Catharina "Nina" Hagen (born 11 March 1955) is a
German singer and actress. She has performed throughout the world for over 40 years.

Nina Hagen was born in the former
East Berlin,
East Germany, the daughter of Hans Hagen (also known as Hans Oliva-Hagen), a scriptwriter, and
Eva-Maria Hagen (née Buchholz), an actress and singer. Her paternal grandfather died in the
Sachsenhausen concentration camp (her father was
Jewish). Her parents divorced when she was two years old, and growing up she saw her father infrequently. At age four, she began to study
ballet, and was considered an
opera prodigy by the time she was nine.
When Hagen was 11, her mother married
Wolf Biermann, an anti-establishment
singer-songwriter. Biermann's political views later influenced young Hagen.
Hagen left school at age sixteen, and went to
Poland, where she began her career.
After that, she returned to Germany and joined the cover band Fritzens Dampferband (
Fritz's Steamboat Band), together with Achim Mentzel and others. She added songs by
Janis Joplin and
Tina Turner to the "allowable" set lists during shows.
From 1972 to 1973, Hagen enrolled in the crash-course performance program at The Central Studio for Light Music in East Berlin. Upon graduation, she formed the band Automobil.
In East Germany, she performed with the band Automobil, becoming one of the country's best-known young stars. Her most famous song from the early part of her career was
Du hast den Farbfilm vergessen (You forgot the colour film), " a subtle dig mocking the sterile, gray, Communist state," in 1974. Her musical career in the GDR was cut short, however, when she and her mother left the country in 1976, following the expulsion of her stepfather.

The circumstances surrounding the family's emigration were exceptional: Biermann was granted permission to perform a televised concert in
Cologne, but denied permission to re-cross the border to his adopted home country. Hagen submitted an application to leave the country. In it, she claimed to be Biermann's biological daughter, and threatened to become the next
Wolf Biermann if not allowed to rejoin her father.
[clarification needed] Just four days later her request was granted, and she settled in
Hamburg, where she was signed to a
CBS-affiliated record label. Her label advised her to acclimate herself to Western culture through travel, and she arrived in London during the height of the
punk rock movement. Hagen was quickly taken up by a circle that included
The Slits and
Sex Pistols.
Back in Germany by mid-1977, Hagen formed the Nina Hagen Band in
West Berlin's
Kreuzberg district. In 1978 they released their self-titled debut album, which included the single "TV-Glotzer" (a cover of "White Punks on Dope" by
The Tubes, though with entirely different German lyrics), and
Auf'm Bahnhof Zoo, about
West Berlin's then-notorious
Berlin Zoologischer Garten station. The album also included a version of "Rangehn" ("Go For It"), a song she had previously recorded in East Germany, but with different music.
A European tour with a new band in 1980 was cancelled, and Hagen turned to the United States. A limited-edition 10-inch EP was released on vinyl that summer in the U.S. Two songs from her first album
Nina Hagen Band were on the A side, and two songs from her second album
Unbehagen were on the
B-side. All four songs were sung in German, although two had English titles and the other two were covers of English-language songs with new German lyrics.

In late 1980, Hagen discovered she was pregnant, broke up with the father-to-be Ferdinand Karmelk, and moved to Los Angeles. Her daughter,
Cosma Shiva Hagen, was born in
Santa Monica on 17 May 1981. In 1982, Hagen released her first
English-language album:
NunSexMonkRock, a dissonant mix of punk, funk, reggae, and opera. She then went on a world tour with the No Problem Orchestra.
In 1983, she released the album
Angstlos and a minor European tour. By this time, Hagen's public appearances were becoming stranger and frequently included discussions of God, UFOs, her social and political beliefs, animal rights and vivisection, and claims of alien sightings. The English version of
Angstlos, Fearless, generated two major club hits in America, "
Zarah" (a cover of the
Zarah Leander (No. 45 USA) song "Ich weiss, es wird einmal ein Wunder geschehen") and the disco/punk/opera song, "
New York New York" (No. 9 USA). During 1984 Hagen spent a lot of time in London and UK based MusicSzene magazine chief-editor Wilfried Rimensberger, in conjunction with Spree Film, produced a first TV feature on her and what was remaining from London's 70 Punk movement induced by artist and model Frankie Stein.
Her 1985 album
In Ekstase fared less well, but did generate club hits with "Universal Radio" (No. 39 USA) and a cover of "
Spirit In The Sky" and also featured a 1979 recording of her hardcore punk take on
Paul Anka's
My Way, which had been one of her signature live tunes in previous years. She performed songs from this album during the 1985 version of
Rock in Rio. Wilfried Rimensberger and award-winning film director Lothar Spree produced a TV documentary for

German Television ZDF. This was followed by a launch of Nina's UFO fashion underwear at anti-SAFT in Zurich, where again Rimensberger joined her up with New Romantic icon Steve Strange performing on stage. Simultaneously fashion photographer Hannes Schmid produced a Nina Hagen cover for German Cosmopolitan magazine. This also coincided with leading music publications like BRAVO and MusicSzene running cover stories that all put Hagen back on the forefront of something that in retrospective became a final highpoint of what the punk movement was all about. At the end of 1986, her contract with
CBS was over and she released the
Punk Wedding EP independently in 1987, a celebration of her marriage to a 17-year-old-punk nicknamed 'Iroquois'. It followed an independent 1986 one-off single with
Lene Lovich, the anthemic
Don't Kill The Animals. In 1989, Hagen released the album
Nina Hagen which was backed up by another German tour.
In 1989 she had a relationship with Frank Chevallier from France, with whom she has a son, Otis Chevallier-Hagen.

In the 1990s, Hagen lived in Paris with her daughter
Cosma Shiva and son Otis. In 1991 she toured Europe in support of her new album
Street. In 1992 Hagen became the host of a TV show on
RTLplus. Also in the same year (1992) she collaborated with
Adamski on the European smash and minor UK hit single "Get Your Body". The following year, she released
Revolution Ballroom. In 1994, Hagen starred in the acclaimed San Francisco Goethe Institut's "The Seven Addictions and Five Professions of Anita Berber", playing the singer version of "Anita" alongside dancer Jennifer Pieren who portrayed the other "professions" of "Anita". Also, her voice was heard on the
Freaky Fukin Weirdoz single "
Hit Me With Your Rhythm Stick". 1995 brought the German-language album
Freud Euch appeared, recorded in English as
BeeHappy in 1996. Nina returned to San Francisco to star in another San Francisco Goethe Institut show, "Hannusen, Hitler's Jewish Clarvoyant." Hagen also collaborated with
electronic music composer
Christopher Franke, along with Rick Palombi (credited as Rick Jude) on "Alchemy of Love", the theme song for the film
Tenchi Muyo! in Love. In May 1996, she married David Lynn, who is fifteen years younger, but divorced him in the beginning of 2000. In 1997 she collaborated with German
hip hop musician
Thomas D.
In 1998, Hagen became the host of a weekly
science fiction show on the British Sci-Fi Channel, in addition to embarking on another tour of Germany. In 1999, she released the devotional album
Om Namah Shivay, which was distributed exclusively online and included an unadulterated musical version of the
Hare Krishna mantra (in real life she believes that the Hindu incarnation of God known as Krishna was 'the king of Jerusalem'. Krishna is sometimes referred to as "Christ"). She also provided vocals to "Witness" and "Bereit" on
KMFDM's
Adios.
Also in 1998, she recorded the official club anthem (Eisern Union !) for
FC Union Berlin and four versions were issued on a CD single by G.I.B Music and Distribution GmbH.
In 1999, she played the role of Celia Peachum in
The Threepenny Opera by
Kurt Weill and
Bertolt Brecht, alongside
Max Raabe. She also regularly performs songs by Kurt Weill,
Hans Eisler and
Paul Dessau set to Brecht's texts.