Hagen Rether

Hagen Rether (born October 8, 1969 in Bucharest) is a Romanian-born German political cabaret artist and musician.[1] The most remarkable features in his performance are usually the presence and use of a grand piano. He was a frequent contributor to the German Kabarett TV show Scheibenwischer.

Hagen Rether
Hagen Rether in 2008
Born(1969-10-08)October 8, 1969
Bucharest, Romania
MediumKabarett
NationalityGerman
GenresObservational comedy, Word play, Political satire, Black comedy
Subject(s)German culture, German and American politics, Religion, Mass media, Globalization
Websitewww.hagenrether.de

Among the topics Rether relates to are not only federal, state and international politics, but also religion, media, consumerism and globalization.

Biography

Hagen Rether spent his childhood in Bucharest and Sibiu, Romania as the son of German, Transylvanian Saxon parents of Siebenbürgen.[2] In 1973, his family relocated to West Germany settling in Freiburg im Breisgau. He began studying the piano at eight years of age and attended the Folkwang Hochschule in Essen,[1] where he still lives today (2008).

Prior to touring with his solo show, he was the pianist in Ludger Stratmann's show as well as performing with other artists. Since 2003 he has presented his show "Liebe" (en.: Love), which he constantly updates and varies according to the contemporary requirements of every performance.

His show is predominantly political. Sometimes he begins by eating a cup of yoghurt. Throughout much of the show he alternates or accompanies his monologue with the piano modifying song selection, tempo and style according to the topic he is about to cover.

Important targets for his satires and biting ironies are, among many others, the Catholic Church, George W. Bush and the German novelist and Nobel Prize winner Günter Grass, whom he criticized for not admitting that he was a member of the Waffen-SS as a teenager. Another target is German pop singer Herbert Grönemeyer, who he alleges for commercially exploiting his own wife's death in his songs.

Using parody, he targets historical and contemporary people using political and medial transcripts for his satires (e.g. Jürgen Rüttgers).

Awards and honors

  • 2003
  • 2004
    • Stuttgarter Besen in Gold
    • Prix Pantheon - Jurypreis Frühreif & Verdorben (award shared with Serdar Somuncu)
    • Paulaner Solo
    • Tollwood-Festival München - Kleinkunstpreis
    • Passauer Scharfrichterbeil
    • Zeck-Kabarettpreis - Newcomer award Fresh Zeck
  • 2005
    • Bavarian Cabaret Prize Senkrechtstarter (en. approximately: High-flyer)
    • Deutscher Kleinkunstpreis Förderpreis der Stadt Mainz
    • Goldener Spaten Senkrechtstarter [3]
    • Sprungbrett (Förderpreis des Handelsblattes)
  • 2008
    • Deutscher Kleinkunstpreis in der Kategorie Kabarett
  • 2011
    • Asteroid 233653 Rether, discovered by German amateur astronomer Rolf Apitzsch in 2008, was named in his honor.[1] The official naming citation was published by the Minor Planet Center on 15 June 2011 (M.P.C. 75353).[4]

Discography

  • 2005: Liebe ISBN 3-86604-162-4
  • 2007: 3. Politischer Aschermittwoch 2007 ISBN 3-931265-65-X
  • 2007: Liebe Zwei ISBN 3-86604-711-8
  • 2010: Liebe 3. Random House Audio, ISBN 978-3-8371-0388-5
  • 2012: Liebe 4. Random House Audio, ISBN 978-3-8371-1466-9
  • 2014: Liebe Fünf. Random House Audio, ISBN 978-3-8371-2539-9
  • 2016: Liebe 6. Random House Audio, ISBN 978-3-8371-3520-6
gollark: Tilt to move the cursor and punch the air to click. This is very optimal.
gollark: Even an accelerometer would be more practical.
gollark: Because it's a complicated software thing.
gollark: Yes, hence "computationally expensive".
gollark: Yes, I too want a camera and computationally expensive computer vision stuff.

References

  1. "233653 Rether (2008 QR)". Minor Planet Center. Retrieved 29 August 2019.
  2. Klein, Konrad (1 February 2005). "Hagen Rether" (in German). Siebenbürgische Zeitung. Retrieved 29 August 2019.
  3. Spaten-Brauerei: Hagen Rether (Kabarett-Senkrechtstarter)
  4. "MPC/MPO/MPS Archive". Minor Planet Center. Retrieved 29 August 2019.
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