Tickets: 28/32 € (numbered seats). Tickets are available onlineand in our booking offices.
Four times a year, Bernadette Schoog invites prominent guests to the Kurhaus Baden-Baden for a discussion. Exciting personalities are asked about their lives, visions, ideas, influences and thoughts. A close-up, ninety-minute experience with an empathetic interviewer in the beautiful ambience of the Runder Saal.
Cordula Stratmann, this woman cannot be pigeonholed. She is a comedian, she is a bestselling author, she is an actress, she is a family therapist and so much more. Her mother always moaned that little Cordula was simply “too much”. Even though this was a long-standing accusation, the adult Cordula can live with it. As she describes herself today, she is indeed “loud, strong and a lot”. But that's what makes her special, on stage, in front of the camera or in conversation. Whether as “Annemie Hülchrath” in “Zimmer frei” or as a playing partner of Maren Kroymann or Olli Dittrich.
With her humor, she discovers the comic in the serious and the serious in the comic. She astutely probes where it hurts and lets us laugh freely where only cheerfulness can help. This is also the case in her latest book: “Wo waren wir stehen geblieben”. We always have to deal with her in person: a woman whose facets are made up of so many things, from her experience as a conflict-steeled therapist, as a passionate mother and, of course, as an original comedian. An evening with her is a journey through the highs and lows of life, humorous, thoughtful, colorful and serious - but always with a wink and a liberating laugh. To be experienced with Bernadette Schoog on May 27, 2026, 8 p.m., in the round salon of the Kurhaus Baden-Baden.
Baden-Baden Events GmbH offers a combined ticket. If you book at least four events in the “Schoog im Dialog” series at the same time, you will receive a discount of €5 per ticket. Bookable online as well as via the advance booking offices and Baden-Baden Events GmbH, tel. 07221-275 232 33.
Photos: Corula Stratmann © Boris Breuer; Bernadette Schoog, © Peter M. Schoog