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Rudi Carrell

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Occupation
  
Entertainer

Name
  
Rudi Carrell

Role
  
Entertainer


Rudi Carrell httpsc1staticflickrcom54078478733889238ac

Full Name
  
Rudolf Wijbrand Kesselaar

Born
  
19 December 1934 (
1934-12-19
)

Died
  
July 7, 2006, Bremen, Germany

Movies and TV shows
  
Tante Trude aus Buxtehude, Starke Zeiten

Spouse
  
Simone Felischak (m. 2002–2006), Anke Bobbert (m. 1974–2000), Truus de Vries (m. 1957–1973)

Children
  
Caroline Kesselaar, Annemieke Kesselaar, Alexander Kesselaar

Similar People
  
Diether Krebs, Heinz Eckner, Beatrice Richter, Mies Bouwman, Lou van Burg

Rudi Carrell - La, la, la 1975


Rudi Carrell (19 December 1934 – 7 July 2006), born Rudolf Wijbrand Kesselaar, was a Dutch entertainer, born in Alkmaar. Along with famous entertainers such as Johannes Heesters and Linda de Mol, Carrell was one of the most successful Dutch personalities active in Germany.

Contents

Rudi Carrell Rudi Carrell Records LPs Vinyl and CDs MusicStack

He worked as a television entertainer and hosted his own show. The Rudi Carrell Show ran first in the Netherlands, then in Germany for many years. Carrell was also a singer with a number of hits, and acted in several movies.

Rudi Carrell Rudi Carrell Wikipedia the free encyclopedia

Boulevard bio show meister rudi carrell joachim fuchsberger dietmar sch nherr


Eurovision Song Contest

He represented the Netherlands at the Eurovision Song Contest 1960 singing "Wat een geluk" (What luck). He finished 12th out of 13 scoring just 2 points. Carrell provided the Dutch radio commentary for the 1987 Contest.

Rudi Carrell Show

The "Rudi Carrell Show" was a huge success in Germany from the 1960s to the 1990s. The show included a similar concept to "Star Search" or "Pop Idol" and brought many well-known German pop stars and actors to prominence, such as Alexis or Mark Keller. It also featured comedy sketches.

His show was also pretty popular in some other European non-German speaking countries like Slovenia.

In between he hosted other popular shows, including "Am laufenden Band", "Rudis Tagesshow", "Herzblatt", "Die verflixte Sieben" and "7 Tage, 7 Köpfe".

Controversial humor

In 1987, he famously caused a diplomatic rift between Germany and Iran with a sketch in which veiled women threw their undergarments at someone dressed like Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khomeini. The Iranian government responded by expelling two German diplomats and permanently closing the Goethe Institute in Tehran.

Another controversial sketch used clever editing to show the then Chancellor Helmut Kohl and other prominent German politicians apparently consorting with prostitutes.

Death

In an interview in November 2005 the entertainer confirmed to the magazine Bunte, that he was suffering from lung cancer. He died on 7 July 2006 in Bremen, Germany, aged 71.

Literature

  • Rudi Carrell, Gib mir mein Fahrrad wieder, Wenen/München/Zürich/Innsbruck 1979.
  • Ingo Schiweck (Red.), "Laß dich überraschen ..." Niederländische Unterhaltungskünstler in Deutschland nach 1945, Münster 2005.
  • Susanne Schult, Rudi Carrell. Das Image eines Stars in der Geschichte des deutschen Fernsehens, Osnabrück 2000.
  • References

    Rudi Carrell Wikipedia