. He had, at various points over the preceding decade, relied on the generosity of friends and acquaintances to sustain himself.
This is not unusual among people who have experienced the kind of financial reversal he had. But it is particularly difficult when the person in question has spent their entire adult life performing and genuinely believing in their own superiority to ordinary material concerns. In 2012, something happened that Burger almost certainly never imagined for himself.
He appeared on the German language reality television program Big Brother. Big Brother, for those unfamiliar with the format, involves a group of people living together in a monitored house for an extended period with their interactions filmed and broadcast continuously. It is a format designed almost entirely around the manufacturer of drama and the exposure of its participants, their habits, their conflicts, their vulnerabilities, their less flattering moments.
Burger was 67 years old when he entered the Big Brother house. His time on the program was by any measure uncomfortable to watch. He was clearly not well physically or otherwise. He struggled visibly with the environment, with the other housemates, with the basic realities of living in a space that offered no privacy and no difference to his sense of his own status.
He left the show early before its conclusion. The reaction to his appearance was difficult. Some coverage was sympathetic. Here was a man who had once been a major figure in European cinema reduced to this. Other coverage was less charitable. The entertainment press, which had followed him for decades, wrote about his time on Big Brother in terms that ranged from pitying to dismissive.
What was hardest to watch, for those who knew his history, was not the struggling or the conflict with housemates. It was the moments in which Burgger clearly and sincerely seemed to believe that the program would restore something. attention, recognition, relevance, and the moments in which it became apparent that it would not.
After Big Brother, he gave a number of interviews about the experience and about his life more broadly. In these interviews, which were conducted by various European publications, he was extraordinarily candid, perhaps more candid than was wise. He spoke about his financial situation in terms that left very little to the imagination.
He spoke about his health, about the alcohol, about the difficulty of his daily life. He was not performing distress. He was simply describing it. He also in some of these interviews said things that were startling in their directness about people he felt had wronged him, about the industry he felt had abandoned him, about the life he believed he should have had.
The grievances that had always been present in his public statements had by this point become the dominant note. What was striking was not the anger. The anger was understandable enough, but the loneliness underneath it, the sense of a man who had spent 50 years in the most social of worlds and ended up almost entirely alone.
The assault allegation and its aftermath. In 2014, a story broke in the German language press that added another layer of difficulty to the final chapter of Burgger’s life. A formal complaint was made against him by a man who alleged that Burgger had acted toward him in a physically threatening and sexually inappropriate manner.
The allegation was serious and was reported on extensively in the Austrian and German press. Burger denied the claims. The legal process that followed was complicated and prolonged. In the Austrian judicial system, such proceedings can move slowly, and the case attracted ongoing media attention precisely because of who Burger was.
The story was not simply about an incident. It was framed in the press as the latest chapter in the narrative of a man whose life had gone profoundly wrong. The charges were eventually not pursued to a conviction, but the damage to Burger’s already fragile public position was considerable. He gave statements through representatives and occasionally directly, maintaining that the allegations were false and motivated by other factors.
Whether people believed him or not, the story followed him. What this period illustrates, perhaps more than anything else, is how completely the architecture of protection that fame once provides can collapse. In his years with Viscanti, any difficulty Burgger encountered was buffered by Viscanti’s prestige, by the team of people around him, by the sheer weight of the world they inhabited.
By 2014, there was no buffer. Whatever happened to him happened directly in public without anyone standing between him and the full weight of it. He was 70 years old, dying in public. The final years of Helmet Burger’s life were documented in a way that most people at the end of their lives are spared from experiencing.
He was still recognizable enough and his story compelling enough that journalists continued to seek him out. and he continued, despite everything, to talk. He lived in Zsburg in his later years in modest circumstances, a far cry from the Roman apartments and the villas on Iskia where he had spent his great years.
He was not entirely without support. There were people who cared for him practically and personally, but the life around him had contracted to something small. He spoke in his final interviews about Viscanti constantly. Whatever else had happened, the drinking, the money, the legal troubles, the big brother humiliation, the allegations, Viscanti remained the fixed point.
He described their time together with a warmth and a clarity that was not always present when he spoke about other subjects. Whatever the relationship had been, it had clearly been the central experience of his life. He also spoke about death with a directness that in retrospect reads as something close to preparation.
He was not afraid of it. He said he had lived his life, had experienced things that most people never would, and if the end was approaching, he was not going to pretend otherwise. In 2019, he gave an interview, one of his last substantial ones, in which he appeared visibly unwell and spoke with a rambling, emotionally raw quality that was quite different from his earlier public persona.
He talked about being forgotten, about the ingratitude of the industry, about viscanti. He talked about being alone. The interview circulated widely in European entertainment media and was written about with a mixture of concern and the particular kind of voyuristic fascination that attaches itself to famous people in decline.
People watched it and felt things discomfort, sadness, something harder to name. Helmet Burger died on May 18th, 2023 in Saltsburg. He was 78 years old. He died just 11 days before what would have been his 79th birthday. The news of his death was reported across Europe and in film publications internationally.
The obituaries were by and large respectful. They focused on the damned, on Ludvig, on the Viscante years, on the extraordinary quality of the best work he had done. They acknowledged the later difficulties without dwelling on them excessively. They treated him as what he was, a significant figure in European cinema, a man with a genuinely remarkable story.
What many of them did not quite capture, what is hard to capture in an obituary’s necessary brevity, was the specific texture of what his life had been. Not just the high points and the low points, but the particular quality of a life spent believing from the very beginning that you were meant for something exceptional, and the way that belief both drove everything remarkable about him and made everything painful about him worse.
What Burger wanted and what that cost him. Helmet Burger was not a simple person, and his story does not resolve into a simple lesson. He was genuinely talented. The performances he gave in The Damned and Ludvig are not the work of someone who was merely lucky to be in the right place at the right time.
There was something real there, a capacity for emotional extremity on screen, a physical intelligence, a willingness to commit completely that not every actor possesses. He was also, and this is important to say plainly, very difficult. people who worked with him, people who knew him socially, people who tried to help him in various ways at various points in his life.
They consistently described someone whose sense of his own entitlement made sustained closeness extremely hard. He expected things that were not reasonable to expect. He said things that burned bridges that once burned stayed burned. He treated people sometimes in ways that were simply unkind.
These things are not incompatible. A person can be genuinely gifted and genuinely difficult simultaneously. The tragedy of Burger’s life is not that he was one or the other. It is the way the two interacted, each making the other worse. The gift required nurturing, and the only person who ever nurtured it completely was Viscante.
When Viscante died, the gift was left without its ideal conditions and the difficulty, the grandiosity, the spending, the drinking, the inability to accommodate himself to circumstances that did not match his self-image. Had nothing to hold it in check. He spent the last 40 years of his life in the long aftermath of a decade and a half of extraordinary experience.
And he never quite found a way to live well in that aftermath. He kept reaching back towards something that was no longer there. The world of Viscanti, the world of European art cinema in its most glamorous period, the world in which he had been treated as someone exceptional. and the reaching backward made it harder to build anything in the present.
There is something genuinely heartbreaking about that. Not because he was a perfect person or even a particularly easy one, but because the longing itself was so human, the desire to return to the moment when you felt most like the person you always believed yourself to be. the boy from Bad Ishel, the restaurant owner’s son, who grew up surrounded by faded imperial grandeur, who spent his whole life trying to become the noble he had always felt himself to be.
He got there for a while in a way that very few people ever manage, and then it slipped away slowly over decades, and no amount of reaching could bring it back. The world he left behind. What remains of Helmet Burger now that he is gone is primarily the work, and the work at its best genuinely holds up. The Damned is still screened at major cinematics and film festivals.
It remains one of the most significant European films of the late 1960s. Not comfortable viewing, but important viewing. The kind of film that asks something of its audience and gives something considerable in return. Burger’s performance in it is indelible. You cannot imagine the film without him. Ludvig has undergone something of a critical rehabilitation in the decades since its release.
Films that were considered overlong and indulgent at the time of their release have a way sometimes of finding their audience later. and Viscanti’s late work has been reassessed with increasing seriousness. Burgers Ludvig is now recognized as one of the more interesting performances of European art cinema in the 1970s.
These films will outlast the difficulties of his later life. They already have in a sense. Anyone who watches The Damned today without knowing anything about Burger’s biography will see first and last a performance of remarkable intensity. The rest of the story is separate from that.
And yet the rest of the story is also in its own way worth knowing because it is a story about what happens when the life you build is constructed entirely around another person’s vision and what you are left with when that vision is no longer there to organize everything around. It is a story about the difference between inhabiting a world and belonging to it.
Burger inhabited the world of European cultural aristocracy for the best part of two decades. He wore it perfectly, performed it brilliantly, and was accepted into it on the terms that Viscanti negotiated for him. But belonging to something requires roots that he had never quite put down in the conventional sense of financial stability, in the sense of relationships that did not depend on his social currency, in the sense of an identity that could survive the removal of its most important supporting structure.
When Viscante died, Burger was left holding a set of expectations and habits and self-im images that had been built for a world that required Viscanti’s presence to sustain them. And the rest of his life was the consequence of that. He is buried in Salsburg. the city where he lived his final years. Not the Rome of his great period, not the bad isel of his beginning, but the middlesized Austrian city where in the end the life contracted to its final form.
A city full of Mozart tourism and Barack churches and the kind of respectable ordered European life that Burgger had always been too restless, too excessive, too hungry for something larger to settle into peacefully. that he ended there has a certain irony to it. Surrounded by culture, by beauty, by the trappings of European refinement he had always chased, but no longer moving through any of it with the ease and authority he had once commanded.
There will be no marble tomb in any Viscante family chapel. There will be no great estate. There will be the films and the photographs and the memory of what he was for a brief brilliant unre repeatable moment. The most beautiful dangerous presence in European cinema. The restaurant owner’s son who convinced the world for a while that he had always been someone exceptional. He had.
He just could not hold on to it. And that perhaps is the saddest thing of all. Not that he failed, but that he succeeded completely and then spent the rest of his life learning that success, like everything else, can be taken away. The world moves on from its beautiful, dangerous, difficult people with remarkable efficiency.
The magazines that once featured his face find new faces. The directors who once built films around him find new muses. The parties that once felt incomplete without him continue, and the chair where he used to sit eventually stops being noticed as empty. What Helmet Burger left behind is complicated. A body of extraordinary work, a life that was by turns dazzling and painful, and a story that does not resolve cleanly into either triumph or failure, but sits somewhere in between, as most real stories do.
He was not a victim of circumstance alone. He was not simply a casualty of someone else’s death or the industry’s cruelty. He was a man who wanted more than almost anything to be treated as exceptional and who was genuinely exceptional in ways that mattered and deeply difficult in ways that also mattered and who never quite found the balance between the two that might have allowed him to grow old with something like peace.
The restaurant owner’s son from bad Isel made it in the end further than almost anyone from that background could have reasonably imagined. He stood in the great rooms of European culture. He appeared in films that will be watched long after everyone who knew him personally is also gone. He was loved by one of the most remarkable men of his century.
And that love shaped everything that came after it for better and for worse. That is not nothing. It is in fact quite a lot. It just was not in the end enough. Not for Helmet Burger, who had always needed it to be everything. If you enjoyed this video, please like and subscribe to our channel so you never miss out on more fascinating stories.
