German TV award: tears from the Zarrellas, awards for “Faking Hitler”

Status: 09/15/2022 04:47 am

At the German Television Prize this year, a ZDF entertainer initially had to admit defeat – and in the end he was able to get rid of a few love messages. Another finding: the forged Hitler diaries are probably still good narrative material.

Presenter and musician Giovanni Zarrella won the German Television Award – and thus caused a small flood of tears. The 44-year-old, who presents “Die Giovanni Zarrella Show” on ZDF, was awarded the coveted trophy for the best individual performance as an entertainment presenter in the evening.

His first comment was, “Okay, that’s awesome.” But it got emotional when he then started a far-reaching speech of thanks – to his wife Jana Ina Zarrella, to his parents and to his children. “Honey, you know exactly: the last few years, they weren’t always easy for us and not always easy,” he said in the direction of his wife. “You have made me a better man, a better person, a better father. I love you more than anything.” Many tears flowed from the 45-year-old and there was a kiss on top of it.

The entertainer also had a message for his children. “Everyone who wins at some point, who is a winner, a champion, was at some point a challenger who didn’t stop believing in himself,” he said. “I wish you the same. I love you more than anything.”

The creators of “Faking Hitler” were also the big winners of the evening

In fact, victory and defeat were very close together for Zarrella that evening in Cologne. Before his triumph, he had come up short in another category. His colleague Joko Winterscheidt (43) got his ProSieben quiz “Who is stealing the show from me?” the award for the best entertainment show – ahead of Zarrella’s format. Last year he had already won in the division with the show. “I never would have thought that it was really realistic,” said the somewhat bewildered Winterscheidt about the successful defense of the title.

The creators of “Faking Hitler” (RTL +) could also feel among the bigger winners of the evening. The series about the scandal surrounding the forged Hitler diaries received an award for “Best Drama Series”. In addition, leading actor Moritz Bleibtreu, who plays the art forger Konrad Kujau, was honored as best actor.

Friederike Becht won the television prize for actresses for her role in “Schneller als die Angst” (ARD). In the top category “Best TV Film”, ZDF won the award with “The Wannsee Conference”.

The streaming service Netflix was happy about the trophy for the best mini series: It won with “The Billion Dollar Code”. The production tells of a time when the internet was still very new.

Ukraine Reporting Award

Among the journalists, the ZDF reporter Katrin Eigendorf was honored for her reporting from Ukraine. Eigendorf dedicated the prize to all reporters working in the war-torn country. It was certainly one of the wars in which “propaganda and disinformation played an above-average role,” she said. “That’s why it’s important that we, as reporters that viewers can trust, show what’s really happening here.”

The German Television Prize has been awarded for outstanding television performances since 1999. It is carried by ZDF, Sat.1, ARD, Deutsche Telekom and RTL.

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