The Times сегодня.
На снимке Мик и Лени Рифеншталь в 1974 году.
Статья большая. Касательно Джаггера там следующее.
Mick Jagger, meanwhile, seems to have been fascinated by her and once told her that he had watched Triumph des Willens several times.
The two had met in London after Jagger had said that he and his wife Bianca would only agree to a Sunday Times shoot if Riefenstahl
was commissioned to take the photographs. “Mick was not at all what I expected,” Riefenstahl wrote afterwards.
“He was clearly intelligent and sensitive; within a short time we were absorbed in a conversation that grew more and more intense.” They hit it off to such an extent that Jagger later invited her to a dinner in New York so that he could introduce her to some of his friends in the film world, such as Faye Dunaway.
I’m not saying Jagger flirted with fascism, but as a film buff he did admire her work and wanted to discuss it with her. And why wouldn’t he? Alongside Orson Welles and Alfred Hitchcock, Riefenstahl was the most technically accomplished film-maker of her era and Triumph des Willens is still considered one of the most enthralling films of prewar cinema, which is partly why even today, almost a century later, it is verboten to screen it in Germany.