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Who was Heinz Sielmann? Google Doodle remembers pioneering photographer and filmmaker on his 101st birthday


HEINZ Sielmann would have turned 101 today and so Google has paid tribute to the renowned filmmaker, photographer and biologist with one of its Google Doodles.

Here's Sielmann's story and why the search engine is celebrating him.

Getty - Contributor Sielmann was one of the most acclaimed wildlife filmmakers of the 20th century

Who was Heinz Sielmann?

Born on June 2, 1917, in Mönchengladbach, a city in western Germany, Sielmann became one of the most revered and respected wildlife photographers and documentary filmmakers of the 20th century.

His first film was released in 1938 - a silent movie on the birds of East Prussia before further work was disrupted and halted due to the outbreak of the Second World War.

Sielmann was stationed in occupied Poland during WW2 as an instructor at a radio-communications unit for the Luftwaffe - the German airforce.

In 1940 he went to study at a university in Poland, gaining a degree in biology and specialising in zoology.

He was later sent to Crete as well as serving time as a prisoner of war in Cairo and London.

Following the end of the war he became to receive acclaim for his work, particularly a feature film about woodpeckers titled Carpenters of the Forest.

Sir David Attenborough lobbied the BBC on his behalf for the film to be aired in the UK.

Later works including Lords of the Forest, Galapagos - Dream Island in the Pacific and The Mystery of Animal Behaviour also won the admiration of fellow wildlife enthusiasts and experts.

Such was the fame of Sielmann that he was even referenced in an episode of Monty Python's Flying Circus.

At the age of 89 in 2006, he passed away surrounded by his family and was buried in the German town of Duderstadt. He is survived by his wife Inge.

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GOOGLE A Google Doodle honours Heinz Sielmann

What is a Google Doodle?

In 1998, the search engine founders Larry and Sergey drew a stick figure behind the second 'o' of Google as a message to that they were out of office at the Burning Man festival and with that, Google Doodles were born.

The company decided that they should decorate the logo to mark cultural moments and it soon became clear that users really enjoyed the change to the Google homepage.

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Bildnis Heinz Sielmanns auf seinem Grabstein, gestaltet von Peter Mildner

Heinz Sielmann (* 2. Juni 1917 in Rheydt; † 6. Oktober 2006 in München) war ein deutscher Tierfilmer, Kameramann, Produzent und Publizist.

Leben und Wirken [ Bearbeiten | Quelltext bearbeiten ]

1924 zogen Sielmanns Eltern mit ihm nach Ostpreußen. Dort fand er Interesse an den Tierfilmen, die vor den Hauptfilmen im Kino liefen. Dies führte zu dem frühen Wunsch, Tierfilmer zu werden. Seine ersten Beobachtungen mit dem Feldstecher seines Vaters galten der Vogelwelt. Nachdem aufgrund seiner neuen Leidenschaft seine Schulnoten am Königsberger Königlichen Hufengymnasium absackten, wurden die Zeiten in der Natur mit dem Feldstecher von seinen Eltern stark eingeschränkt. Doch in der Folgezeit verbesserten sich seine Schulnoten wieder, und er bekam als Anerkennung von seiner Mutter seinen ersten Fotoapparat geschenkt. Nach ersten Versuchen mit dem Fotoapparat drehte Sielmann bereits 1938 in Ostpreußen und dem damaligen vom Völkerbund abgetrennten Memelland seinen ersten Tierfilm Vögel über Haff und Wiesen (noch als Stummfilm), der ihm große Anerkennung in der Fachwelt und beim Publikum einbrachte. Assistiert wurde ihm hierbei von dem Kameramann und Freund Georg Schimanski, mit dem er zehn Jahre zusammenarbeitete.[1]

Ab 1939 war er in der Wehrmacht als Ausbilder an der Luftnachrichtenschule in Posen tätig. Der spätere Künstler und Bildhauer Joseph Beuys war sein Untergebener, zugleich entwickelte sich eine intensive Freundschaft. Sielmann studierte gleichzeitig Biologie und Zoologie an der Reichsuniversität Posen.[2] Nach Kreta verlegt, beendete er 1945 den Naturfilm seines verstorbenen Kollegen Horst Siewert. Die Britische Armee nahm ihn gefangen und brachte ihn mit dem gedrehten Material nach England, wo er nach der Sichtung des Films für die BBC arbeiten durfte.[3]

Nach dem Krieg wurde er Kameramann für das Institut für Film und Bild in Wissenschaft und Unterricht in München und drehte international anerkannte Naturfilme. 1949 wurde sein erster Kinofilm Lied der Wildbahn uraufgeführt. Im Jahr 1952 entstand Sielmanns Kontakt mit Konrad Lorenz, dem eine enge Zusammenarbeit folgte. Für die Filme Quick, das Eichhörnchen (1952) und Zimmerleute des Waldes (1954) über Spechte erhielt er jeweils den Bundesfilmpreis. Für den letztgenannten Film bekam er in England den Spitznamen „Mr. Woodpecker“. Trotz seiner Reisen nahm er 1956 seine Universitätsstudien in München wieder auf mit dem Schwerpunkt Zoologie und Ornithologie.

Unter der Schirmherrschaft des ehemaligen belgischen Königs Leopold drehte Sielmann 1958 in Belgisch Kongo einen der ersten Filme über Berggorillas: Les Seigneurs de la forêt (Herrscher des Urwaldes). 1962 folgte ein vielbeachteter Dokumentarfilm über die Galápagos-Inseln Galápagos – Landung in Eden. An dieser sehr langen Expedition nahm auch der Verhaltensforscher Irenäus Eibl-Eibesfeldt teil, der für einen Teil der damals sensationellen Unterwasseraufnahmen zuständig war. Sielmann erhielt für diesen Film auf der Berlinale 1962 einen Silbernen Bären.

1963 ging Sielmann auf Expedition in den Dschungel Papua-Neuguineas, um erste Filmaufnahmen der bis dahin noch nicht gezeigten Paradiesvögel und der scheuen Laubenvögel aufzunehmen. Der Film wurde 1965 unter dem Titel In die Bergdschungel Neuguineas veröffentlicht. Sielmanns Ehefrau Inge (* 1930) begleitete ihn bei den Expeditionen in den Kongo und in die Savanne Afrikas. Sielmanns Sohn Stephan kam 24-jährig bei einem Unfall während einer Expedition in Kenia ums Leben. Auch für den amerikanischen Dokumentar-Film Die Hellstrom-Chronik (The Hellstrom Chronicle) (1971) machte Sielmann einige Aufnahmen. Der Film erhielt 1972 den Oscar als „Bester Dokumentarfilm“.

Von 1965 bis 1991 moderierte Sielmann im Fernsehen die überaus erfolgreiche Tiersendung Expeditionen ins Tierreich mit überwiegend eigenem Filmmaterial. Er war Herausgeber der Zeitschrift Sielmanns Tierwelt, die Anfang der 1980er Jahre mit Bernhard Grzimeks Magazin Das Tier fusionierte.

Seit 1988, als er den Film Tiere im Schatten der Grenze drehte, engagierte sich Sielmann dafür, den Todesstreifen der ehemaligen innerdeutschen Grenze zu Thüringen für den Naturschutz zu erhalten. Als Grünes Band Deutschland ist das Naturschutzprojekt inzwischen Teil des Grünen Bandes Europa.

1994, also erst mit 77 Jahren, erhielt Sielmann, der aufgrund der zoologischen praktischen Aktivitäten nicht die übliche Habilitation durchschritt, eine Honorarprofessur für Ökologie an der Fakultät für Biologie der Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München.

Zentrale der Heinz Sielmann Stiftung auf Gut Herbigshagen mit Logo und Leitspruch am Eingang

Aus dem Engagement am ehemaligen Grenzstreifen resultierte 1994 die Gründung der Heinz Sielmann Stiftung. Seit 1996 ist die Stiftung auf Gut Herbigshagen bei Duderstadt ansässig. Die Stiftung will durch Ankauf und Pflege von Biotopen Lebensräume für bedrohte Arten schaffen und erhalten.

Heinz Sielmann starb am 6. Oktober 2006 in München. Seine letzte Ruhestätte fand er auf dem Gelände der Heinz Sielmann Stiftung in der Franz-von-Assisi-Kapelle.

Inge Sielmann übernahm nach dem Tod Heinz Sielmanns den Vorsitz des Stiftungsrats der Heinz Sielmann Stiftung. Neben dem unmittelbaren Naturschutz gilt ihr Interesse der Natur- und Umweltbildung von Kindern und Jugendlichen. So gibt es unter anderem in Fuhrbach, Kreis Göttingen, einen „Inge Sielmann Kindergarten“, der Kindern das Aufwachsen mit der Natur vermitteln soll. Jugendorganisation der Heinz Sielmann Stiftung ist der Sielmanns Natur-Ranger Deutschland e.V.

Franz-von-Assisi-Kapelle auf Gut Herbigshagen

Kapelle

Gedenkstein an der Außenwand der Kapelle

Grabplatte von Sielmann in der Kapelle

NDR-Reihe Expeditionen ins Tierreich

Lied der Wildbahn, 1949

1949 Wiesensommer, 1955

1955 Herrscher des Urwalds (Les Seigneurs de la forêt), 1959

(Les Seigneurs de la forêt), 1959 Galápagos – Landung in Eden, 1962

1962 Grönland – Pforte zum ewigen Eis (Greenland and beyond), 1962

(Greenland and beyond), 1962 In der Savanne Ost-Afrikas, 1964

1964 In die Bergdschungel Neuguineas, 1965

1965 Lockende Wildnis – Durch die Wildbahnen von Nordamerika, 1974

1974 Tiere im Schatten der Grenze, 1988

1988 Lebenswerk von Heinz Sielmann nur bei Bertelsmann (Sammleredition), 2007

2007 Was ist Was (Bände 72 Heimtiere und 73 Spinnen)

30 weitere wissenschaftliche und praktische Bücher

Insgesamt entstanden vier Dokumentar-Kinofilme, mehr als 200 Fernsehfilme, 123 wissenschaftliche Lehrfilme, mehrere DVDs und zahlreiche Buchveröffentlichungen.

(Auswahl)

Verschiedene Schulen tragen Sielmanns Namen, darunter die Hauptschule der Stadt Oerlinghausen (seit 1997), die Realschule Duderstadt (seit 1998), die Staatliche Grundschule Haßleben (seit 2003), die West-Grundschule Neustadt an der Weinstraße (seit 2004) und die Crinitzer Grundschule (seit 2006).

Der 2001 an der Volkssternwarte Drebach (Erzgebirge) entdeckte Asteroid 2001 RO 15 trägt seit dem 7. Februar 2012 die offizielle Bezeichnung (208351) Sielmann.

Zum 100. Geburtstag von Heinz Sielmann gab die Deutsche Post AG ein Postwertzeichen im Nennwert von 45 Eurocent heraus. Der Erstausgabetag war der 8. Juni 2017. Der Entwurf stammt vom Grafiker Thomas Mayfried aus München.[4]

Peter Berthold: In: Neue Deutsche Biographie (NDB). Band 24, Duncker & Humblot, Berlin 2010, ISBN 978-3-428-11205-0, S. 368 ( ).

In: (NDB). Band 24, Duncker & Humblot, Berlin 2010, ISBN 978-3-428-11205-0, S. 368 ( ). Heinz Sielmann, Internationales Biographisches Archiv 08/2007 vom 24. Februar 2007, im Munzinger-Archiv (Artikelanfang frei abrufbar)


A Google Doodle pays tribute to the renowned biologist and filmmaker Heinz Sielmann, on what would have been his 101st birthday.

Despite creating a wide range of wildlife documentaries over his life, Sielmann gained the nickname “Mr Woodpecker” after the release of one of his most best-loved films, Carpenters of the Forest, in 1954.

Detailing the life of the bird, it featured then-groundbreaking footage from inside its nests and became hugely popular in Britain after it was broadcast on the BBC.

That the film, known as The Woodpecker on UK broadcasts, remains his most famous work among a career littered with award-winning movies pays testament to its ability to capture the imaginations of audiences at the time.

Born in in Rheydt, Germany, in 1917, Sielmann moved to East Prussia at an early age where his father opened a business selling electrical and building supplies.

His fascination with wildlife began as a child, often waking up early in order to watch birds before school.

At the age of 17, he received his first camera and made his first steps into the world of wildlife photography.

East Prussia became the setting for his first nature film in 1938, a silent movie on birdlife in the province.

However, the young Sielmann’s career was interrupted the following year by the outbreak of the Second World War.

He was initially stationed in occupied Poland as an instructor at a radio communications training unit for the Luftwaffe, spending time as a prisoner of war in Cairo and London.

After the war, he began his critically-acclaimed work for the Educational Film Institute of the Federal Republic of Germany.

It was during this time he started filming Carpenters of the Forest, capturing the elusive woodpecker in a degree of depth that had not been seen before.

Sielmann placed cameras inside woodpecker nests and in doing so was able to film intimate moments between parents and offspring, a move that helped the documentary become a global hit.

“Of all the animals that I have worked with, the woodpeckers are my favourites,” Sielmann would later write, “because I was able to find out many new facts about the biology of these birds.”

In the late 1950s, he released his first feature film, Les Seigneurs de la Forêt, or Lords of the Forest, which was commissioned by the King of Belgium and filmed in the then-Belgian Congo.

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The film was notable for being one of the first to capture the social nature of gorillas in their natural habitat. It won first place at the Moscow Film Festival and quickly became one of his most revered works, being translated into 26 languages including an English version narrated by Orson Welles.

In 1971 he photographed for the Academy Award winning film The Hellstrom Chronicle, along with Walon Green, about the threat that insects collectively pose to humans and the struggle between the two.

In 1994, he founded the Heinz Sielmann Stiftung, a foundation that has successfully reintroduced otters and beavers into the wild in Germany.

He died surrounded by his family in Munich in 2006.


Google Doodle has chosen to celebrate the birthday of Heinz Sielmann as their Google logo. The famous German naturalist was well known for his ability to capture the rarest animals in the world on film. Google has changed their logo to a cartoonish drawing of Mr Sielmann behind the camera capturing colourful owls and woodpeckers in a woodland setting. Nicknamed “Mr Woodpecker”, Mr Sielmann would have turned 101 years-old today, if he was still alive. Google has changed the Google logo today across nine countries to celebrate the date.

Who is Heinz Sielmann? The famous German film-maker was born in Rheidt in 1017. Starting from humble beginnings, Heinz Sielmann’s father owned an electrical materials shop in East Prussia during the First World War. Mr Sielmann became a student of nature throughout his life, becoming one of the most famous nature cinematographers in the world, becoming the first person to film the social nature of gorillas in the wild. His work has inspired countless other documentary work across the ages, each attempting to achieve his knack of capturing wildlife in his own unique way. Likely his most famous work, Carpenters of the Forest, gave Sielmann his nickname “Mr Woodpecker”, showcasing one of Europe’s most elusive birds on film in a way that had not been seen before.

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Sielmann placed cameras inside Woodpecker nests high up in the trees, filming intimate moments between parent birds and their offspring. Sielmann had said of his work: “Of all the animals that I have worked with, the woodpeckers are my favourites… because I was able to find out many new facts about the biology of these birds.” Carpenters of the Forest was broadcast across the nation on BBC, with thousands of viewers in the UK requesting for it to be broadcast again. The programme's appreciation index matched that of a football final, according to British newspaper The Guardian.

GETTY Heinz Sielmann was a well known nature documentarian

GETTY Heinz Sielmann dies in 2006, but would be 101 today

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