Roger Klüh is out of the mess. His boat Apache Star broke down en route from Miami to Cuba. He couldn't bring it back to the US because that would be a violation of the Cuba embargo, the Americans said. 20 years in prison threatened the Dusseldorf. But now it's just a warning. The Klüh file was closed. Phew!
Queen Esther Marrow does her best again. Together with her Harlem Gospel Singers she is performing in the Tonhalle today - at two concerts. It's their last. After 25 years, the 75-year-old is now over. The Düsseldorf audience praises her in the highest tones. It's so enthusiastic, she says. Thanks to the Grand Dame of Gospel.
Winter didn't bring us Düsseldorfers to our knees this week. We showed it to you, Winter, with the snappy line: "Winter - there was no chaos!" You couldn't even impress the Rheinbahn, you beginner, with your two or three snowflakes. Something completely different has to come, an avalanche or something, until you stop us. And on March 21st it's time to say goodbye!
Joachim Riese manages the company "Warth & Klein Grant Thornton". He justifies this unwieldy name with his competitors "PricewaterhouseCoopers" or "Klynveld Peat Marwick Goerdeler" (KPMG), whose names are just as funny. We will soon be interviewing the Düsseldorf law firm with the crisp name "Heuking Kühn Lüer Wojtek". They know the problem.
Joachim Luger aka father Beimer was speechless, children would say for real. He only acted, because of his great hoarseness the voice came from the off, from an actor colleague. To that we say: It's all just theatre.
Kerstin Gäthe jumps to the side of father Beimer in matters without a voice. She says, "It keeps happening." The pressure to perform and function is great for the artists. She, too, has suppressed the pain several times in her 30-year career and appeared even though she was ill. Oh, non-actors stay at home with every ailment? Or what?
Source: RP Online