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Gerhard Polt
Gerhard Polt
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Awarding of honorary prices of the Zelt Musik Festival Freiburg, Germany 2015 by Gernot Erler (MdB)

Key Information

Zelt Musik Festival. Gerhard Polt reads Peter and the Wolf accompanied by the Russische Kammerphilharmonie St. Petersburg.

Gerhard Polt (born 7 May 1942 in Munich[1]) is a German writer, filmmaker,[2] actor and satirical cabaret artist from Bavaria.[3]

Gerhard Polt's main topics are Bavarian people, culture and politics. On stage he often plays the role of an ignorant Bavarian petty bourgeoisie. One of his trademarks is the constant switching and the combining of Bavarian, Standard German and even (pseudo-) Englisch language elements (albeit always performed with strongly Bavarian pronunciation and melody), where a lot of jokes and wordplays derive from.

His performances in Munich theaters, which he started in 1976, are very popular. In 1979, he became known to a wider audience in West Germany as a result of his television comedy series Fast wia im richtigen Leben (Almost like in real life). In the following years, he was writer and actor in the movies Kehraus [de] (1983), Man spricht deutsh [sic] [de] (1987), Germanikus [de] (2004), and writer and director of Herr Ober! [de] (1992).

He's one of the most regarded and highest decorated German cabaret artists.

Awards (selection)

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See also

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References

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from Grokipedia
''Gerhard Polt'' is a German cabaret artist, actor, writer, and filmmaker known for his satirical sketches, films, and stage performances in Bavarian dialect that sharply observe and humorously critique petty-bourgeois attitudes, bureaucracy, tourism clichés, and social absurdities in everyday German and Bavarian life. Born on May 7, 1942, in Munich, Polt spent part of his childhood in the Catholic pilgrimage town of Altötting before returning to Munich. After his Abitur, he studied political sciences, art history, and history, later studying Nordic languages in Sweden, working initially as a translator, interpreter, and teacher before entering cabaret. He debuted on stage in 1976 at Munich's Die Kleine Freiheit theater and gained widespread recognition from 1979 onward through the long-running ARD television series Fast wia im richtigen Leben, where he collaborated closely with actress Gisela Schneeberger and director Hanns Christian Müller to portray the resentful yet sympathetic Bavarian everyman. Polt's film career includes key works such as Kehraus (1983), Man spricht deutsh (1988), and his directorial debut Herr Ober! (1992), often blending satire with character-driven comedy. He has maintained long-term artistic partnerships with the music group Biermösl Blosn (and its successor, the Well-Brüder aus’m Biermoos) for stage revues and tours, while also producing numerous books, audio recordings, and theater programs that showcase his inventive language and grotesque humor. Regarded as one of the most influential figures in German-speaking cabaret, Polt has received numerous honors for his contributions, including the Grimme-Preis, the Großer Karl-Valentin-Preis, the Jean-Paul-Preis, and the Bayerischer Verdienstorden. He continues to perform, publish, and engage in cultural projects well into his later years, remaining a prominent voice in satirical storytelling.

Early life

Early life and education

Gerhard Polt was born on 7 May 1942 in Munich, Germany, as the son of a lawyer. Shortly after his birth during World War II, his mother relocated with him to the Catholic pilgrimage town of Altötting to escape the dangers of air raids and bomb damage in Munich, where they were quartered at a butcher's shop. His father, a lawyer, was away at war and held as a prisoner of war until the early 1950s. In the early 1950s, following his father's return from captivity, the family reunited and returned to Munich's Amalienstraße. After completing his Abitur, Polt studied political science, history, and art history in Munich. From 1962, he pursued Scandinavian studies and Old Germanic philology at the University of Gothenburg in Sweden, where he became fluent in Swedish. Upon returning to Munich, Polt worked as a translator, interpreter, and language teacher.

Career

Cabaret and stage beginnings

Gerhard Polt made his stage debut in 1976 at the Kleine Freiheit in Munich, marking his entry into live satirical performance. The following year, he created his first radio play, "Als wenn man ein Dachs wär’ in seinem Bau", for Hessischer Rundfunk, where he single-handedly voiced over 30 different characters. Beginning in the 1970s, Polt developed a long-term collaboration with director Hanns Christian Müller and worked with folk-satirical groups such as Biermösl Blosn, later known as Well-Brüder aus’m Biermoos, blending Bavarian dialect satire with musical elements in his stage work. Major programs at the Münchner Kammerspiele included "Diridari" and "Tschurangrati", the latter premiering in 1993 with contributions from collaborators including Dieter Hildebrandt, Otto Grünmandl, and Gisela Schneeberger. His later stage productions continued this style, with "Obatzt is – Crème Bavaroise" premiering in 2002, "Offener Vollzug – Ein Staatsschauspiel" in 2006, "Ekzem Homo" in 2015, and "A scheene Leich" in 2023. In 2005, he undertook the tour "Abvent" alongside Die Toten Hosen and Biermösl Blosn, expanding his live satirical reach. These early and ongoing stage efforts laid the foundation for his distinctive Bavarian cabaret presence.

Television work

Gerhard Polt's television breakthrough came with the sketch comedy series Fast wia im richtigen Leben, produced by Bayerischer Rundfunk and broadcast on ARD from 1979 to 1988. The series comprised 12 episodes in which Polt portrayed a variety of characters opposite Gisela Schneeberger, delivering sharp satirical observations of everyday Bavarian life and petty-bourgeois absurdities. This work, which built upon his established cabaret roots, earned critical recognition, including the Adolf-Grimme-Preis in Bronze in 1981. In 1979, Polt faced censorship during a ZDF broadcast when editors cut portions of his contribution that referred to CSU politician Friedrich Zimmermann as "Old Schwurhand," an allusion to an alleged perjury. As a form of protest the following year, upon receiving the Deutscher Kleinkunstpreis in 1980, Polt delivered an acceptance "speech" consisting of prolonged silence lasting around 10 minutes, broken only by occasional remarks such as "I sag nix!" and time updates, highlighting his opposition to media censorship. Polt also made guest appearances and contributions to other television programs, including a role as a customs officer in one episode of Monaco Franze – Der ewige Stenz in 1983. He appeared in the 1983 series Unsere Nachbarn, die Baltas. In 1994, he starred in the TV movie Tschurangrati alongside Gisela Schneeberger and others. Additionally, he contributed a segment to Neues aus der Anstalt in 2009. Polt further participated in Dieter Hildebrandt's satirical program Scheibenwischer with guest spots and writing contributions spanning the 1980s and into the 1990s.

Film career

Gerhard Polt extended his satirical cabaret work to feature films, where he often served as actor, writer, and sometimes director, crafting comedies that mocked Bavarian everyday life, bureaucracy, and social pretensions through his characteristic dialect and observational humor. He made his cinematic debut with the feature film Kehraus (1983), in which he starred as the hapless Ferdinand Weitel and co-wrote the screenplay. The film follows a Bavarian cleaning company employee entangled in absurd situations after a carnival mishap, showcasing Polt's early ability to blend slapstick with sharp social commentary. Five years later, Polt starred in and co-wrote Man spricht deutsh (1988), playing Erwin Löffler, a Bavarian tourist whose vacation in Italy exposes cultural clashes and linguistic misunderstandings. This comedy highlighted his talent for satirizing German provincial attitudes abroad. In 1992, Polt took on triple duties as actor, writer, and director for Herr Ober!, portraying the arrogant headwaiter Ernst Held in a restaurant setting filled with chaotic customer interactions and class satire. He returned to directing with Germanikus (2003), where he also wrote the script and played the titular role of a Roman legionary transported to modern Bavaria, using anachronistic humor to lampoon contemporary society. The film's release extended into 2004 in some markets. Later, Polt co-wrote and starred as the aging actor Hans A. Pospiech in Und Äktschn! (2014), a comedy about an out-of-work performer attempting a comeback. His most recent feature appearance came in Der Onkel – The Hawk (2022), where he played a supporting role as a Gutachter (expert assessor) in this satirical take on modern life. These films consistently carried forward the satirical approach and Bavarian dialect central to his cabaret roots.

Artistic style and themes

Satirical approach and use of Bavarian dialect

Gerhard Polt's satirical approach centers on the sharp use of Bavarian dialect to portray and critique petty-bourgeois attitudes, often through exaggerated characters who embody narrow-mindedness and provincial attitudes. His performances consistently employ mittelbairischer Dialekt as an authentic vehicle for satire, allowing him to expose hypocrisy, complacency, and the clash between regional self-image and reality without resorting to the dialect merely for cheap laughs. Polt's work has been recognized for its beispiellosen Tiefgang in this dialect, positioning him as a leading figure who embodies the originality, inventiveness, and expressive richness of Bavarian language while delivering socially critical humor. Recurring themes in his satire include Bavarian culture, politics, society, and the absurdities of everyday life, frequently highlighting the petty-bourgeois mentality and its resistance to change. He unmasks German Spießbürgertum alongside Bavarian clichés, presenting tragikomische depictions of everyday shortcomings with ruthless observation and provocative bite. This style often features characters who are resentful yet sympathetic petit-bourgeois figures confronting bureaucratic absurdities or modern complexities, revealing their flaws through natural, unfiltered expression. Polt studied Skandinavistik in Sweden and worked as a translator and interpreter. His mastery of dialect extends to viewing Bavarian as an ocean of expressive potential, evoking sympathy for those limited by linguistic poverty and reinforcing regional self-confidence through his work. This approach has placed him in the tradition of altbayerischer Sittenprediger, blending humor with moral insight to critique societal failings.

Awards and honors

Recognition and major awards

Gerhard Polt has received widespread recognition for his decades-long contributions to cabaret, satire, television, and film, earning numerous prestigious awards that highlight his mastery of subtle, socially observant humor and his lasting impact on German-speaking culture. In later years, these honors have increasingly emphasized lifetime achievement. In 2025, he was awarded the Ehrenpreis des Bayerischen Ministerpräsidenten as part of the inaugural Bayerischer Kunstpreis, with Ministerpräsident Markus Söder describing him as a "Gigant des Kabaretts" who has mastered feinsinnige Satire, sharply observing everyday absurdities from Stammtisch wisdom to world politics while profoundly shaping Bavaria's cultural identity. In 2024, Bundespräsident Frank-Walter Steinmeier presented him with the Verdienstkreuz am Bande des Verdienstordens der Bundesrepublik Deutschland, acknowledging Polt as a gesellschaftskritischer Künstler who follows in the tradition of Karl Valentin by holding up a loving yet grotesque mirror to society through fine, non-offensive humor that resonates across generations and regions. In 2021, Ministerpräsident Markus Söder bestowed upon him the Bayerischer Verdienstorden, one of Bavaria's highest civilian honors. His earlier career was marked by key accolades that established his reputation in cabaret and media. These include the Deutscher Kleinkunstpreis in 1980 for his cabaret work, the Adolf-Grimme-Preis in 1981 for the television series Fast wia im richtigen Leben and in 1983 for Scheibenwischer, and the Deutscher Filmpreis in 1984 for the screenplay of Kehraus. He later received the Morenhovener Lupe in 1992, the Göttinger Elch in 2000 for his satirical contributions, and the Großer Karl-Valentin-Preis in 2007 (shared with the Biermösl Blosn and with Christian Ude as laudator), a major Munich honor in the tradition of Karl Valentin. Additional lifetime-oriented recognitions include the Salzburger Stier Ehrenstier in 2019 for his overall oeuvre. These awards collectively underscore Polt's enduring status as a leading figure in satirical entertainment, celebrated for his precise observations of human behavior delivered with wit and humanity.

Personal life

Family, residence, and later activities

Gerhard Polt has been married to the teacher Christine Polt since 1971. Their son was born in 1979. The family has long resided in Neuhaus, a district of the Schliersee municipality in Upper Bavaria, where Polt maintains his primary home. In his later years Polt has engaged in cultural advocacy and civic activism alongside his artistic work. He has been a prominent supporter of the initiative for a "Haus des Humors" in Munich, campaigning through the Forum Humor und komische Kunst e.V. to establish a dedicated space for humor and comic art, with public promotion efforts noted from around 2018 onward. The project, which planned to repurpose the historic Alte Viehmarktbank in the Schlachthofviertel, was ultimately halted in 2020 when the city of Munich withdrew funding amid budget cuts related to the COVID-19 pandemic. In April 2022 Polt was among the initial signatories of an open letter addressed to Chancellor Olaf Scholz, urging against further deliveries of heavy weapons to Ukraine due to risks of escalation and Germany becoming a direct party to the conflict. He has continued performing and releasing work into the 2020s, including stage tours with the Well-Brüder aus’m Biermoos to mark a 40-year collaboration anniversary and the publication of his book Dr. Arnulf Schmitz-Zceisczyk in 2022.

References

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