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Hazel Brugger
Hazel Brugger
from Wikipedia

Allison Hazel Brugger (born 9 December 1993) is a Swiss slam poet, comedian, cabaret artist, and television presenter.

Key Information

Background

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Allison Hazel Brugger was born on 9 December 1993 in San Diego, California. Her father is Swiss neuropsychologist Peter Brugger[1] and her mother is an English teacher who is originally from Cologne, Germany.[2]

She grew up in Dielsdorf, near Zürich and has two older brothers. After graduating in Bülach, she began studying philosophy and literature at the University of Zurich, but she eventually quit.[3] When she was 17, she started her poetry slam career in Winterthur, Switzerland northeast of Zürich.

From 2014 and 2017, Brugger wrote a fortnightly column for Das Magazin,[4] a Swiss daily newspaper. From 2013 to 2014, she was a columnist for "Hochparterre"[5] and the TagesWoche.[6] In 2015, she was the moderator of the live talk show "Hazel Brugger Show and Tell" in the Theater am Neumarkt[7] in Zürich which was held every two months. On 9 October 2013, she performed in the fourth Poetry Slam Championships in Bern, Switzerland.[8] In November 2015, she started her first cabaret programme "Hazel Brugger passiert".[9] In February 2019, she began to tour in Germany, Austria, and Switzerland with her second solo programme "Tropical",[3] which debuted on Netflix on 2 December 2020.

In October 2020, Brugger announced that she was pregnant.[9] She and Thomas Spitzer have been married since 2020.[10] They have two daughters[citation needed].

Career

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Since 2016, she has been a correspondent on the German political satire show heute-show on ZDF.[11][12] On 26 April she had her first guest appearance on another ZDF satire-show, "Die Anstalt" (The Insane Asylum).[13] In 2017 she won the Salzburger Stier, a prize for cabaret artists.[14] She is the youngest person to ever win this award.[15]

In 2019, Brugger started a YouTube series which she hosts with Spitzer, a co-producer and an author. The show is called Deutschland Was Geht, which translates to What's up, Germany?.[16] In the show Brugger and Spitzer explore interesting and at times bizarre places together with various German comedians.[17] In 2020 the show changed names to What's up, Europe?.[16]

In 2025, she co-hosted the Eurovision Song Contest 2025 in Basel alongside Sandra Studer, with Michelle Hunziker joining for the final.[18] As part of her role, she performed the musical number "Made in Switzerland" (with Studer and Petra Mede) in the first semi-final,[19] which was later released as a single.[20]

Brugger has lived in Cologne since 2016.[21][12]

Guest appearances

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Books

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  • Ich bin so hübsch (I'm so pretty). Kein & Aber, Zürich 2016, ISBN 978-3-0369-5936-8.
  • Hazel Brugger, Thomas Spitzer (Authors), Jannes Weber (Illustrations): Deutschland Was Geht – Das Wimmelbuch. Diogenes, Zürich 2021, ISBN 978-3-257-01294-1.

Audiobooks

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  • Hazel Brugger passiert* : live im Café Kairo Bern. Audio-CD, Der gesunde Menschenversand, Luzern 2016, ISBN 978-3-03853-029-9.

Awards

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  • 2013: «Swiss Master» of Poetry-Slam
  • 2015: «Young Journalist of the Year» by the magazine Schweizer Journalist
  • 2016: «Swiss Columnist of the Year» voted by a survey conducted by Schweizer Journalist among 1400 journalists.[23]
  • 2017: German prize for cabaret by the city of Mainz
  • 2017: Salzburger Stier[24]
  • 2017: Bavarian cabaret prize for emerging artist
  • 2017: Swiss Comedy Award
  • 2017: German Comedy Award for Best Newcomer
  • 2020: German Comedy Award for Best Female Comedian
  • 2025: Bambi Award in Comedy[25]

References

[edit]
[edit]
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from Grokipedia
Allison Hazel Brugger (born 9 December 1993) is a Swiss-American stand-up comedian, slam poet, and television presenter known for her satirical and ironic humor. Born in San Diego, California, to a Swiss father and German mother, she was raised near Zurich, Switzerland, and began performing as a slam poet during her teenage years. Brugger rose to prominence in the German- and Swiss-speaking entertainment scenes through her cabaret shows and television appearances, earning accolades such as the German Kleinkunstpreis for Best Stand-Up Comedy in 2024. She released the Netflix stand-up special Tropical in 2022, featuring routines on everyday absurdities, and co-hosted segments of the Eurovision Song Contest 2025 in Basel, where her deadpan delivery drew both praise and minor criticism for stylistic choices. While her career has occasionally involved experimental performances that elicited mixed audience reactions, such as a challenging show in Zurich, Brugger maintains a reputation for intelligent, non-conformist comedy across Europe.

Early Life

Birth and Upbringing

Allison Hazel Brugger was born on December 9, 1993, in , , to Peter Brugger, a Swiss neuropsychologist, and her mother, an English teacher originally from , . This American birthplace reflected her parents' international backgrounds, with her father providing Swiss heritage and her mother German roots, setting the stage for a trinationally influenced early life. From early childhood, Brugger was raised in Dielsdorf, a suburb near , , alongside two older brothers. This relocation immersed her in Swiss-German culture while maintaining ties to her U.S. birth and German maternal lineage, fostering a multicultural household environment. Her family dynamics emphasized linguistic diversity, contributing to her fluency in English, German, and dialects. Brugger holds dual Swiss and American citizenship, acquired through her father's and her , respectively. Her formative years in the Zurich area exposed her to Switzerland's multilingual and federal structure, though primarily within the German-speaking region, shaping a bilingual foundation without formal reports of early French proficiency.

Education and Initial Interests

Brugger completed her at the Kantonsschule Zürcher Unterland in Bülach, a public academic high school in the canton known for its rigorous preparation for university entrance via the examination. This institution emphasizes core subjects including languages, literature, and , providing students with a broad intellectual grounding suited to analytical and expressive disciplines. Her completion of the Matura there in the early positioned her for higher education in related fields, reflecting an early orientation toward verbal and philosophical pursuits. After , Brugger enrolled at the to study philosophy and literature, fields that built directly on her academic background. She did not complete the degree, discontinuing her studies after an unspecified period, a decision consistent with her pivot toward creative expression outside formal academia. This brief university phase nonetheless reinforced her foundational exposure to , textual analysis, and linguistic precision, elements evident in her later work. Brugger's pre-professional interests in writing and trace to her teenage years in the area, influenced by her mother's profession as an English teacher, which likely encouraged linguistic experimentation at home. These pursuits, rooted in family and school environments fostering verbal arts, laid the groundwork for her affinity for and rhetorical play, though specific school-based activities such as debates remain undocumented in available accounts.

Professional Career

Entry into Comedy and Slam Poetry

Hazel Brugger entered the performance arts scene through poetry slams, beginning her competitive career at age 17 in , , a city northeast of . This initial involvement around 2010–2011 marked her first structured foray into spoken-word performance, where she honed skills in rhythmic delivery and audience engagement typical of the slam format. Her early competitions yielded regional successes, culminating in a national victory at the Swiss Poetry Slam Championship in 2013, when she was 20 years old. That year, she also performed in the fourth Poetry Slam Championships in Bern on October 9 and contributed pieces to Zürich-area events, building a reputation through consistent wins and appearances in Swiss German-speaking circuits. These achievements drew initial media attention in regional outlets, establishing her as a rising talent in slam poetry before broader recognition. Following her slam successes, Brugger transitioned to cabaret-style solo performances, debuting her first program titled Hazel Brugger haut auf in November 2015. These early shows emphasized observational humor drawn from everyday absurdities and showcased her linguistic precision in and High German, adapting slam's intensity to structured stage narratives. This shift laid the groundwork for her expansion into longer-form comedy while retaining the raw, competitive edge from her origins.

Television and Media Breakthrough

Brugger joined the German satirical news program heute-show on as a correspondent in 2016, contributing on-location segments that critiqued political events and cultural phenomena with her characteristic dry wit. Her reports often targeted inefficiencies in European bureaucracy and Swiss-German cultural differences, marking her transition from niche poetry slams to broader broadcast audiences in the German-speaking region. From 2016 onward, Brugger made recurring guest appearances on Die Anstalt, another satirical format hosted by Max Uthoff and Claus von Wagner, where she participated in sketches dissecting media conglomerates and political scandals. Notable episodes included contributions on media ownership structures in 2018, expanding her exposure amid the program's consistent viewership in the millions per episode, though specific attribution to her segments remains anecdotal. Additional guest spots in 2016-2018 on programs like Neo Magazin Royale and Dittsche further solidified her media presence, leading to invitations on high-profile panels and amplifying her satirical commentary beyond live performances.

Stand-up Tours and Live Performances

Brugger's first solo program, Hazel Brugger passiert, debuted in November 2015 on small art stages in German-speaking regions, including and . The show featured her signature blend of slam poetry roots with pointed social , drawing audiences through rapid delivery and absurd observations on everyday absurdities. Performances often sold out, reflecting strong initial reception in intimate venues. By February 2019, Brugger transitioned to her second solo program, Tropical, expanding tours to larger halls across , , and . This iteration incorporated more autobiographical elements, such as reflections on personal aging and family dynamics, alongside quick-witted critiques of cultural norms, maintaining her evolution from poetry slams toward structured stand-up with causal dissections of societal hypocrisies. The tour's momentum carried into early 2020 before pandemic disruptions, with the program's content later adapted into a filmed special. Following restrictions, Brugger resumed live touring in 2021, prioritizing in-person events with enhanced safety measures over hybrid formats, as evidenced by resumed bookings in major venues. Her latest program, Immer noch wach, premiered in October 2024 after trial runs in , emphasizing heightened tempo in satirical routines and self-deprecating narratives on maturity and motherhood. Early dates, including sold-out shows at Kursaal-Arena in on October 25, 2025, underscore sustained demand in core markets, with expansions to U.S. venues like Sony Hall in New York scheduled for November 2025.

Hosting Roles and Recent Engagements

Brugger co-hosted the Eurovision Song Contest 2025, the 69th edition of the event, held at St. Jakobshalle in Basel, Switzerland, from May 13 to 17, 2025. She presented the first semi-final on May 13 and the second semi-final on May 15 alongside Sandra Studer, then joined Studer and Michelle Hunziker for the grand final on May 17. The hosting trio was announced on January 20, 2025, marking Brugger's prominent role in one of Europe's largest live music broadcasts. Preparation for the event involved extensive rehearsals, with Brugger describing show day as relatively calm if adequately prepared beforehand, amid the high-stakes production for an international audience. The contest achieved record-breaking viewership reach, boosting Brugger's public profile significantly, as evidenced by her followers surging from approximately 930,000 to over one million following the broadcasts. In addition to Eurovision, Brugger moderated segments at the CDU party congress in 2023 as part of her work with the ZDF program heute show, engaging in satirical political commentary during the event. This engagement highlighted her versatility in handling live political moderation, blending humor with discourse at a major German conservative gathering. For 2024 and early 2025, her hosting focused on high-profile televised events like Eurovision, with no major additional party moderations reported amid her preparation for the contest.

Creative Output

Books and Publications

Brugger's first book, Ich bin so hübsch: Kolumnen und mehr, appeared in 2016 from Kein & Aber Verlag as a compilation of columns blending personal anecdotes with satirical commentary on daily life absurdities. The essays employ self-deprecating humor to dissect topics like insomnia coping strategies, perceived male wit, and cultural tendencies to overfeed pets, often revealing embarrassing or poignant insights into human behavior. It secured bestseller ranking in German-speaking regions. She followed this in 2021 with the collaborative Deutschland, was geht: Das Wimmelbuch, co-written with Thomas Spitzer and illustrated by Jannes Weber for Diogenes Verlag. Structured as a large-format search-and-find volume for young readers, it humorously captures overcrowded vignettes of quirky German settings—from farms and fitness studios to beach outings and food stalls—challenging viewers to locate the authors amid the detailed chaos. The work extends observational from their series, which amassed over 20 million views.

Audiobooks and Adaptations

Brugger entered audiobook production in the mid-2010s with collaborative releases, including Flipper Flipperchaschte: Spi Spa für Kinder, a 67-minute collection of 31 tracks featuring her alongside poets Nora Gomringer and Jürg Halter, released on December 1, 2015. The auditory format emphasized rhythmic, performative delivery suited to children's engagement, differing from print by leveraging vocal inflection for humor and pacing. Her first solo audiobook, Hazel Brugger passiert: ein bisschen und in Mundart, followed on August 26, 2016, as a 72-minute self-narrated recording in dialect drawn from her live stage show of the same name, captured at Café Kairo in . This production highlighted her , ironic voicing style, optimized for passive listening during activities like driving or household chores, which enhanced accessibility compared to stage performances by stripping visual cues while preserving dialectal authenticity. The release positioned audio as an extension of her slam poetry roots, allowing replayability without theatrical elements. Later narrations include Brugger's voicing of Die drei ??? und der weinende Sarg, a children's story adaptation produced by EUROPA in collaboration with Axel Lutter as Albert Hitfield, emphasizing her distinctive for suspenseful delivery in a studio-recorded format. No exclusive audio-only bonus content from her 2020s works has been documented, though her self-narration consistently adapts live or written material to exploit auditory strengths like tonal over textual subtlety.

Political Engagement and Satire

Satirical Style and Targets

Brugger's satirical style is characterized by dry wit, irony, and deliberate exaggeration to expose perceived inconsistencies in political and outcomes. Her approach often dissects causal chains in public discourse, linking stated intentions to real-world effects through observational anecdotes rather than overt ideological preaching, as seen in her contributions to the program heute-show since 2015. This method privileges logical breakdowns over emotional appeals, though it frequently aligns with critiques of conservative positions. Her primary targets include right-wing populists and establishment conservatives, such as U.S. President , Germany's Alternative für Deutschland (AfD), the Christian Democratic Union (CDU), and Swiss right-leaning parties like the . In a September 27, 2017, heute-show segment titled "Hazel Brugger bei der AfD!", she infiltrated an AfD event to highlight the party's anti-immigration stance through ironic endorsement of its more extreme views, exaggerating their implications for absurdity. Similarly, an October 20, 2017, piece critiqued Swiss right-populists by mocking their referendum-driven as self-defeating in a globalized economy. Brugger's commentary on Trump exemplifies her ironic exaggeration, as in a January 26, 2018, heute-show appearance where she sarcastically demanded "Nachsicht" (leniency) for his administration's missteps, attributing them to impulsive that undermined alliances without strategic gain. CDU critiques appear in her routines lampooning party leadership's as hypocritical amid welfare expansions, using personal-scale analogies to illustrate broader policy contradictions. While occasional jabs at left-leaning figures occur, such as a , 2018, segment on SPD Ralf Stegner, her output disproportionately focuses on right-of-center entities, reflecting a pattern common in German .

Notable Political Interactions

In November 2024, Hazel Brugger conducted a one-hour interview with former German Chancellor to promote Merkel's memoir Freiheit – Erinnerungen 1954–2021. The discussion, published as a dedicated book chapter, elicited Merkel's reflections on personal freedoms and leadership, with Brugger observing that Merkel eschewed standard political phrasing in favor of more candid responses. The exchange drew mixed reactions, as Brugger appeared uncharacteristically reserved and hesitant, diverging from her typical sharp-witted style, which some characterized as a mismatch in dynamics. Brugger has also satirically engaged with (AfD) co-leader , portraying cross-ideological banter in her 2024 stand-up show Still Awake. During performances, Brugger humorously depicted "seducing" Weidel by dubbing her "Fräulein Rottenmeier," a reference to the stern character from , as part of critiquing Weidel's Swiss residency and political persona amid the show's premiere events. This routine highlighted Brugger's approach to right-leaning figures through exaggerated, flirtatious mockery rather than direct confrontation, building on an earlier 2017 where Weidel fielded satirical questions.

Criticisms of Bias and Reception

Hazel Brugger's has drawn criticism for its perceived edginess and occasional discomfort in delivery, particularly evident in her moderation of the 2025 semi-finals on May 15, 2025. Viewers and media commentators described her performance as ranging from "damn good" to "completely inappropriate," with specific backlash focusing on her stiff demeanor and unconventional style that some found wooden or try-hard. users on platforms like X highlighted moments such as her tongue tricks during the broadcast as off-putting, questioning the appropriateness for a family-oriented event. In the context of Eurovision's emphasis on political neutrality amid pro-Palestine protests and debates over Israel's participation, Brugger's hosting alongside Sandra Studer and included reminders of the event's non-political stance through a musical skit, yet her inherently satirical background raised questions about maintaining . Brugger herself acknowledged in interviews that full unpolitical presentation is only "conditionally" possible given the contest's geopolitical undercurrents. Critics argued her dry, Germanic humor overshadowed contestants during interviews, creating awkward interactions that detracted from the performers. Online discussions, including on , revealed divided reception of her humor, with some praising its wit as a breath of fresh air for millennial and older audiences, while others dismissed it as cringe or generational mismatch, preferring more accessible or memey styles. Her outfit choices, likened by viewers to low-cost online bargains, further fueled negative sentiment on edginess over professionalism. Despite this backlash, Brugger's following surged by 70,000 during the event, reaching one million, indicating a net positive visibility boost amid the controversy. Brugger's broader satirical engagements, such as incorporating right-wing figures like AfD's into routines, have faced general pushback for sharpness but not explicit charges of ideological one-sidedness in documented reviews. Reception often hinges on audience tolerance for her self-deprecating, pointed commentary, which prioritizes cultural critique over broad appeal.

Recognition and Legacy

Awards and Honors

In 2017, Brugger won the Salzburger Stier, an Austrian cabaret award established in 1959 to recognize emerging talents in and performance, making her the youngest recipient at age 23 for her surgical precision in critiquing societal norms through delivery. That year, she also received the Swiss Comedy Award, the principal national honor for comedic excellence in , selected by a evaluating originality and audience impact. Additionally in 2017, she earned the Best Newcomer category at the Deutscher Comedypreis, a German award voted on by industry professionals and public input, highlighting her rapid breakthrough in stand-up. Brugger secured the Deutscher Comedypreis for Best Female Comedian in 2020, an upset victory over established peers like Martina Hill, determined by a combination of jury and audience votes emphasizing her generational shift toward sharper, youth-oriented satire. In 2024, she was awarded the Deutscher Kleinkunstpreis in the Stand-Up category, one of Germany's most prestigious honors for cabaret and comedy since 1967, with the jury lauding her as the "Königin der komischen Schlagfertigkeit" for innovative quick-wittedness amid a field of traditional performers. In January 2025, Brugger received the Ehrenpreis at the Poetry Slam Awards in Hamburg, a lifetime achievement for her foundational role in elevating slam poetry's visibility through competitive wins and media crossover, as selected by an expert panel.

Public Perception and Impact

Hazel Brugger achieved prominence in the German-speaking landscape from the mid-2010s onward, building a dedicated following through sold-out theater and arena tours across , , and . Her 2024-2025 "Immer noch wach" tour, for instance, featured multiple fully booked performances at venues like the Kursaal-Arena in and the Kongresshaus in , drawing thousands of attendees per show and demonstrating sustained commercial success. This trajectory reflects her transition from slam poetry roots to mainstream stand-up, with consistent sell-outs underscoring her appeal in the DACH region. Her style has shaped trends in youth-oriented comedy, emphasizing deadpan irony and concise delivery that resonates with younger demographics seeking non-conformist humor amid digital media fragmentation. Observers credit her with revitalizing Swiss stand-up by injecting slam poetry's rhythmic edge into cabaret formats, elevating Swiss talent's visibility in broader European circuits. Yet, public reception remains divided; while fans laud her as a breath of fresh air for challenging stiff cultural norms, detractors in Switzerland argue her sarcasm occasionally prioritizes cleverness over substantive engagement, potentially limiting crossover appeal in less receptive local audiences. Brugger's broader impact includes amplifying Swiss comedy internationally, as evidenced by her pioneering invitation to the 2025 New York Comedy Festival—the first for a Swiss —and co-hosting the 2025, which reached 166 million viewers across 37 markets. These milestones highlight pros like enhanced global exposure for underrepresented voices, counterbalanced by challenges in polarized environments where satirical edge risks entrenching audience silos rather than bridging divides, per analyses of her post-Eurovision commentary reception. Long-term legacy hinges on adapting this format to evolving media landscapes, where empirical metrics like viewership sustain her influence but demand scrutiny of stylistic sustainability.

Personal Life

Citizenship and Residences

Hazel Brugger holds triple in the , , and . She acquired American citizenship by birth in , , on December 9, 1993. Swiss citizenship stems from her father's nationality, while German citizenship is held alongside these, facilitated by her mother's German origin from and Brugger's extended residency in the country. Brugger grew up in Dielsdorf, a municipality near , , where her family resided during her childhood and adolescence. This Swiss base persisted into the , aligning with her early life there. In recent years, particularly the , Brugger has shifted her to the Darmstadt region in , . She and her husband are constructing a home near Groß-Umstadt, on the edge of a , reflecting a settled presence in . This arrangement underscores her transnational lifestyle, with no public declarations indicating changes to tax residency beyond these locations.

Relationships and Privacy

Hazel Brugger married German comedian and author Thomas Spitzer in 2020, with whom she collaborates on personal projects including podcasts. The couple has two daughters and resides in the Darmstadt region of Germany. Prior to this, Brugger disclosed few details about romantic partners, with no prior long-term relationships receiving sustained media attention. Brugger was raised in Zurich with two older brothers in a multilingual household speaking English, German, and . Despite her public career, she has consistently limited disclosures about and relationships, eschewing tabloid-style revelations in favor of , as evidenced by the scarcity of personal anecdotes in her interviews and the absence of publicized conflicts or details beyond marital status and basic parental roles. This approach contrasts with her candid professional persona, prioritizing separation between public and private matters.

References

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