In 1972, an American show manager offered Haag a tour booking and she performed her show
Berlin Chanson at
Fire Island, in
Long Island and
Atlantic City. There she met and fell in love with a street musician from
Berlin and decided to move back to Europe to live in the German city with him. In 1974, at age 26, she opened her own cabaret, named
Chez Romy Haag, in
Berlin-Schöneberg. Visitors to the venue included
Udo Lindenberg,
Zizi Jeanmaire,
Patricia Highsmith,
Bryan Ferry,
Tina Turner,
Horst Buchholz,
Grace Jones,
Rainer Werner Fassbinder,
Iggy Pop,
Freddie Mercury,
Lou Reed and
Mick Jagger, whom she first met in 1973. In 1976, Haag and
David Bowie began a romantic relationship. Bowie subsequently moved to Berlin and completed his first German tour. Haag's first single "Liege-Samba" appeared in 1977, with Udo Lindenberg contributing the lyrics and music. She went on tour with Lindenberg, and in the following year, released her single "Superparadise". In 1979,
The New Yorker profiled her in a photo tribute. In 1981, her first album
So bin ich was released with
Klaus Hoffmann contributing the lyrics. In 1983, Haag sold her night club to travel the world. Returning to Germany in 1986, she began touring Germany, Austria, Switzerland and the U.S. with her
City in the Night show. During mid 1980s, Haag was featured in the
performance art video installation
Queen Zero. During her career, she performed with Conny Göckel, Alexander Kraut, Lutz Woite, Friedel Schwarz, Erik Küppers, Blacky Schwarz, Roland Götz, Hansi Wallbaum, Uli Moritz, Eberhardt Fortmann. In 2010, she had a role as a receptionist in the internet soap opera
Doc Love playing alongside
Dieter Bach,
Oliver Bender and
Ellenie Salvo González. ==Honors and awards==