German Entertainment Icons Alice and Ellen Kessler Die Together at Age 89
Twin performers famous across Europe choose joint assisted death after a lifelong inseparable bond
Alice and Ellen Kessler, the German twin sisters who became stars of dance, song and television in the 1950s and 1960s, have died together at the age of 89.
Both passed away on 17 November 2025 at their home in Grünwald, near Munich, in what police described as a “joint suicide” under Germany’s assisted-dying framework.
Born on 20 August 1936 in Nerchau, Saxony, the Kessler twins began ballet training early, joined the Leipzig Opera children’s ballet programme, and in 1952 fled East Germany with their family to West Germany.
Their international career took off after an engagement at the Lido in Paris in 1955.
They represented Germany at the 1959 Eurovision Song Contest in Cannes, finishing eighth with “Heute abend wollen wir tanzen geh’n”.
In the 1960s they lived and worked in Italy, where they were known as “le gemelle Kessler”, appearing in variety television, film and stage, and performing with major figures including Frank Sinatra and Fred Astaire.
Their image—twin dancers, glamorous, elegant—resonated across Europe during the post-war decades of cultural revival.
According to the Deutsche Gesellschaft für Humanes Sterben (DGHS), a Berlin-based assisted-dying advocacy group, the sisters long planned to end their lives together.
Their chosen method was lawful under German constitutionally protected rights to a self-determined death, though active euthanasia remains prohibited.
Friends say the decision was carefully considered, and the sisters requested their ashes be placed in the same urn and eventually buried alongside their mother and dog.
The announcements prompted tributes throughout Germany and Italy.
In Italy especially, where the twins had become television icons, commentators highlighted the emotional final act as very much in keeping with their lifelong tandem partnership.
Analysts say their death raises questions about assisted-dying norms, ageing, autonomy and the bond between close siblings.
In Germany the case may revive debates about the regulation of assisted suicide and the adequacy of support for older persons who choose the path.
While their career may have peaked decades ago, the Kessler twins’ cultural legacy endures.
They represented a bridge between Germany’s fragility after war and the modern European entertainment age—mirroring a continent’s own transition.
In choosing to depart life together, they reaffirmed the unity that underpinned their entire public and private existence.
And in that final duet, they again offered a powerful, if poignant, performance.