Wehn studied Business Administration in Münster and worked in customer relations.[2] In 2002, he moved to the United Kingdom to work in the marketing department of Wycombe Wanderers.[3] One evening, he saw an open mic night and decided to try comedy.[4] Of his decision to stay in the UK, Wehn later wrote:[5]
I initially planned to stay in the UK for only 12 months to improve my English, but the good weather, the tasty food and the classy women made me stay. In order to blend in with the locals, I decided to get extremely lazy, spend money I don't have and, most importantly, to unjustifiably bang on about my great sense of humour. This is why I decided 1,646 days, nine hours and 42 minutes ago to try my hand at stand-up and become the German Comedy Ambassador.
As a result, since October 2003, Wehn has been the self-styled "German Comedy Ambassador in London".[6] After beginning his career as "warm-up act" to various comedians in London (including Stewart Lee for Comedy Vehicle), he now has his own act on the British comedy circuit.[7]
He appeared on Would I Lie To You?, Episode 7 of Series 7, in which he revealed that for three weeks in the mid-1990s he was listed as a missing person by Interpol. He later appeared on Episode 9 of Series 9, in which he revealed that he and his friend were once arrested by border guards for illegally entering the Czech Republic in the mid-1990s.[9]
In 2014, Wehn and fellow comedian Mark Watson fronted a travelogue in Brazil called The Road to Rio for TV channel Dave. In the show, they explored the country's sporting culture, tying in with the 2014 World Cup held in the country. Henning has often toured and performed with fellow German comedian Otto Kuhnle [de].[10] Kuhnle appeared on Wehn's BBC Radio 2 series Henning Knows Best in 2012.[11]
In May 2015, Wehn presented An Immigrant's Guide to Britain on Channel 4, telling Radio Times: "[W]hat I really like about the programme it mixes light-hearted issues (the job market), with more serious ones (trouble of having two water taps instead of just one) to the ultra serious (the British class system)".[12] In October that same year, Wehn was the presenter of the BBC World Service radio documentary Wall in the Head in which he explored "the invisible cultural and psychological divide" between East and West Germans twenty five years after German reunification following the fall of the Berlin Wall.[13]
In October 2018, Wehn appeared in the German episode of History's TV series Al Murray: Why Does Everyone Hate The English alongside host Al Murray.
In June 2024 he predicted that Germany would win the forthcoming UEFA Euro 2024 championships, saying, "A few months ago, I would have said it's a miracle if we make it out of the group so I would have taken a draw with Scotland, a draw with Hungary and a 1–0 defeat to Switzerland, I would have settled for that. ... But now with a new manager and beating France and the Netherlands, we're going to win it!"[14]
Approach to comedy
Wehn's comedy frequently employs common stereotypes about Germans, with critic Brian Logan noting in The Guardian in 2015: "Wehn has made a career out of sending up and celebrating German stereotypes. But that particular ingredient is lower in the new show's mix – with abundant TV and radio credits to his name, Wehn is now well enough established to joke not only about who he is, but what he thinks".[15]
^Presenter: Henning Wehn, Producer: Helena Selby (4 October 2015). "Wall in the Head". The Documentary. BBC World Service. Archived from the original on 3 October 2015. Retrieved 21 March 2016.
^Lee, Stewart (17 April 2013). "Where are all the right-wing stand-ups?". New Statesman. Archived from the original on 17 September 2020. Retrieved 23 April 2023. Henning Wehn and Liam Mullone occupy broadly libertarian positions and would please the right with their common-sense fiscal comments but confuse it with their views on individual freedom and use of irony.