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Sandra Studer: From Eurovision Host to Authenticity Advocate

Sandra Studer, who hosted Eurovision, shares her experiences and thoughts on success, relationships, and authenticity. Despite finding the contest overwhelming, she continues to shape Swiss television and encourage open dialogue.

This picture is clicked in a musical concert. There is a woman who is holding a microphone in her...
This picture is clicked in a musical concert. There is a woman who is holding a microphone in her hand and she is talking on the microphone. Behind her, we see lights and in the background, it is black in color. In the left bottom of the picture, we see the face of the man.

Sandra Studer: From Eurovision Host to Authenticity Advocate

Sandra Studer, the Swiss singer and television host, has opened up about her experiences hosting the Eurovision Song Contest. The 57-year-old, who lives in the canton of Zurich with her partner, lawyer Luka Müller, and is mother to four children, found the scale and energy of the Eurovision 2025 event overwhelming. Despite this, she has shaped numerous SRF programs and represented Switzerland at the 1991 Eurovision Song Contest.

Studer, who has also hosted the Eurovision Song Contest in Basel in 2025, admitted that she misses the chaos of her home after her children moved out. She defines success not by external validation, but as a state of being that involves joy and a normal, loving life. To maintain their 35-year relationship, Studer and Müller share a morning coffee ritual.

Studer, who was a singer and moderator before her work at SRF, stays authentic in the spotlight by embracing her off-screen appearance and not defining herself by external validation. She openly discusses menopause to encourage open conversation and reduce stigma, a stance she maintains despite finding the international stage of the Eurovision Song Contest daunting.

Sandra Studer, a prominent figure in Swiss television, has shared her experiences and thoughts on success, relationships, and authenticity. Despite finding the Eurovision Song Contest overwhelming, she continues to shape Swiss television and encourage open dialogue about important topics.

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