Nina Hagen

Born in East Berlin in 1955 as Catharina Hagen, Nina Hagen has for decades been one of the most influential and singular figures in German-speaking and international music and culture. Raised in an artistic household, she developed an extraordinary vocal and theatrical presence at an early age. She achieved her first professional successes in the former GDR, appearing in DEFA film productions and becoming one of the country’s most popular young voices with the hit song “Du hast den Farbfilm vergessen.” 

As later revealed in her autobiographies Mein sinnliches und übersinnliches Leben (1988) and Bekenntnisse (2010), Hagen was exposed to serious dangers during her youth in the GDR. A decisive turning point came in 1972 following a near-death experience under LSD, which she herself described as a “baptism by fire in the Holy Spirit.” From that moment on, her faith in God and Jesus Christ became a defining force in her life—something she increasingly proclaimed in her concerts from the late 1970s onward. Her close ties to the GDR singer-songwriter and opposition scene, particularly to Wolf Biermann, led to her permission to leave the country in 1976—a political rupture that marked the beginning of her international career as a singer. 

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