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     Thomas Gottschalk (1950- )
 

“Er war schon als Erstklässler zwar nicht
der Fleißigste, aber immer der Lustigste.”

“Even as a first-grader he may not have been the
most studious one, but always the funniest one.”

   — Thomas Gottschalk’s mother, Rutila (1922-2004)
 

Finding Refuge in California

Unless you live in German-speaking Europe, Thomas “Thommy” Gottschalk is the host of the most famous TV show you’ve never heard of. Although he has appeared in a handful of German and Hollywood movies (Sister Act 2), Gottschalk is best known as the moderator and “Showmaster” of Europe’s most successful television show of all time. Each airing of Wetten, dass...? (“Wanna bet?”) draws as many as 15 million viewers when it is broadcast from various German and European cities. But the famous TV star got his start in radio.

Gottschalk
Thomas Gottschalk was the featured guest at the opening of the new media lounge at the Goethe Institute, Los Angeles in October 2005.
PHOTO: Hyde Flippo
 

It is difficult to describe his TV show or to compare Gottschalk’s fame to American circumstances. In Germany he is as famous as Jay Leno or David Letterman are in the U.S. (Gottschalk also hosted a late-night TV talk show), and it is precisely his megastar status in Germany, Austria, and Switzerland that prompted Gottschalk to move his wife and two sons to southern California in 1987, the same year he began hosting the “Wetten, dass...?” show. (He bought his first home in the Hollywood Hills with money from his first German McDonald’s TV commercial.) In Los Angeles and Malibu, the German celebrity and his family can enjoy a level of anonymity and freedom that is impossible in his homeland.

Thomas Johannes Gottschalk was born into a middle-class, conservative, Catholic family on May 18, 1950 in the Bavarian/Franconian town of Bamberg. His father, Hans, was a lawyer. His mother, Rutila (nee Kossorz), was a full-time housewife. He and his younger siblings, Christoph and Raphaela, grew up in Kulmbach. When Thomas was only 14, he lost his father to stomach cancer. His mother would die of heart failure at age 82 in 2004. (Gottschalk flew from America with his family to be by her side just before she died.) Even as a teenager in Kulmbach, Thomas was known for his bizarre atire: colorful sports jackets, loud shirts, and unusual pants. To this day, Gottschalk is notorious for the rumpled, sometimes bizarre outfits that he wears.

Though never an outstanding student, Gottschalk completed teacher training, but then decided he didn't really want to become a high-school teacher (German, history). In the early 1970s he began a modest career as a disc jockey and radio announcer at Bayrischer Rundfunk (BR3), the Bavarian public broadcast network. Later moving to the European commercial station Radio Luxembourg (RTL), he became popular as “Mr. Morning” for the German program.

In 1976 he broke into television at BR as the host of a music-video show later known as “Pop Stop.” A year later he became the host of the regional television call-in quiz show “Telespiele,” which later went nationwide. Gottschalk appeared in his first movie (Piratensender Powerplay) in 1982, and co-wrote the script for his next film with co-star Mike Krüger. Die Supernasen (“The Super Noses,” 1983), a comedy about two bumbling private detectives, became a German box-office success, and a couple of semi-sequels soon followed. Gottschalk’s wife, Thea, whom he married in 1976, played the role of Princess Fatima in Supernasen.

Gottschalk did his last radio show for BR3 in 1989. In the meantime he had continued his German TV and film work. But his true fame would begin on the fateful evening of September 26, 1987. His friend and colleague Frank Elstner had been the host of “Wetten, dass..?” since inventing the show in 1981. Ready to retire from TV, Elstner asked Gottschalk to take over as host of the popular show. Except for a two-year pause, Gottschalk has been the host of “Wetten, dass...?” since his first broadcast in September 1987. With over 100 broadcasts behind him, Gottschalk is now the undisputed “Mr. ‘Wetten, dass.’”

 
Gottschalk TV
Thomas Gottschalk points to "Thommy."
Photo: ZDF
His 25-year-old show, broadcast on Germany’s ZDF (Zweites Deutsches Fernsehen) public TV network seven times per year, is seen in all of the German-speaking countries. “Wetten, dass..?” is a major European TV phenomenon, consistently drawing very high ratings. As the show’s host, Gottschalk has welcomed not only famous German entertainers and prominent politicians, but many international celebrities, including Madonna, Elton John, Shania Twain, Michael Jackson, and Green Day. His two-hour show, broadcast from a different city each time, is a sort of combination of “The Tonight Show” and “Beat the Clock.” There is nothing remotely like it on American TV, yet many American stars (Cameron Diaz, Catherine Zeta-Jones, Kevin Costner, Faith Hill, Carlos Santana) have appeared on “Wetten, dass..?” Contestants on the show try to pull off various odd feats, while some celebrity guests bet (as Wettpaten) on whether a contestant can actually do it or not. If a Wettpate loses the bet, he or she has to do some stunt—usually some kind of minor public humiliation—that has been agreed on in advance. Other celebrities appear on the show merely as performers.

In November 2004 Gottschalk purchased Schloss Marienfels, a castle on the Rhine in the famous town of Remagen near Cologne, for 3.5 million euros (about $4 million US). Although he plans to keep his California home, the family’s new 18-room residence is intended to help end wife Thea’s homesickness for Germany.

See the next page for Gottschalk’s Hollywood films and more about his German-Hollywood connections.

WEB > Wetten, dass...? (ZDF)

N E X T > Gottschalk Films and Books

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