Background
Roche, who is bilingual in English and German, is the daughter of an engineer and a politically and artistically active mother. She grew up in the Lower Rhine region, in a family with liberal views.
Actor writer television presenter
Roche, who is bilingual in English and German, is the daughter of an engineer and a politically and artistically active mother. She grew up in the Lower Rhine region, in a family with liberal views.
When she was 14 years old she moved to Mönchengladbach, where she was educated at the Hugo Junkers Gymnasium in Rheydt, a borough of Mönchengladbach.
She has lived in Germany since the age of one, having previously lived in London and the Netherlands. Her primary school was in Niederkrüchten. In 1989 she went to the secondary school, Saint Wolfhelm Gymnasium, in the neighbouring town of Schwalmtal.
She left school after the 11th grade, at the age of 17.
She obtained initial stage experience in drama groups during her time at school. Roche left home in 1993, still aged 17, and formed the garage rock group The Dubinskis with three female friends.
The band never released an album, nor recorded any material, nor notably performed anywhere. There followed a period where she undertook anything that would shock and offend people – self-mutilation to paint with blood, drug experiments, or shaving her head
After successfully auditioning for the German music channel Viva, she worked there for several years as a video jockey and presenter, as well on the sister channel Viva Zwei, where she presented her show Fast Forward.
Roche has a daughter, Polly, born in 2002, whose father Eric Pfeil was the producer and writer of Roche"s programme Fast Forward and Der Kindergeburtstag ist vorbei! (The child"s birthday party is over). In 2006, Roche played the female lead in the German film Eden, directed by Michael Hofman. The film was widely distributed in Europe.
In an interview published in Der Spiegel in 2010, Charlotte Roche proposed to have sex with German president Christian Wulff in exchange for his veto on a new regulation extending the life of nuclear reactors, highlighting the controversial extension, and Wulff"s role in passing it into law.
Roche"s book Feuchtgebiete (English: Wetlands) was the world"s best-selling novel at Amazon.com in March 2008. Partly autobiographical, it explores cleanliness, sex and femininity, and had sold over 1,500,000 copies in Germany by early 2009.
Foreign supporters it is an erotic literary novel. Foreign critics it is cleverly marketed shock fiction bordering on pornography with a previously exhibited habit of the author of offense for the sake of offense.
Justin East. H. Smith wrote of the novel in a review in n+1: "If Roche has hit on something true and heretofore unsaid, it is the insight that to write about bodily fluids is not to describe something exceptional in the course of human life.
lieutenant is, rather, to describe something that is always there and always felt to be there, through all those other things people do and experience at that level that used to be the subject of novels (falling in love, challenging others to duels, talking about the buying and selling of land, etc)." Her second novel, Schoßgebete (English: Wrecked) was published in 2011.