Jürgen von der Lippe liest... - Sextextsextett - Comedy-Lesung
Jürgen von der Lippe, born in 1948, has been successfully working as a master of humorous finesse and moderator on stages and television for decades. He lives in Berlin and is, among other accolades, a recipient of the Bambi, the Grimme Prize, and the Golden Camera. His recent books "Beim Dehnen singe ich Balladen," "Der König der Tiere," "Nudel im Wind," and "Sex ist wie Mehl" have spent weeks on the bestseller list.
As with all previous 15 books, fans will have their fun while non-fans will overlook the numerous linguistic nuances, interesting facts, and witty aperçus, whether intentionally or due to cognitive weaknesses, and will be outraged by the genital-referential passages.
As Goethe already noted:
Everyone hears only what he understands.
Otherwise, I align myself with Schopenhauer:
Pleasure in the act of copulation. That is it. That is the true essence and core of all things, the goal and purpose of all existence.
This is the universal human condition:
Wanting, transient satisfaction, boredom, further wanting. The genitals are the actual focal point of the will.
Three Schopenhauer quotes that I will throw at any critic who accuses me of preferring genital-referential topics.
Just like now:
It is difficult not to rhapsodize about my new book.
Even for me.
Just the title Sextextsextett, a tongue- and icebreaker in conversation at the same time. What does it promise?
Everything you want and more:
A lot of zeitgeist that sometimes comes timeless, sometimes mindless, answers to pressing questions like:
What does language achieve in the case of hair loss, how does one mindfully end a relationship with a partner, what are the differences between Goethe's erotic poetry and that of Hermann Löns?
What does the feminist movement "Equal breasts for all" want?
Who said: The genitals are the actual focal point of the will, and what name could one give to one's own? Schopenhauer. Hence the quote comes from him, the other part is up to you.
How many meanings can the sentence "I have a finger in the PO" have? Numerous texts reflect my xenologophilia, my love for foreign words, which I then like to explain through jokes, such as the malapropism, the confusion of similarly sounding foreign words. "I was deflowered yesterday afternoon. You mean confirmed! No, that was in the morning."
One of the most mysterious and simultaneously universally applicable sentences in the book, if not in literature, is:
I am awake now.
I don’t want to say more at the moment.
And there are poems that were created as bycatch during water aerobics with my wife on vacation.
Pale as death and corpse-like
Eyes staring, the noodle soft
Seeing one's partner like this
After love, is not nice
Photo: André Kowalski
Admission: 7:00 PM
Remaining tickets may still be available at the box office on site.