Lutz von Rosenberg Lipinsky, Ausbilder Schmidt, Ole Lehmann,
Jacqueline Feldmann and Jens Heinrich Claassen
On February 28, 2025, laughter will fill Wilhelmshaven! A fantastic mix of cabaret and comedy awaits you!
The evening will be moderated by Lutz von Rosenberg Lipinsky. He is "Germany's funniest pastor". For years, he has been caring for the German soul in an entertaining and intelligent way. The German soul is currently agitated like rarely before, as democracy is in danger, some say. Others argue that we do not live in a democracy. It is time to talk about what "rule of the people" actually means. We get worked up, question everything, want to know it all, and then always oppose it. It's time to make sure: do we really want and are able to have democracy? And is it unavoidable? Perhaps we should try something different: monarchy, plentocracy, theocracy, autocracy, or anarchy. Maybe someday we will be content? And get what we want: Our peace!
Certainly not quiet are the evening's guests who offer top-notch entertainment:
Ausbilder Schmidt amusingly rants about all everyday obstacles in his new program – especially about all the losers, loseroinas (pronounced like Smurfette), and amphibians. Comedy with a high density of gags and lots of audience interactions and parodies. The trainer's mission is clear: giving everyone a proper reprimand, which has never harmed anyone. Yes, indeed! Especially since the trainer is really struggling these days: the deluxe Kevin generation unfortunately can't do anything at all. Even the boots need to be tied for his recruits in the morning after laying out their uniforms and bringing the soy milk coffee to the camp bed.
Ole Lehmann, who started his comedy career over 30 years ago at the newly opened Quatsch Comedy Club in Hamburg and now brings out his funniest comedy routines from the closet, dusts them off and brings them to the stage in a new light. It'll be challenging to select the best from the multitude of these sketches. Will it be the stadium horn that is meant to bring fun back into everyday life or the screaming animators at the holiday club? Will it be the cheerful spy phone call to the pizza delivery person or rather the humorous announcements of the train conductors? Does Ole talk about Darth Vader's private life or the glittering vampire in Twilight? And does Adolf still work at the post office and Louis in a Berlin bakery? No one knows, not even Ole himself. "You just have to embrace Lehmann's special brand of humor: always open, always honest, sometimes cheeky, always funny and direct." (Allgäuer Zeitung)
Jacqueline Feldmann would probably still be peacefully lying on a meadow with a carton of juice under her arm and a sunflower in her hair if suddenly school hadn't ended. What to do with the newfound future? Become a chemist, a policewoman, or maybe a sewage plant diver? Initially, Jacqueline aimed for a career as a hammer thrower (no kidding), but this failed due to her rather delicate physique and squeaky throwing yelp. The choice ultimately fell on a desk job at the tax office. Everyday life settled in, as did the humor. The young Sauerlander already knew that turnover tax and value-added tax were not Pokemons. But the stories Jacqueline experienced as a tax officer speak their own language...
Jens Heinrich Claassen finds the statement "Time heals all wounds" utter nonsense, as the sympathetic comedian is now in his mid-forties and time is slowly slipping away. He's still single, living with his mother again, and his best friends are still his stuffed animals. But how does one reinvent themselves in their mid-forties? How do you finally stop writing love songs for women all the time? And how do you deal with catching your mother kissing her new boyfriend? Fortunately, Jens Heinrich Claassen is still not a quitter. With humor and music, he takes his audience on a journey to combat his rising fear of missing out. Perhaps getting older isn't so bad after all. Maybe one can handle things more calmly. That could help. After all, a well-known saying goes, "Nothing rusts without love." That's true. At least a bit.