Johannes Heesters
Johannes Heesters (born December 5, 1903) is a Dutch actor, singer, and entertainer who can look back on an 83-year career, almost exclusively in the German-speaking world. As of 2003, Heesters holds the record of being the oldest performer worldwide who is still active, both on the stage and on television.
Born in Amersfoort, Netherlands, Heesters very early in his career specialized in Viennese operetta, making his Viennese stage debut in 1934 in Karl Millöcker's Der Bettelstudent (The Beggar Student). Over the decades, "Da geh' ich ins Maxim", Count Danilo Danilovitch's entrance song from Franz Lehar's Die lustige Witwe (The Merry Widow) -- Danilo has spent most of the night drinking at Maxim's and flirting with women -- has become Heesters's signature tune. More operettas followed, many of which were also made into musical films.

Johannes Heesters at 98
Heesters has two daughters by his first wife, whom he married in 1930. After her death, he remarried in 1991; his second wife, Simone Rethel (born 1949), is a German actress and painter.
In the 1990s he and his wife toured Germany and Austria with Curt Flatow's play Ein gesegnetes Alter (A Blessed Age), which was also televised in 1996. In September and October of 2003 Heesters appeared in the Komödie im Marquardt in Stuttgart in a show commissioned on the occasion of his 100th birthday, Heesters - eine musikalische Hommage.






