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Coco Schumann
Coco Schumann
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Key Information

Heinz Jakob "Coco" Schumann (14 May 1924 – 28 January 2018) was a German jazz musician and Holocaust survivor.[1] He became a member of the Ghetto Swingers while transported to Theresienstadt at the age of nineteen. In the aftermath of the Holocaust, Schumann performed as a jazz guitarist, with Marlene Dietrich, Ella Fitzgerald, and Helmut Zacharias.

Early life

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Schumann was born in Berlin, Germany, into a bourgeois family.[2][3] His father, Alfred Schumann, was a war veteran. German by ethnicity and Christian by upbringing, he converted to Judaism after marrying his Jewish wife.[4][5][2] Schumann's mother, Hedwig (née Rothholz), was a hairdresser who worked at her father's salon.[6] His nickname, "Coco," came from his French girlfriend who could not pronounce his first name.[7] Schumann became passionate about Swing jazz after having heard it during the Berlin Olympics.[8][9] During his teenage years, he played for various swing bands and taught himself to play guitar and drums.[10]

Holocaust years

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Schumann was transported first to Theresienstadt at the age of nineteen, where he became a member of the Ghetto Swingers.[11] Finally he and Martin Roman were transported to Auschwitz, where he came face to face with Josef Mengele. When Mengele inquired of the blue-eyed, nineteen-year-old Schumann where he came from and what he did, Schumann shouted, "Berlin, Herr Obersturmbannführer! Plumber, Herr Obersturmbannführer!"[12][13]

Just a few days before the end of the Nazi regime, Schumann contracted spotted fever that had killed hundreds of co-prisoners, and he spent weeks fighting high fevers and delirious nightmares. He and one other man were the only ones to survive the illness. When he was finally able to return home to Berlin, he learned that his grandparents, aunts, uncles, and cousins had been murdered in the camps. However he found his parents alive, as his father had ingeniously succeeded in keeping his Jewish wife hidden from the Nazis by declaring her dead after a disastrous fire.[14]

Career

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After the war, Schumann became a celebrated jazz guitarist.[15] In 1950, he left Germany for Australia along with his family before returning to Berlin in 1954.[7][16][15] He played with Marlene Dietrich, Ella Fitzgerald, and Helmut Zacharias, among others, before founding his own Coco Schumann Quartet.[17] Schumann's eventful and colorful life is a subject of and is celebrated in a German-language true-to-life color graphic novel by Caroline Gille and Niels Schröder.[18] His autobiography, The Ghetto Swinger: A Berlin Jazz-Legend Remembers, was first published in 1997 and became a bestseller.[19] In 2012 it was staged as a musical in Hamburg.[15]

His French girlfriend gave him his "Coco" nickname after she struggled with the pronunciation of "Jakob".[15]

In reflection to his years in a concentration camp, Schumman recalled: "I am a musician who was imprisoned in concentration camps," Schumann said in later years, adding: "Not a concentration camp prisoner who plays music".[15]

Schumann, who had been filmed in Theresienstadt in 1944 as part of a German documentary, Theresienstadt, was featured in a 2013 documentary called Refuge in Music, about the life of Jewish musicians, composers and artists under the Third Reich.[19]

Death

[edit]

Schumann died in Berlin on 28 January 2018 at the age of 93.[15]

References

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from Grokipedia
Coco Schumann was a German jazz guitarist known for his extraordinary life as a musician who performed in Nazi concentration camps during the Holocaust and went on to become a prominent figure in postwar European jazz. Born Heinz Jakob Schumann in Berlin on May 14, 1924, he developed a passion for swing and jazz as a teenager, teaching himself guitar and playing in underground venues despite the Nazi regime's suppression of "degenerate" music. In 1943, at the age of 19, Schumann was deported to Theresienstadt, where he joined the Ghetto Swingers jazz band, performing for fellow prisoners and occasionally for camp officials. He was later transferred to Auschwitz, where he was forced to play guitar for SS officers and in the camp's musical groups, experiences he later described with a focus on his identity as a musician rather than solely as a victim. Surviving the war, Schumann returned to Berlin and resumed his career, performing with leading German jazz ensembles, touring internationally, and collaborating with notable musicians while maintaining his distinctive electric guitar style influenced by American swing and Django Reinhardt. Over the decades, he released recordings, shared his story through interviews and an autobiography, and remained active in the jazz scene until advanced age, earning recognition as one of the last surviving members of the Ghetto Swingers and a symbol of resilience through music. Schumann died in Berlin on January 28, 2018, at the age of 93.

Early life

Family background and childhood

Heinz Jakob Schumann was born on 14 May 1924 in Berlin into a family that blended Jewish and Christian traditions. His father, Alfred Schumann, was a Christian who converted to Judaism out of love for his wife, while his mother, Hedwig (née Rothholz), was Jewish and worked as a hairdresser. The household observed both religious customs without strict separation, with Christmas trees placed alongside Hanukkah menorahs and celebrations of Easter with his father's family alongside Passover with his mother's relatives. The enactment of the Nuremberg Laws in 1935 classified Schumann as a Geltungsjude, a person deemed Jewish under Nazi racial definitions despite his partial Christian heritage. This status resulted in significant disruptions to his childhood, as he was required to leave public school and attend a Jewish school instead, while his mother's hairdressing salon was forced to close.

Introduction to jazz and early musical development

Schumann's interest in music emerged early through his family, particularly influenced by his uncle Arthur Rothholz, a drummer who performed with a gypsy band at Berlin's Prater. Rothholz's involvement in music introduced the young Heinz Jakob Schumann to jazz rhythms and performance, laying the foundation for his lifelong passion. He inherited a drum kit from his uncle and began exploring percussion alongside string instruments. His passion for swing jazz ignited at age 12 during the 1936 Berlin Olympics, when the regime temporarily permitted jazz performances to present a cosmopolitan facade to international visitors. This exposure hooked him on the genre, which he embraced as an escape amid growing Nazi oppression. Schumann received initial guitar lessons from a German teacher around age 14 but largely developed his skills as a self-taught musician on both guitar and drums, becoming proficient through dedicated practice. As a teenager, he participated in informal swing sessions and early gatherings with like-minded musicians, honing his abilities in private or semi-private settings before restrictions intensified. These formative experiences established him as an emerging talent in Berlin's underground jazz scene despite the era's cultural prohibitions.

Nazi persecution and underground career

Classification as Geltungsjude and restrictions

In 1935, following the introduction of the Nuremberg Laws, Heinz "Coco" Schumann was classified as a Geltungsjude (a Mischling treated as a full Jew under Nazi racial policy) owing to his father's conversion to Judaism out of love for his Jewish wife. His mother was Jewish, while his father was originally Christian. This classification subjected him to the full discriminatory measures applied to Jews under Nazi racial policy. He was excluded from membership in the Reichskulturkammer (Reich Chamber of Culture), which barred him from legally working as a musician, performing in public, or earning money from music. The Nazi regime further declared jazz and swing music "undeutsch," adding ideological prohibition to his musical activities and exposing him to severe restrictions as a Geltungsjude, a banned professional, and a player of forbidden music. Despite these severe restrictions on his career and personal life, Schumann's interest in jazz persisted privately.

Illegal jazz performances and stage name origin

During the Nazi regime, jazz—especially American and English swing—was condemned as "degenerate" and "music of the enemy," leading to tighter restrictions after the 1936 Olympics. As a classified Geltungsjude, Schumann was barred from membership in the Reich Chamber of Culture and thus forbidden from performing publicly in any capacity. Despite these restrictions, he participated in Berlin's clandestine jazz scene, performing at night after forced labor by day. Schumann acquired his stage name "Coco" from a French girlfriend. He received the name during his first paid engagement on New Year's Eve 1939/40, when he appeared as a drummer at the Hasenschaukel in Charlottenburg. He went on to perform at the Rosita Bar in Schöneberg with Tullio Mobiglia’s orchestra, a popular group in the underground circuit. To enable these appearances, he concealed his yellow star in his pocket while at the venues, risking severe consequences for playing the banned jazz repertoire. As his success increased, these illegal performances grew increasingly dangerous under the regime's intensifying crackdown.

Holocaust imprisonment and survival

Deportation to Theresienstadt

In 1943, Coco Schumann was denounced and deported to the Theresienstadt ghetto at the age of 19. His arrest stemmed from his participation in illegal underground jazz performances, which violated Nazi prohibitions on "degenerate music" and led to charges including playing such music and associating with those deemed Aryan. As a Geltungsjude—classified as Jewish under Nazi racial laws due to his Jewish mother and his father's conversion—Schumann had already lived under constant threat of deportation for years. Upon arrival in Theresienstadt, Schumann took part in the ghetto's permitted cultural activities, particularly music performances, which the Nazi administration encouraged to project an image of a "normal" cultural scene for propaganda purposes. This involvement in music initially afforded him a degree of protection from further deportation to extermination camps. The ghetto's staged cultural life thus offered a temporary reprieve amid the broader horrors of deportation and imprisonment.

Role in the Ghetto Swingers

In Theresienstadt, Coco Schumann joined the Ghetto Swingers, a jazz band founded by Czech trumpeter Erich Vogel. The group performed swing music, which was otherwise forbidden under Nazi rule, to help sustain the appearance of a normal cultural scene in the ghetto. The Nazi administration promoted such activities as part of a deliberate effort to create a false impression of humane conditions for propaganda purposes. In the summer of 1944, the Ghetto Swingers were featured in the Nazi propaganda film Theresienstadt, staged to deceive international observers—including the Red Cross—by depicting the ghetto as a cultured and leisurely settlement. Band members were provided clean white shirts for the filming and performed in a bucolic outdoor setting. The surviving footage shows the ensemble playing in a park pavilion, presenting an idyllic image that concealed the ghetto's true suffering. Schumann and the band performed the song "You Can’t Stop Me From Dreaming" during the production. These performances were coerced and formed part of the broader Nazi strategy to mask the reality of imprisonment, starvation, and deportation in Theresienstadt. Schumann later described playing under such circumstances as "music in hell."

Transfer to Auschwitz and Dachau

On 24 September 1944, Coco Schumann was deported from Theresienstadt to Auschwitz-Birkenau along with other members of the Ghetto Swingers. In Auschwitz, a fellow musician recognized him and arranged for his assignment to the camp orchestra, where he played guitar—using one that had belonged to a murdered Romani prisoner—for SS guards during selections for the gas chambers, tattooing of new arrivals, and other daily activities. The band performed requested pieces such as "La Paloma" to entertain the SS and mask the fate of those being led to their deaths. Schumann nearly died from spotted fever while in Auschwitz. As Soviet forces advanced in January 1945, he was transferred to Kaufering, a satellite camp of Dachau. In April 1945, Kaufering was evacuated, and Schumann was forced onto a death march toward Lake Starnberg, during which he was gravely ill. He was liberated by American soldiers along this route in Bavaria. After liberation, he learned that his parents had survived, though much of his extended family had perished in the Holocaust.

Liberation and immediate aftermath

In April 1945, as Allied forces advanced, Coco Schumann was liberated by U.S. troops in Wolfratshausen, Bavaria, from a Dachau satellite camp during the chaotic dispersal of prisoners and a death march. He had endured severe illness, including near-fatal spotted fever in Auschwitz, which left him weakened as the war ended. After liberation, Schumann made his way back to Berlin, arriving in early July 1945 amid the city's widespread destruction. There he discovered that his parents had miraculously survived the Holocaust—his father had hidden his mother to shield her from deportation—but most of his extended family, including grandparents, aunts, uncles, and cousins, had been murdered in the camps. This devastating homecoming marked the end of his imprisonment and the beginning of his confrontation with profound personal loss in postwar Berlin.

Post-war musical career

Return to Berlin and early post-liberation performances

After his liberation in April 1945 from a Dachau satellite camp during a death march, Coco Schumann returned to Berlin and immediately resumed playing swing and jazz music in the city's recovering cultural scene. He performed alongside violinist Helmut Zacharias, a leading figure in German popular music during the late 1940s, and formed his own ensemble known as the Coco Schumann Combo. Schumann gained particular recognition for introducing the electric amplified guitar to Germany, becoming one of the first musicians there to employ this technology in live performances and recordings during the immediate post-war years. This innovation allowed him to develop a distinctive sound within the emerging post-war jazz environment in Berlin, where he played in various clubs and venues. During this period from 1945 to 1950, he also produced some of his earliest commercial recordings, helping to reestablish jazz as a vibrant part of Berlin's musical life amid reconstruction.

Emigration to Australia and return to Germany

Due to his distrust of the political climate in post-war Germany, Coco Schumann emigrated to Australia with his family in 1950. He was accompanied by his wife Gertraud Goldschmidt, whom he had met shortly after liberation in 1945 and who had also survived Theresienstadt, along with her son Peter from a previous relationship. After four years abroad, Schumann returned to Berlin in 1954, driven primarily by homesickness. This brief period overseas marked a temporary departure from his re-established musical life in Germany before he resumed performing there.

Collaborations, bands, and innovations

After returning to Germany from Australia in 1954, Coco Schumann quickly reestablished himself in the Berlin jazz scene, collaborating with international stars and integrating into local ensembles. He performed with Marlene Dietrich during her tours in the 1960s, accompanying her on guitar, and also played with Ella Fitzgerald during her European engagements. Additionally, he worked with violinist and bandleader Helmut Zacharias in his orchestra, contributing to popular swing and light music recordings. Schumann became a sought-after sideman in dance bands and orchestras for radio and television broadcasters, including the RIAS Tanzorchester, where he played both acoustic and, later, electric guitar. In 1989, he founded the Coco Schumann Quartet, a small combo focused on jazz standards and swing that remained active intermittently into his later years and featured his distinctive guitar work. During the 1960s and 1970s, Schumann diversified his activities, working as an entertainer and ship musician on cruise liners, where he performed for passengers across various genres. He also contributed musically to a film featuring comedian Heinz Erhardt, providing guitar accompaniment in line with his versatile post-war career. Around this period, Schumann continued to use the electric guitar, adopting amplification and a more contemporary tone that reflected evolving popular music styles while preserving his swing roots.

Later career revival and performances

In the 1990s, Schumann's career experienced a notable revival following the publication of his autobiography Der Ghetto-Swinger in 1997, which drew renewed public and media attention to his unique story as both a Holocaust survivor and a jazz musician. The book, which detailed his experiences in the camps and his lifelong dedication to swing music, led to increased invitations for performances and interviews, elevating his profile beyond the local Berlin jazz scene. Throughout the 2000s and 2010s, Schumann remained an active performer well into his eighties and nineties, regularly appearing at jazz festivals, commemorative concerts, and cultural events in Germany and abroad. He often played with small ensembles, including his own trio, delivering classic swing and jazz standards while incorporating reflections on his past. His performances frequently combined music with spoken narratives about his survival and the role of jazz in the ghettos and camps, making them both artistic and testimonial events. Schumann continued to perform until shortly before his death, with appearances that highlighted his enduring skill on the guitar despite the physical challenges from his camp experiences. His late-career work reinforced his legacy as one of the last surviving members of the Ghetto Swingers and a living link to the history of jazz under Nazi persecution. In recognition of his contributions, he received honors such as the Federal Cross of Merit in 1989, underscoring the cultural and historical significance of his ongoing performances.

Autobiography and personal reflections

Publication of Der Ghetto-Swinger

In 1997, Coco Schumann published his autobiography Der Ghetto-Swinger: eine Jazzlegende erzählt, which became a bestseller in Germany. The book recounts his experiences as a jazz musician under Nazi persecution and during his imprisonment in Theresienstadt and Auschwitz, while emphasizing his self-description as a musician who was imprisoned rather than a prisoner who played music. This distinction underscores Schumann's view that music remained his core identity and a form of resistance throughout his ordeal. The English edition, titled The Ghetto Swinger: A Berlin Jazz-Legend Remembers and translated by John Howard, appeared in 2016 from Doppelhouse Press, featuring rare photographs, historical documents, and an afterword by Michael H. Kater. The autobiography was adapted into a musical that premiered in Hamburg in 2012 and into a graphic novel in 2014.

Interviews and perspectives on survival and music

In interviews conducted during his later years, Coco Schumann offered candid reflections on how music served as a crucial mechanism for survival and psychological resistance during his imprisonment in Theresienstadt and Auschwitz. He described playing jazz as a temporary escape that allowed him to momentarily detach from the surrounding horrors, stating, “When I played, I forgot where I was. I forgot hunger and misery, the emaciated people, the many dead. … The music was a shield. Music and jokes.” Schumann further emphasized music's life-preserving role, declaring in multiple conversations that “The music saved our lives.” Schumann frequently characterized human nature as profoundly unpredictable and cruel in the context of the camps, reflecting that “The human is a peculiar creation. Unpredictable and merciless. What we saw in those days was unbearable, and yet we bore it. We played the tunes to it, for the sake of our bare survival. We played music in hell.” Despite the trauma, he consciously rejected bitterness and chose a life-affirming stance, explaining, “I decided I could either live the rest of my life being broken by Auschwitz, or be joyful that I survived.” He consistently resisted being defined primarily as a concentration camp survivor, insisting instead on his core identity as a musician: “I’m a musician who was once in concentration camps” and “I rejoice that I survived.” Schumann asserted that the Nazis had failed to destroy his innate joy for living, affirming, “My life, my joy for living, they were not able to take that away from me then, and I am not going to let anybody take it away from me now.” He credited ongoing engagement with music for preserving his vitality, noting, “As long as I am making music, I have no time to grow old.” In reflecting on his entire life, Schumann expressed no regrets and integrated his traumatic past without allowing it to overshadow his optimism, describing his experiences as part of a “wild and colorful ride” that revealed life’s “unbelievably mean and terribly beautiful face” but was “certainly not: horrible.” These perspectives, articulated in interviews such as his 2015 conversation with Die Zeit and discussions with biographer Michaela Haas, underscored his commitment to living fully and joyfully despite the camps’ lasting impact.

Media appearances and portrayals

Documentary and television appearances

Coco Schumann was forced to appear in the 1944 Nazi propaganda film Theresienstadt, a short documentary produced to deceive international observers by portraying the ghetto as a humane and cultured Jewish settlement, where he was shown performing music as part of the staged facade. This involuntary role occurred while he was imprisoned in the Theresienstadt concentration camp. In later years, Schumann appeared as himself in several documentaries and television programs to discuss his survival, experiences in the camps, and the role of music during that period. He was interviewed in the 2005 television episode "Mein Kriegsende," part of a mini-series reflecting on personal accounts of the war's end. In 2009, he was a guest on the German talk show Alpha Forum, sharing insights into his life and career. He also featured in the 2013 documentary Refuge in Music, which focused on Jewish musicians persecuted under the Nazi regime and their use of music as a means of resilience and expression.

Contributions to films and other media

Coco Schumann occasionally extended his musical activities to contributions in films and other media, particularly during the 1960s and 1970s when traditional jazz venues became less viable. For example, he provided guitar music for the 1957 Heinz Erhardt comedy film Witwer mit fünf Töchtern (Widower with 5 Daughters). In the same period, Schumann worked as a musician for dance bands, as well as contributing to radio and television orchestras, thereby supporting music production in broadcast media. These roles represented an adaptation of his swing and jazz expertise to broader entertainment formats during a transitional phase in his career. No other verified soundtrack compositions, music department credits, or significant film contributions appear in primary biographical sources.

Death and legacy

Death in 2018

Coco Schumann died on 28 January 2018 in Berlin at the age of 93. His record label Trikont announced the death the following day. In his later years, Schumann faced significant health challenges, including a brain tumour and a finger injury sustained from a fall in the summer of 2014, which largely brought his public performances to an end. He continued to play guitar daily in his Berlin bungalow, maintaining his lifelong connection to music until the end. The Jewish Museum Berlin, where he had frequently performed as part of its Cultural Summer program and maintained a long association dating back to the institution's founding, expressed grief at his passing.

Honors, cultural impact, and recognition

Coco Schumann's contributions to jazz and his remarkable survival through music earned him lasting recognition in Germany, particularly through his long association with the Jewish Museum Berlin. He frequently performed as part of the museum's Cultural Summer program, sharing his swing and jazz repertoire with audiences over many years. For more than a decade and a half, from 2001 to 2017, his life story was prominently featured in the museum's Rafael Roth Learning Center in a multimedia presentation titled “Surviving with music,” which illustrated how his musical talent provided moments of self-assertion under Nazi oppression and ultimately helped sustain him in Theresienstadt and Auschwitz. Schumann's legacy endures as a powerful symbol of jazz's survival and resilience amid persecution, with his insistence on being remembered primarily as “a musician who spent time in a concentration camp” rather than the reverse shaping public understanding of his experiences. In 2015, he received the Ehrenpreise lifetime achievement award from the German Record Critics, honoring his pioneering role in post-war German jazz and his enduring influence as an electric guitarist and bandleader. His ninetieth birthday in 2014 was marked by a tribute gala attended by Germany's cultural and political elite, underscoring the broad respect he commanded in later years. The success of his autobiography further amplified his cultural impact, raising awareness of his story through its adaptation into a musical production.

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