Political cabaret with great entertainment value
The cabaret veteran Lothar Bölck, best known from various TV satire programs, had actually wanted to stop performing on stage a long time ago, but fortunately decided on an "endgame with extra time". The audience can expect the best political cabaret with an incredibly high entertainment value and the greatest possible density of punchlines:
You have to think of a thing from the end, because then you know that you can make napkins and toilet paper out of cellulose. Every ending begins when the beginning ends. If you lose the prelude, you don't reach the endgame. Those are the rules. But we keep on playing. Because we haven't been eliminated. We're just no longer in it. However, the final will not be played without us. We have tickets. Lothar Bölck, "the Louis de Funés of German cabaret artists" (Celler Nachrichten) has made it to the final. Man against the world. So far it's a draw. But for whom? As his season draws to a close, Bölck asks himself: will there be a winner? And if so, why not? Do we have one foot in the offside or the other? Who will leave the pitch as the winner? The visions or the divisions? Will it be a heated game with dicey scenes or a hot one with scorched earth? Will there be stoppage time or will time be an afterthought? Certainly. Every time the final whistle blows, there's a scoreline. Will the game go into extra time or will it be abandoned because the pitch is unplayable? One thing is certain, either way, there will be no replay. Because what does this world cost? Nerves.
