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Bayreuth Festival

The Bayreuth Festival (German: Bayreuther Festspiele) is a music festival held annually in Bayreuth, Germany, at which performances of operas by the 19th-century German composer Richard Wagner are presented. Wagner himself conceived and promoted the idea of a special festival to showcase his own works, in particular his monumental cycle Der Ring des Nibelungen and Parsifal.

Bayreuther Festspiele
Bayreuth Festival
Festspielhaus in Bayreuth, the festival's main venue, in 2006
GenreCanon of Wagner's stage works
Frequencyannual
Location(s)Bayreuth, Bavaria, Germany
Inaugurated1876; 147 years ago (1876)
Websitewww.bayreuther-festspiele.de
Bayreuth Festspielhaus in 1882

Performances take place in a specially designed theatre, the Bayreuth Festspielhaus. Wagner personally supervised the design and construction of the theatre, which contained many architectural innovations to accommodate the huge orchestras for which Wagner wrote as well as the composer's particular vision about the staging of his works. The Festival has become a pilgrimage destination for Wagnerians and classical-music enthusiasts.[1]

Patronage certificate for funding the Bayreuth Festival, issued on 1 February 1872, signed by Richard Wagner in the original. By paying 300 Thaler, the holder of the certificate acquired the right to attend three performances of the stage festival play Der Ring des Nibelungen.

Origins

The origins of the Festival itself lie rooted in Richard Wagner's interest in establishing his financial independence. A souring of the relationship with his patron, Ludwig II of Bavaria, led to his expulsion from Munich, where he had originally intended to launch the festival. Wagner next considered Nuremberg, which would have reinforced the thematic significance of works such as Die Meistersinger. On the advice of Hans Richter, however, the focus fell upon Bayreuth which enjoyed three distinct advantages.

First, the town boasted a splendid venue: the Markgräfliches Opernhaus built for Margrave Frederick and his wife, Friederike Sophie Wilhelmine (sister of Frederick the Great) in 1747. With its ample capacity and strong acoustics, the opera house was a good match for Wagner's vision. Second, the town of Bayreuth was located outside those regions where Wagner no longer owned the rights to the performance of his own works, which he had sold off in 1864 in order to alleviate pressing financial concerns. Finally, the town had no cultural life that could offer competition to Wagner's own artistic dominance. The Festival, once launched, would be the dominant feature of Bayreuth's cultural landscape. In addition, "Richard Wagner did not want his works interpreted amid the hustle and noise or the distractions of a large city; he sought a place remote from the usual theatrical world where it was so quiet so that the hearers could concentrate their whole attention on the work offered, and could in the pauses refresh themselves in natural surroundings.[2]"

In April 1870, Wagner and his wife Cosima visited Bayreuth. On inspection, the Opera House proved to be inadequate. It was built to accommodate the baroque orchestras of the 18th century and was therefore unsuited for the complex stagings and large orchestras that Wagner's operas required. Nonetheless, the Burgermeisters proved open to assisting Wagner with the construction of an entirely new theatre and the Festival was planned to launch in 1873. After a fruitless meeting in the spring of 1871 with the German Chancellor Otto von Bismarck to obtain funds, Wagner embarked on a fundraising tour across Germany, including Leipzig and Frankfurt.

An initial public subscription proved disappointing until Wagner, at the suggestion of his friend and admirer Emil Heckel, launched a number of Wagner Societies to increase participation in the Festival's subscription. Societies were established in Leipzig, Berlin, Vienna and other places.

Despite making direct appeals based on Wagner's role as a composer of the new German Reich, the Societies and other fundraising channels were well short of the needed sum by the end of 1872. Wagner made another appeal to Bismarck in August 1873 and was again denied.

Desperate, Wagner turned to his former patron, Ludwig II, who reluctantly agreed to help. In January 1874, Ludwig granted 100,000 Thaler and construction on the theatre, designed by architect Gottfried Semper, started shortly thereafter. A planned 1875 debut was postponed for a year due to construction and other delays.

Early history

 
Felix Mottl conducted Tristan und Isolde at Bayreuth in 1886

Since its opening in 1876, the Bayreuth Festival has been a socio-cultural phenomenon. The inauguration took place on 13 August 1876, with a performance of Beethoven's "Choral" Symphony, which is occasionally programmed during the festival. (It was played at the post-war reopening in 1951, and subsequently in 1953, 1954, 1963, 2001, and had been planned for the cancelled 2020 season.)[3] Then came the first performance of Das Rheingold. Present at this unique musical event were Kaiser Wilhelm, Dom Pedro II of Brazil, King Ludwig (who attended in secret, probably to avoid the Kaiser), and other members of the nobility, as well as the philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche who committed much effort to helping his then good friend Wagner establish the festival,[4] and such accomplished composers as Anton Bruckner, Edvard Grieg, Pyotr Tchaikovsky, Franz Liszt, and the young Arthur Foote.

Artistically, the festival was a success. ("Something has taken place at Bayreuth which our grandchildren and their children will still remember", wrote Tchaikovsky, attending the Festival as a Russian correspondent.) Financially, however, the festival was a disaster and did not begin to make money until several years later. Wagner abandoned his original plan to hold a second festival the following year, and travelled to London to conduct a series of concerts in an attempt to make up the deficit. Although the festival was plagued by financial problems in its early years, it survived through state intervention and the continued support of influential Wagnerians, including King Ludwig II of Bavaria.

From its inception, the festival has attracted leading conductors and singers, many of whom performed without pay. Among these was Hans Richter, who conducted the premiere of the Ring Cycle in 1876. Another was the talented conductor Hermann Levi, who was personally chosen by Richard Wagner to conduct the debut of Parsifal in 1882 with the assistance of the young Engelbert Humperdinck.[5]

Following Wagner's death, his widow Cosima continued running the festival at one or, more frequently, two-year intervals. She gradually introduced the remaining operas which complete the Bayreuth canon of Wagner's last ten completed operas. Levi, the son of a rabbi, remained the festival's principal conductor for the next two decades. Felix Mottl, who was involved with the festival from 1876 to 1901, conducted Tristan und Isolde there in 1886. Until the 1920s, performances were strictly in accordance with the traditions established under King Ludwig's patronage. Not a note was "cut" from any of the enormous scores; no concessions were made to the limits of human patience on the part of the audiences. Cosima Wagner preserved the productions of Parsifal and the Ring just as they had been in Wagner's day, defending any proposed changes with appeals to her son Siegfried: "Was this not how Papa did it in 1876?"

After Cosima's retirement in 1906, Siegfried Wagner took over management of the festival, introducing new staging and performance styles. His early death in 1930 left the Festival in the hands of his English-born wife Winifred Wagner, with Heinz Tietjen as artistic director.

Bayreuth under Nazi Germany

 
Patronage certificate for funding the Bayreuth festival, issued 22. May 1922

In the 1920s, well before the rise of the Nazi Party, Winifred Wagner became a strong supporter and close personal friend of Adolf Hitler; her correspondence with Hitler has never been released by the Wagner family. She and other festival leaders were members of Nazi chief ideologue Alfred Rosenberg's Kampfbund für deutsche Kultur, which actively suppressed modernist music and works by "degenerate" artists. The festival maintained some artistic independence under Nazi rule. Ironically, Hitler attended performances that included Jewish and foreign singers, long after they had been banned from all other venues across Germany (including homosexual heldentenor Max Lorenz, married to a well-known Jewish woman). Winifred's influence with Hitler was so strong that Hitler even wrote a letter (at her behest) to anti-fascist Italian conductor Arturo Toscanini, begging him to lead the festival.[citation needed] Toscanini, who had conducted there in 1930 and 1931, refused in 1933. From 1933 to 1942, the festival was conducted principally by Karl Elmendorff.

It was in Nazi Germany that the festival made its first break from tradition, abandoning the deteriorating 19th century sets created by Richard Wagner. Many protested at the changes, including prominent conductors such as Toscanini and Richard Strauss, and even some members of the Wagner family. In their view, any change to the festival was a profanation against "the Master" (Wagner). Nevertheless, Hitler approved of the changes, thus paving the way for more innovations in the decades to come.

During the war, the festival was turned over to the Nazi Party, which continued to sponsor operas for wounded soldiers returning from the front. These soldiers were forced to attend lectures on Wagner before the performances, and most found the festival to be tedious.[5] However, as "guests of the Führer", none complained.

Bayreuth Memorial

 
Memorial to Jewish singers in the Bayreuth Festival Park

During the 1970s Winifred Wagner was repeatedly petitioned to install a memorial to the Jewish singers at the Bayreuth Festival who had been murdered in concentration camps.[6] A plaque was finally installed honouring Ottilie Metzger-Lattermann and Henriette Gottlieb after Winifred's death.

New festival

Two-thirds of the town of Bayreuth was destroyed by American bombing in the final days of World War II, taking with it the rotunda, living room and guest room of Wahnfried, though the theatre itself was undamaged. Following the war, Winifred Wagner was sentenced to probation by a war court for her support of the Nazi Party. The court also banned her from administration of the Bayreuth Festival and its assets, which fell eventually to her two sons, Wolfgang and Wieland.

During American occupation of the region after World War II, the theatre was used for army recreation and religious services for American soldiers. Only popular concerts and mixed entertainment were allowed: comedy, dancing, acrobatics, and then only Die Fledermaus was staged. When the Festival House was handed over to the city of Bayreuth in 1946, it was used for concerts of the Bayreuth Symphony Orchestra and the performances of such operas as Fidelio, Tiefland, Madama Butterfly and La traviata and talks about reopening of the Wagnerian Festival started. Finally it reopened on 29 July 1951 with, as always, a performance by the Bayreuth Festival Orchestra under conductor Wilhelm Furtwängler of Beethoven's 9th Symphony, followed by the first post-war performance of Wagner's opera, Parsifal.[7]

Under the direction of Wieland Wagner, the "New Bayreuth" ushered in an era that was no less than revolutionary. Gone were the elaborate naturalistic sets, replaced with minimalist modern productions. In comparison, the pre-war changes seemed tame. For the first time in its history, the Bayreuth audience booed at the end of productions. Wieland was particularly derided for his 1956 production of Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg. Stripped of its pageantry, conservatives viewed the breaking of this "sacred German tradition" as an outrage.[5]

Wieland defended the changes as an attempt to create an "invisible stage" that would allow the audience to experience the full psychosocial aspects of the drama without the baggage and distraction of elaborate set designs. Others have speculated that by stripping Wagner's works of their Germanic and historic elements, Wieland was attempting to distance Bayreuth from its nationalistic past and create productions with universal appeal. Over time, many critics came to appreciate the unique beauty of Wieland's reinterpretation of his grandfather's works.[5]

Wieland's innovative productions invited comparison to Wolfgang's, which critics unanimously found to be uninspired. If Wieland's productions were radical, Wolfgang's were regressive. Although still minimalist in approach, Wolfgang resurrected much of the naturalistic and romantic elements of pre-war productions. Thus, when Wieland died prematurely from lung cancer in 1966, many wondered if Bayreuth had a future. They began to question Bayreuth's primacy among German opera houses, and some suggested that more interesting productions were being staged elsewhere.[5]

Around this time (1955), in order to broaden its audience, the whole Bayreuth Festival company conducted performances in Paris and Barcelona, performing Parsifal, Die Walküre and Tristan und Isolde.

In 1973, faced with overwhelming criticism and family infighting, the Bayreuth Festival and its assets were transferred to a newly created Richard Wagner Foundation. The board of directors included members of the Wagner family and others appointed by the state. As chairman, Wolfgang Wagner remained in charge of administration of the festival.

The Wagner Werkstatt

While Wolfgang Wagner continued to administer the festival, beginning in the 1970s, production was handled by a number of new directors in what Wolfgang called Werkstatt Bayreuth (Bayreuth Workshop). The idea was to turn the festival into an opportunity for directors to experiment with new methods for presenting the operas. The change came out of necessity, as it was impossible for Wolfgang to both administer and direct the festival. It also provided an opportunity for Bayreuth to renew itself with each production, rather than continue to present the same operas in the same way, year after year. Ingmar Bergman, who famously made a film version in Swedish of Mozart's Die Zauberflöte, turned down an invitation to direct the festival.

The most sensational production in Werkstatt Bayreuth was the Centennial Ring Cycle under the direction of French director Patrice Chéreau. Chereau used an updated 19th-century setting that followed the interpretation of George Bernard Shaw who saw the Ring as a social commentary on the exploitation of the working class by wealthy 19th-century capitalists.[8]

The audience reaction was split between those who saw the production as an offence and those who considered it the best Ring Cycle ever produced. The ensuing conflict, short only of outright riot, between supporters and detractors was unprecedented in the history of the festival. The performances, and the performers, however, were without dispute some of the best seen in the world of opera.[citation needed]

Other notable directors to have participated in Werkstatt Bayreuth included Jean-Pierre Ponnelle, Sir Peter Hall of the Royal Shakespeare Company, Götz Friedrich of the Deutsche Oper Berlin, Harry Kupfer of the Berlin State Opera in the former communist East Germany and Heiner Müller of the Berliner Ensemble. In the end, Wolfgang's decision to bring in experimental directors helped rejuvenate Bayreuth and restore its reputation as the world leader in Wagnerian opera.

21st century

There was uncertainty over how the Festival was to be managed after the retirement of Wolfgang Wagner at the end of August 2008. In 2001, the Festival's 21-member board of directors had voted for his daughter, Eva Wagner-Pasquier, to succeed him. Wolfgang Wagner, however, proposed to hand control over to his second wife, Gudrun, and their daughter Katharina.[9] Gudrun died in 2007.[10] No successor was named at that time, but it was speculated that Wagner-Pasquier and Katharina would eventually be named as joint directors of the festival.[11] Directors have stated that preference will be given to descendants of Richard Wagner, and that a non-descendant would have to be a clearly better candidate.[citation needed]

On 1 September 2008, Wolfgang Wagner's daughters, Eva Wagner-Pasquier and Katharina Wagner, were named by Bavaria's culture minister, Thomas Goppel, to take over the Festival. They were to take up their duties immediately, since their father had announced his retirement at the conclusion of the 2008 Festival.[9] They were chosen ahead of the pair of their cousin, Nike Wagner, and Gerard Mortier, who had placed a late bid for the directorship on 24 August.[12][13] The conductor Christian Thielemann has agreed to act as chief adviser to the new directors, effectively taking the role of music director of the Festival.[14]

In 2014 it was announced that Eva would be stepping down from the co-directorship leaving, in accord with her father's will,[15] Katharina in sole charge.[16]

On the 31 March 2020 it was announced that, due to the COVID-19 pandemic and the resulting restrictions, the 2020 festival (due to take place from 25 July to 30 August) would be cancelled.[17] The new Der Ring des Nibelungen production planned for that festival would probably be postponed until 2022.

Tickets

The festival draws thousands of Wagner fans to Bayreuth every summer. It is very difficult to get tickets, because demand (estimated at 500,000) greatly exceeds supply (58,000 tickets); the waiting time is between five and ten years (or more). The process entails submitting an order form every summer; applicants are usually successful after about ten years. Failure to make an application every year results in being placed at the back of the queue. Although some tickets are allocated by lottery, preference is given to members of the Society of Friends of Bayreuth (financial donors), famous patrons, and to regional and international Wagner societies, which are distributed to their own members through lottery or the willingness to pay a high contribution.

However, in 2013 tickets for one opera production were offered exclusively online, on a first come first served basis with no preferential eligibility. It is reported that they sold out within seconds.[citation needed] This offer was repeated for the 2014 season, with tickets being available for eight performances including one complete Ring cycle.[18] As of 2014, retail ticket prices ranged from €320 for a front row stalls seat to €45 for a gallery (third level) back row seat.[19]

The Festival authorities assiduously police the traffic of tickets, and monitor sites such as eBay. On admission patrons are required to show photographic identification matching the name on the ticket.

In 2011 it was revealed that the German Bundesrechnungshof (federal audit office) were investigating the situation where, for a publicly subsidised event, only 40 percent of the tickets were actually available to the general public.[20][21] Early in 2012 it was announced that changes would be made to the allocation system, including the ending of allocations to Wagner Societies (but not including the Society of Friends of Bayreuth as they make a substantial financial contribution) and a reduction in the proportion reserved for travel agents and hotels. As a result, the proportion of tickets available to the general public would increase to about 65 percent of the total available.[22]

Der Ring des Nibelungen

A new production of Der Ring des Nibelungen is presented every five to seven years, following a year in which no Ring is presented. In years in which the Ring is staged, three other operas are also presented. When no Ring is staged, five other operas are presented. Tickets for the Ring are normally sold only as a complete set for all four performances.[19]

The newest production of the Ring (directed by Frank Castorf) premiered in 2013. Castorf's radical staging of the cycle—a colourful modern setting with the global race for oil as the underlying theme—was received with lengthy booing at its premiere.[23][24]

Directors

Recordings

DVD

Laserdisc

VHS

CD

Historical recordings

Historical performances of Wagner's operas at Bayreuth, available on CD, are too numerous to list. The following are a few outstanding examples.

  • 100 Jahre Bayreuth auf Schallplatte: The Early Festival Singers, 1887–1906, Gebhardt Records
This 12 CD set put together all of the surviving recordings done by the Gramophone and Typewriter Company in 1904 at Bayreuth and includes some of the original artists from the 1876 debut.
– recorded during the summer of 1928 with the approval of Siegfried Wagner, in the Festspielhaus without an audience, by Columbia EMI onto 40 78rpm sides (for 20 discs)
– several reissues on CD: Grammofono, 2000 AB 78925-26 (2 CDs – "First Bayreuth Recordings Vol. 2") | Naxos, CD 8.110200-02 (3 CDs) | Preiser, PSR 90383 (2 CDs)
  • Götterdämmerung (1942) Conductor: Karl Elmendorff, Soloists: Marta Fuchs (Brünnhilde), Camilla Kallab (1. Norne, Waltraute), Else Fischer (Gutrune). Set Svanholm (Siegfried), Friedrich Dalberg (Hagen), Robert Burg (Alberich), Egmont Koch (Gunther)
– from a radio broadcast of Deutscher Rundfunk; this is what German soldiers would have heard as "Guests of the Führer"
– issued by various labels: among them Music and Arts, CD-1058 (4 CDs) | Preiser, PRE 90164 (4 CDs)
– issued by various labels: among them Grammofono 2000, AB 78602/05 (4 CDs)

Postwar performances

See also

References

  1. ^ "How to get tickets for the Wagner Festival in Bayreuth" 28 January 2010 at the Wayback Machine on wagneropera.net Retrieved 1 July 2013
  2. ^ Wagner, Siegfried (1 June 1930). "The Bayreuth Festival Plays". The Musical Times. 71 (1048): 506–507. doi:10.2307/917356. ISSN 0027-4666. JSTOR 917356.
  3. ^ "Aufführungsdatenbank".
  4. ^ Nietzsche, Friedrich, Twilight of the Idols, Penguin Books, 2003. Translator's note (R. J. Hollingdale).
  5. ^ a b c d e Spotts, Frederic (1994). Bayreuth: A History of the Wagner Festival. New Haven and London: Yale University Press. ISBN 0300066651.[page needed]
  6. ^ Opera. Vol. 48. London. 1997. pp. 914–915. The festival's archive, with its correspondence with Hitler and other documentation of the period, is still closed to research. He has not even been willing to have a modest memorial for the three Bayreuth singers who perished in concentration camps. The proposal for a memorial plaque was proposed to Wolfgang ages ago by a retired singer and Bayreuth antiquarian bookseller, Peer Baedeker. And therein lies a revealing story. When the centenary festival opened in 1976 with a wreath-laying ceremony at Wagner's grave, Baedeker placed his own wreath with a ribbon attached, with the words: In memory of Richard Breitenfeld, Henriette Gottlieb, Ottilie Metzger-Lattermann Honoured as festival singers murdered in Nazi concentration camps. Within 24 hours of the ceremony, the ribbon had vanished. An article about the incident, which later appeared in an Israeli newspaper, was sent to Winifred, who wrote the following ineffable letter to Baedeker: 'Herr Heinrich Schaar in Munich sends me from time to time cuttings from the Israel Nachrichten, including this one. ... Herr Schaar appears to suspect that this was my doing or at my behest, since otherwise he would not have sent me the press cutting. In the first place I had no idea you had laid a wreath, and in the second I seldom go to RW's resting place; since it is now permanently open to the public, it is never possible to visit the grave alone. I myself never heard Frau Metzger-Lattermann in Bayreuth. but I know that my husband had a very high impression of her. Frau Gottlieb sang here in my time and I had a high opinion of her as well. Herr Breitenfeld is unknown to me. But were all three really killed at Auschwitz? I would doubt that in the case of Frau Lattermann, since she must have been terribly old. With best wishes, also to your wife, whom I recently greeted in front of Wahnfried.' – The casualness of this brush-off, the brutal indifference to the murder of three old singers speaks volumes about the attitude in Bayreuth to its past. And so the monument that the festival visitor sees today on the Green Hill – the massive copy of the bust of a glowering Wagner made for Hitler by the Nazi sculptor Arno Breker – is, properly viewed, a brazen symbol of Bayreuth's (??) {{cite magazine}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)[title missing][author missing][excessive quote]
  7. ^ Emmerich, Peter (1992). Wagner in Bayreuth: A Documentary. Belgium: Philips Classics Productions, Baarn. pp. 69–71.
  8. ^ Bernard Shaw, The Perfect Wagnerite (1883) online at www.marxists.org Shaw's examination of Wagner's approach to the cycle
  9. ^ a b "Daughters chosen to run Bayreuth", BBC News, 1 September 2008. Retrieved on 1 September 2008.
  10. ^ Obituary Der Spiegel, 28 November 2007
  11. ^ "Bayreuth Festival's Wolfgang Wagner to Retire", Deutsche Welle, 29 April 2008
  12. ^ Hickley, Catherine (1 September 2008). "Wagner Sisters Katharina, Eva Named to Lead Bayreuth (Update2)". Bloomberg. Retrieved 1 September 2008.
  13. ^ McGroarty, Patrick; Ron Blum (1 September 2008). "Bayreuth names Wagner half-sisters as co-directors". International Herald Tribune. Retrieved 1 September 2008.
  14. ^ Roger Boyes, "Wagner hits a note of peace over Bayreuth", The Times (London), 2 September 2008.
  15. ^ Service, Tom (26 February 2014). "Eva Wagner to leave Bayreuth - what does this mean for the festival?". The Guardian. Guardian News & Media Limited. Retrieved 29 April 2020.
  16. ^ Gereben, Janos (25 February 2014). "Bayreuth: And Then There Was One". San Francisco Classical Voice. San Francisco Classical Voice. Retrieved 29 April 2020.
  17. ^ "Suspension Bayreuth Festival 2020". Bayreuther Festspiele. 31 March 2020. Retrieved 31 March 2020.
  18. ^ "Bayreuth Festival 2014". Bayreuther Festspiele. Retrieved 24 September 2013.
  19. ^ a b Bayreuther Festspiele: "Spielfolge/Programme 2014" leaflet, issued September 2013
  20. ^ Lucas Wiegelmann: "Mit den Förderzielen des Bundes nicht vereinbar". Die Welt, 24 June 2011
  21. ^ "Götterdämmerung". The Economist. 20 June 2011. Retrieved 24 September 2013.
  22. ^ "Was lange währt: Reform der Ticketvergabe in Bayreuth kommt voran". Klassik Magazine (in German). Retrieved 24 September 2013.
  23. ^ Tommasini, Anthony (1 August 2013). "At Bayreuth, Boos and Dropped Jaws". The New York Times. from the original on 7 December 2017. Retrieved 11 August 2018.
  24. ^ Kettle, Martin (3 August 2013). "Castorf has become the villain of the Bayreuth Ring cycle". The Guardian. Retrieved 3 July 2022.

Further reading

  • "Bayreuth", Time magazine, 11 August 1924
  • Wagner in Bayreuth, Documentary film on the festival narrated by Wolfgang Wagner. In German with English subtitles. Polygram Video, 1992
  • Wagner wins Bayreuth battle, BBC News Online, 14 December 2001

External links

  •   Media related to Bayreuth Festival at Wikimedia Commons
  • Bayreuth Festival (in German and English)
  • "How can I get tickets to the Bayreuth Festival?", faqs.org
  • Review of Patrice Chéreau's Centennial Ring

Coordinates: 49°57′36″N 11°34′47″E / 49.96000°N 11.57972°E / 49.96000; 11.57972

bayreuth, festival, this, article, about, annual, festival, building, used, bayreuth, festspielhaus, german, bayreuther, festspiele, music, festival, held, annually, bayreuth, germany, which, performances, operas, 19th, century, german, composer, richard, wagn. This article is about an annual festival For the building used see Bayreuth Festspielhaus The Bayreuth Festival German Bayreuther Festspiele is a music festival held annually in Bayreuth Germany at which performances of operas by the 19th century German composer Richard Wagner are presented Wagner himself conceived and promoted the idea of a special festival to showcase his own works in particular his monumental cycle Der Ring des Nibelungen and Parsifal Bayreuther Festspiele Bayreuth FestivalFestspielhaus in Bayreuth the festival s main venue in 2006GenreCanon of Wagner s stage worksFrequencyannualLocation s Bayreuth Bavaria GermanyInaugurated1876 147 years ago 1876 Websitewww wbr bayreuther festspiele wbr deBayreuth Festspielhaus in 1882 Performances take place in a specially designed theatre the Bayreuth Festspielhaus Wagner personally supervised the design and construction of the theatre which contained many architectural innovations to accommodate the huge orchestras for which Wagner wrote as well as the composer s particular vision about the staging of his works The Festival has become a pilgrimage destination for Wagnerians and classical music enthusiasts 1 Patronage certificate for funding the Bayreuth Festival issued on 1 February 1872 signed by Richard Wagner in the original By paying 300 Thaler the holder of the certificate acquired the right to attend three performances of the stage festival play Der Ring des Nibelungen Contents 1 Origins 2 Early history 3 Bayreuth under Nazi Germany 3 1 Bayreuth Memorial 4 New festival 5 The Wagner Werkstatt 6 21st century 6 1 Tickets 6 2 Der Ring des Nibelungen 7 Directors 8 Recordings 8 1 DVD 8 2 Laserdisc 8 3 VHS 8 4 CD 8 4 1 Historical recordings 8 4 2 Postwar performances 9 See also 10 References 11 Further reading 12 External linksOrigins EditThe origins of the Festival itself lie rooted in Richard Wagner s interest in establishing his financial independence A souring of the relationship with his patron Ludwig II of Bavaria led to his expulsion from Munich where he had originally intended to launch the festival Wagner next considered Nuremberg which would have reinforced the thematic significance of works such as Die Meistersinger On the advice of Hans Richter however the focus fell upon Bayreuth which enjoyed three distinct advantages First the town boasted a splendid venue the Markgrafliches Opernhaus built for Margrave Frederick and his wife Friederike Sophie Wilhelmine sister of Frederick the Great in 1747 With its ample capacity and strong acoustics the opera house was a good match for Wagner s vision Second the town of Bayreuth was located outside those regions where Wagner no longer owned the rights to the performance of his own works which he had sold off in 1864 in order to alleviate pressing financial concerns Finally the town had no cultural life that could offer competition to Wagner s own artistic dominance The Festival once launched would be the dominant feature of Bayreuth s cultural landscape In addition Richard Wagner did not want his works interpreted amid the hustle and noise or the distractions of a large city he sought a place remote from the usual theatrical world where it was so quiet so that the hearers could concentrate their whole attention on the work offered and could in the pauses refresh themselves in natural surroundings 2 In April 1870 Wagner and his wife Cosima visited Bayreuth On inspection the Opera House proved to be inadequate It was built to accommodate the baroque orchestras of the 18th century and was therefore unsuited for the complex stagings and large orchestras that Wagner s operas required Nonetheless the Burgermeisters proved open to assisting Wagner with the construction of an entirely new theatre and the Festival was planned to launch in 1873 After a fruitless meeting in the spring of 1871 with the German Chancellor Otto von Bismarck to obtain funds Wagner embarked on a fundraising tour across Germany including Leipzig and Frankfurt An initial public subscription proved disappointing until Wagner at the suggestion of his friend and admirer Emil Heckel launched a number of Wagner Societies to increase participation in the Festival s subscription Societies were established in Leipzig Berlin Vienna and other places Despite making direct appeals based on Wagner s role as a composer of the new German Reich the Societies and other fundraising channels were well short of the needed sum by the end of 1872 Wagner made another appeal to Bismarck in August 1873 and was again denied Desperate Wagner turned to his former patron Ludwig II who reluctantly agreed to help In January 1874 Ludwig granted 100 000 Thaler and construction on the theatre designed by architect Gottfried Semper started shortly thereafter A planned 1875 debut was postponed for a year due to construction and other delays Early history Edit Felix Mottl conducted Tristan und Isolde at Bayreuth in 1886 Since its opening in 1876 the Bayreuth Festival has been a socio cultural phenomenon The inauguration took place on 13 August 1876 with a performance of Beethoven s Choral Symphony which is occasionally programmed during the festival It was played at the post war reopening in 1951 and subsequently in 1953 1954 1963 2001 and had been planned for the cancelled 2020 season 3 Then came the first performance of Das Rheingold Present at this unique musical event were Kaiser Wilhelm Dom Pedro II of Brazil King Ludwig who attended in secret probably to avoid the Kaiser and other members of the nobility as well as the philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche who committed much effort to helping his then good friend Wagner establish the festival 4 and such accomplished composers as Anton Bruckner Edvard Grieg Pyotr Tchaikovsky Franz Liszt and the young Arthur Foote Artistically the festival was a success Something has taken place at Bayreuth which our grandchildren and their children will still remember wrote Tchaikovsky attending the Festival as a Russian correspondent Financially however the festival was a disaster and did not begin to make money until several years later Wagner abandoned his original plan to hold a second festival the following year and travelled to London to conduct a series of concerts in an attempt to make up the deficit Although the festival was plagued by financial problems in its early years it survived through state intervention and the continued support of influential Wagnerians including King Ludwig II of Bavaria From its inception the festival has attracted leading conductors and singers many of whom performed without pay Among these was Hans Richter who conducted the premiere of the Ring Cycle in 1876 Another was the talented conductor Hermann Levi who was personally chosen by Richard Wagner to conduct the debut of Parsifal in 1882 with the assistance of the young Engelbert Humperdinck 5 Following Wagner s death his widow Cosima continued running the festival at one or more frequently two year intervals She gradually introduced the remaining operas which complete the Bayreuth canon of Wagner s last ten completed operas Levi the son of a rabbi remained the festival s principal conductor for the next two decades Felix Mottl who was involved with the festival from 1876 to 1901 conducted Tristan und Isolde there in 1886 Until the 1920s performances were strictly in accordance with the traditions established under King Ludwig s patronage Not a note was cut from any of the enormous scores no concessions were made to the limits of human patience on the part of the audiences Cosima Wagner preserved the productions of Parsifal and the Ring just as they had been in Wagner s day defending any proposed changes with appeals to her son Siegfried Was this not how Papa did it in 1876 After Cosima s retirement in 1906 Siegfried Wagner took over management of the festival introducing new staging and performance styles His early death in 1930 left the Festival in the hands of his English born wife Winifred Wagner with Heinz Tietjen as artistic director Bayreuth under Nazi Germany Edit Patronage certificate for funding the Bayreuth festival issued 22 May 1922 In the 1920s well before the rise of the Nazi Party Winifred Wagner became a strong supporter and close personal friend of Adolf Hitler her correspondence with Hitler has never been released by the Wagner family She and other festival leaders were members of Nazi chief ideologue Alfred Rosenberg s Kampfbund fur deutsche Kultur which actively suppressed modernist music and works by degenerate artists The festival maintained some artistic independence under Nazi rule Ironically Hitler attended performances that included Jewish and foreign singers long after they had been banned from all other venues across Germany including homosexual heldentenor Max Lorenz married to a well known Jewish woman Winifred s influence with Hitler was so strong that Hitler even wrote a letter at her behest to anti fascist Italian conductor Arturo Toscanini begging him to lead the festival citation needed Toscanini who had conducted there in 1930 and 1931 refused in 1933 From 1933 to 1942 the festival was conducted principally by Karl Elmendorff It was in Nazi Germany that the festival made its first break from tradition abandoning the deteriorating 19th century sets created by Richard Wagner Many protested at the changes including prominent conductors such as Toscanini and Richard Strauss and even some members of the Wagner family In their view any change to the festival was a profanation against the Master Wagner Nevertheless Hitler approved of the changes thus paving the way for more innovations in the decades to come During the war the festival was turned over to the Nazi Party which continued to sponsor operas for wounded soldiers returning from the front These soldiers were forced to attend lectures on Wagner before the performances and most found the festival to be tedious 5 However as guests of the Fuhrer none complained Bayreuth Memorial Edit Memorial to Jewish singers in the Bayreuth Festival Park During the 1970s Winifred Wagner was repeatedly petitioned to install a memorial to the Jewish singers at the Bayreuth Festival who had been murdered in concentration camps 6 A plaque was finally installed honouring Ottilie Metzger Lattermann and Henriette Gottlieb after Winifred s death New festival EditTwo thirds of the town of Bayreuth was destroyed by American bombing in the final days of World War II taking with it the rotunda living room and guest room of Wahnfried though the theatre itself was undamaged Following the war Winifred Wagner was sentenced to probation by a war court for her support of the Nazi Party The court also banned her from administration of the Bayreuth Festival and its assets which fell eventually to her two sons Wolfgang and Wieland During American occupation of the region after World War II the theatre was used for army recreation and religious services for American soldiers Only popular concerts and mixed entertainment were allowed comedy dancing acrobatics and then only Die Fledermaus was staged When the Festival House was handed over to the city of Bayreuth in 1946 it was used for concerts of the Bayreuth Symphony Orchestra and the performances of such operas as Fidelio Tiefland Madama Butterfly and La traviata and talks about reopening of the Wagnerian Festival started Finally it reopened on 29 July 1951 with as always a performance by the Bayreuth Festival Orchestra under conductor Wilhelm Furtwangler of Beethoven s 9th Symphony followed by the first post war performance of Wagner s opera Parsifal 7 Under the direction of Wieland Wagner the New Bayreuth ushered in an era that was no less than revolutionary Gone were the elaborate naturalistic sets replaced with minimalist modern productions In comparison the pre war changes seemed tame For the first time in its history the Bayreuth audience booed at the end of productions Wieland was particularly derided for his 1956 production of Die Meistersinger von Nurnberg Stripped of its pageantry conservatives viewed the breaking of this sacred German tradition as an outrage 5 Wieland defended the changes as an attempt to create an invisible stage that would allow the audience to experience the full psychosocial aspects of the drama without the baggage and distraction of elaborate set designs Others have speculated that by stripping Wagner s works of their Germanic and historic elements Wieland was attempting to distance Bayreuth from its nationalistic past and create productions with universal appeal Over time many critics came to appreciate the unique beauty of Wieland s reinterpretation of his grandfather s works 5 Wieland s innovative productions invited comparison to Wolfgang s which critics unanimously found to be uninspired If Wieland s productions were radical Wolfgang s were regressive Although still minimalist in approach Wolfgang resurrected much of the naturalistic and romantic elements of pre war productions Thus when Wieland died prematurely from lung cancer in 1966 many wondered if Bayreuth had a future They began to question Bayreuth s primacy among German opera houses and some suggested that more interesting productions were being staged elsewhere 5 Around this time 1955 in order to broaden its audience the whole Bayreuth Festival company conducted performances in Paris and Barcelona performing Parsifal Die Walkure and Tristan und Isolde In 1973 faced with overwhelming criticism and family infighting the Bayreuth Festival and its assets were transferred to a newly created Richard Wagner Foundation The board of directors included members of the Wagner family and others appointed by the state As chairman Wolfgang Wagner remained in charge of administration of the festival The Wagner Werkstatt EditWhile Wolfgang Wagner continued to administer the festival beginning in the 1970s production was handled by a number of new directors in what Wolfgang called Werkstatt Bayreuth Bayreuth Workshop The idea was to turn the festival into an opportunity for directors to experiment with new methods for presenting the operas The change came out of necessity as it was impossible for Wolfgang to both administer and direct the festival It also provided an opportunity for Bayreuth to renew itself with each production rather than continue to present the same operas in the same way year after year Ingmar Bergman who famously made a film version in Swedish of Mozart s Die Zauberflote turned down an invitation to direct the festival The most sensational production in Werkstatt Bayreuth was the Centennial Ring Cycle under the direction of French director Patrice Chereau Chereau used an updated 19th century setting that followed the interpretation of George Bernard Shaw who saw the Ring as a social commentary on the exploitation of the working class by wealthy 19th century capitalists 8 The audience reaction was split between those who saw the production as an offence and those who considered it the best Ring Cycle ever produced The ensuing conflict short only of outright riot between supporters and detractors was unprecedented in the history of the festival The performances and the performers however were without dispute some of the best seen in the world of opera citation needed Other notable directors to have participated in Werkstatt Bayreuth included Jean Pierre Ponnelle Sir Peter Hall of the Royal Shakespeare Company Gotz Friedrich of the Deutsche Oper Berlin Harry Kupfer of the Berlin State Opera in the former communist East Germany and Heiner Muller of the Berliner Ensemble In the end Wolfgang s decision to bring in experimental directors helped rejuvenate Bayreuth and restore its reputation as the world leader in Wagnerian opera 21st century EditThere was uncertainty over how the Festival was to be managed after the retirement of Wolfgang Wagner at the end of August 2008 In 2001 the Festival s 21 member board of directors had voted for his daughter Eva Wagner Pasquier to succeed him Wolfgang Wagner however proposed to hand control over to his second wife Gudrun and their daughter Katharina 9 Gudrun died in 2007 10 No successor was named at that time but it was speculated that Wagner Pasquier and Katharina would eventually be named as joint directors of the festival 11 Directors have stated that preference will be given to descendants of Richard Wagner and that a non descendant would have to be a clearly better candidate citation needed On 1 September 2008 Wolfgang Wagner s daughters Eva Wagner Pasquier and Katharina Wagner were named by Bavaria s culture minister Thomas Goppel to take over the Festival They were to take up their duties immediately since their father had announced his retirement at the conclusion of the 2008 Festival 9 They were chosen ahead of the pair of their cousin Nike Wagner and Gerard Mortier who had placed a late bid for the directorship on 24 August 12 13 The conductor Christian Thielemann has agreed to act as chief adviser to the new directors effectively taking the role of music director of the Festival 14 In 2014 it was announced that Eva would be stepping down from the co directorship leaving in accord with her father s will 15 Katharina in sole charge 16 On the 31 March 2020 it was announced that due to the COVID 19 pandemic and the resulting restrictions the 2020 festival due to take place from 25 July to 30 August would be cancelled 17 The new Der Ring des Nibelungen production planned for that festival would probably be postponed until 2022 Tickets Edit The festival draws thousands of Wagner fans to Bayreuth every summer It is very difficult to get tickets because demand estimated at 500 000 greatly exceeds supply 58 000 tickets the waiting time is between five and ten years or more The process entails submitting an order form every summer applicants are usually successful after about ten years Failure to make an application every year results in being placed at the back of the queue Although some tickets are allocated by lottery preference is given to members of the Society of Friends of Bayreuth financial donors famous patrons and to regional and international Wagner societies which are distributed to their own members through lottery or the willingness to pay a high contribution However in 2013 tickets for one opera production were offered exclusively online on a first come first served basis with no preferential eligibility It is reported that they sold out within seconds citation needed This offer was repeated for the 2014 season with tickets being available for eight performances including one complete Ring cycle 18 As of 2014 retail ticket prices ranged from 320 for a front row stalls seat to 45 for a gallery third level back row seat 19 The Festival authorities assiduously police the traffic of tickets and monitor sites such as eBay On admission patrons are required to show photographic identification matching the name on the ticket In 2011 it was revealed that the German Bundesrechnungshof federal audit office were investigating the situation where for a publicly subsidised event only 40 percent of the tickets were actually available to the general public 20 21 Early in 2012 it was announced that changes would be made to the allocation system including the ending of allocations to Wagner Societies but not including the Society of Friends of Bayreuth as they make a substantial financial contribution and a reduction in the proportion reserved for travel agents and hotels As a result the proportion of tickets available to the general public would increase to about 65 percent of the total available 22 Der Ring des Nibelungen Edit Further information List of Bayreuth Festival productions of Der Ring des Nibelungen A new production of Der Ring des Nibelungen is presented every five to seven years following a year in which no Ring is presented In years in which the Ring is staged three other operas are also presented When no Ring is staged five other operas are presented Tickets for the Ring are normally sold only as a complete set for all four performances 19 The newest production of the Ring directed by Frank Castorf premiered in 2013 Castorf s radical staging of the cycle a colourful modern setting with the global race for oil as the underlying theme was received with lengthy booing at its premiere 23 24 Directors EditRichard Wagner 1876 1883 Cosima Liszt Wagner 1883 1908 Siegfried Wagner 1908 1930 Winifred Williams Wagner 1930 1945 Wieland Wagner and Wolfgang Wagner 1951 1966 Wolfgang Wagner 1967 2008 Eva Wagner Pasquier and Katharina Wagner 2008 2015 Katharina Wagner 2015 today Recordings EditDVD Edit Tannhauser 1978 Director Gotz Friedrich Conductor Sir Colin Davis Soloists Spas Wenkoff Dame Gwyneth Jones Bernd Weikl Hans Sotin Label Deutsche Grammophon Unitel Der Ring des Nibelungen 1980 Complete Cycle Director Patrice Chereau Conductor Pierre Boulez Soloists Dame Gwyneth Jones Donald McIntyre Peter Hofmann Jeannine Altmeyer Matti Salminen Label Deutsche Grammophon Unitel Parsifal 1981 Director Wolfgang Wagner Conductor Horst Stein Soloists Siegfried Jerusalem Eva Randova Bernd Weikl Hans Sotin Matti Salminen Label Deutsche Grammophon Unitel Tristan und Isolde 1983 Director stage design amp costumes Jean Pierre Ponnelle Conductor Daniel Barenboim Soloists Rene Kollo Johanna Meier Matti Salminen Hanna Schwarz Hermann Becht Label Deutsche Grammophon Unitel Die Meistersinger von Nurnberg 1984 Centenary Production Director Wolfgang Wagner Conductor Horst Stein Soloists Bernd Weikl Siegfried Jerusalem Mari Anne Haggander Hermann Prey Label Deutsche Grammophon Unitel Der fliegende Hollander 1985 Director Harry Kupfer Conductor Woldemar Nelsson Soloists Simon Estes Lisbeth Balslev Matti Salminen Label Deutsche Grammophon Unitel Lohengrin 1990 Director Werner Herzog Conductor Peter Schneider Soloists Paul Frey Cheryl Studer Manfred Schenk Label Deutsche Grammophon Unitel Der Ring des Nibelungen 1992 Director Harry Kupfer Conductor Daniel Barenboim Soloists John Tomlinson Anne Evans Nadine Secunde Siegfried Jerusalem Label 1 Warner Classics Tristan und Isolde 1995 Director Heiner Muller Stage design Erich Wonder Costumes Yohji Yamamoto Conductor Daniel Barenboim Soloists Siegfried Jerusalem Waltraud Meier Falk Struckmann Label Deutsche Grammophon Unitel Gotterdammerung 1997 Director Alfred Kirchner Stage design rosalie Conductor James Levine Soloists Wolfgang Schmidt Deborah Polaski Hanna Schwarz Eric Halfvarson Ekkehard Wlaschiha Falk Struckmann Anne Schwanewilms Label Deutsche Grammophon Unitel Die Meistersinger von Nurnberg 2008 Director Katharina Wagner Conductor Sebastian Weigle Soloists Michaela Kaune Klaus Florian Vogt Franz Hawlata Michael Volle Label BF Medien United MotionLaserdisc Edit Tristan und Isolde 1983 Conductor Daniel Barenboim Orchester der Bayreuther Festspiele Staged and Directed by Jean Pierre Ponnelle Soloists Rene Kollo Johanna Meier Matti Salminen Hermann Becht Hanna Schwarz Unitel Laserdisc Philips 070 509 1VHS Edit Die Meistersinger von Nurnberg 1984 Conductor Horst Stein Orchester der Bayreuther Festspiele Staged by Wolfgang Wagner Video Director Brian Large Soloists Bernd Weikl Siegfried Jerusalem Hermann Prey Mari Anne Haggander Graham Clark Unitel Parsifal 1999 Conductor Giuseppe Sinopoli Chor und Orchester der Bayreuther Festspiele Staged by Wolfgang Wagner Soloists Poul Elming Linda Watson Hans Sotin Falk Struckmann Ekkehard Wlaschiha UnitelCD Edit Historical recordings Edit Historical performances of Wagner s operas at Bayreuth available on CD are too numerous to list The following are a few outstanding examples 100 Jahre Bayreuth auf Schallplatte The Early Festival Singers 1887 1906 Gebhardt RecordsThis 12 CD set put together all of the surviving recordings done by the Gramophone and Typewriter Company in 1904 at Bayreuth and includes some of the original artists from the 1876 debut ListenTristan und Isolde 1928 Conductor Karl Elmendorff Soloists Nanny Larsen Todsen as Isolde Anny Helm Brangane Gunnar Graarud Tristan Rudolf Bockelmann Kurwenal Ivar Andresen Konig Marke Joachim Sattler Melot Gustav Rodin Ein junger Seemann Hans Beer Ein Hirt recorded during the summer of 1928 with the approval of Siegfried Wagner in the Festspielhaus without an audience by Columbia EMI onto 40 78rpm sides for 20 discs several reissues on CD Grammofono 2000 AB 78925 26 2 CDs First Bayreuth Recordings Vol 2 Naxos CD 8 110200 02 3 CDs Preiser PSR 90383 2 CDs Gotterdammerung 1942 Conductor Karl Elmendorff Soloists Marta Fuchs Brunnhilde Camilla Kallab 1 Norne Waltraute Else Fischer Gutrune Set Svanholm Siegfried Friedrich Dalberg Hagen Robert Burg Alberich Egmont Koch Gunther from a radio broadcast of Deutscher Rundfunk this is what German soldiers would have heard as Guests of the Fuhrer issued by various labels among them Music and Arts CD 1058 4 CDs Preiser PRE 90164 4 CDs Die Meistersinger von Nurnberg 1943 Conductor Wilhelm Furtwangler Soloists Maria Muller Eva Camilla Kallab Magdalene Max Lorenz Walther Jaro Prohaska Hans Sachs Josef Greindl Viet Pogner Eugen Fuchs Beckmesser issued by various labels among them Grammofono 2000 AB 78602 05 4 CDs Postwar performances Edit Ludwig van Beethoven Symphony No 9 Choral 1951 Conductor Wilhelm Furtwangler Soloists Elisabeth Schwarzkopf Elisabeth Hongen Hans Hopf Otto Edelmann EMI mono Die Meistersinger von Nurnberg 1951 Conductor Herbert von Karajan Soloists Elisabeth Schwarzkopf Otto Edelmann Erich Kunz Hans Hopf Gerhard Unger Recorded live EMI mono Gotterdammerung 1951 Conductor Hans Knappertsbusch Testament Records mono Parsifal 1951 Conductor Hans Knappertsbusch Soloists Wolfgang Windgassen Ludwig Weber George London Martha Modl Hermann Uhde Arnold van Mill Recorded live Teldec mono Tristan und Isolde 1952 Conductor Herbert von Karajan Soloists Ramon Vinay Martha Modl Ira Malaniuk Ludwig Weber Hans Hotter Hermann Uhde Recorded live on 23 July Orfeo mono Der Ring des Nibelungen 1953 Conductor Clemens Krauss Soloists Ramon Vinay Wolfgang Windgassen Regina Resnik Astrid Varnay Hans Hotter Hermann Uhde Gustav Neidlinger Ludwig Weber Josef Greindl Gerhard Stolze Ira Malaniuk Maria von Ilosvay Paul Kuen Rita Streich Recorded live Archipel Records mono Lohengrin 1953 Conductor Joseph Keilberth Decca Records LW 50006 mono Der Ring des Nibelungen 1955 Conductor Joseph Keilberth Recorded live Testament stereo Der Ring des Nibelungen 1956 Conductor Hans Knappertsbusch Soloists Wolfgang Windgassen Ludwig Suthaus Astrid Varnay Gre Brouwenstijn Georgine von Milinkovic Jean Madeira Hans Hotter Gustav Neidlinger Josef Greindl Maria von Ilosvay Recorded Live Orfeo mono Parsifal 1962 Conductor Hans Knappertsbusch Soloists Jess Thomas Hans Hotter George London Irene Dalis Gustav Neidlinger Martti Talvela Philips stereo Tristan und Isolde 1966 Conductor Karl Bohm Soloists Birgit Nilsson Wolfgang Windgassen Christa Ludwig Martti Talvela Eberhard Waechter Deutsche Grammophon stereo Der Ring des Nibelungen 1966 67 Conductor Karl Bohm Soloists Helga Dernesch Birgit Nilsson Theo Adam James King Leonie Rysanek Wolfgang Windgassen Philips stereo Die Meistersinger von Nurnberg 1968 Conductor Karl Bohm Soloists Theo Adam Karl Ridderbusch Waldemar Kmentt Dame Gwyneth Jones Orfeo stereo Parsifal 1970 Conductor Pierre Boulez Soloists James King Franz Crass Thomas Stewart Sir Donald McIntyre and Dame Gwyneth Jones Deutsche Grammophon stereo Der Ring des Nibelungen 1980 Conductor Pierre Boulez Soloists Dame Gwyneth Jones Sir Donald McIntyre Manfred Jung Peter Hofmann Jeannine Altmeyer Philips stereo Der Ring des Nibelungen 1991 Conductor Daniel Barenboim Warner Classics stereo Der Ring des Nibelungen 2008 Conductor Christian Thielemann Opus Arte stereo See also EditBayreuther BlatterReferences Edit How to get tickets for the Wagner Festival in Bayreuth Archived 28 January 2010 at the Wayback Machine on wagneropera net Retrieved 1 July 2013 Wagner Siegfried 1 June 1930 The Bayreuth Festival Plays The Musical Times 71 1048 506 507 doi 10 2307 917356 ISSN 0027 4666 JSTOR 917356 Auffuhrungsdatenbank Nietzsche Friedrich Twilight of the Idols Penguin Books 2003 Translator s note R J Hollingdale a b c d e Spotts Frederic 1994 Bayreuth A History of the Wagner Festival New Haven and London Yale University Press ISBN 0300066651 page needed Opera Vol 48 London 1997 pp 914 915 The festival s archive with its correspondence with Hitler and other documentation of the period is still closed to research He has not even been willing to have a modest memorial for the three Bayreuth singers who perished in concentration camps The proposal for a memorial plaque was proposed to Wolfgang ages ago by a retired singer and Bayreuth antiquarian bookseller Peer Baedeker And therein lies a revealing story When the centenary festival opened in 1976 with a wreath laying ceremony at Wagner s grave Baedeker placed his own wreath with a ribbon attached with the words In memory of Richard Breitenfeld Henriette Gottlieb Ottilie Metzger Lattermann Honoured as festival singers murdered in Nazi concentration camps Within 24 hours of the ceremony the ribbon had vanished An article about the incident which later appeared in an Israeli newspaper was sent to Winifred who wrote the following ineffable letter to Baedeker Herr Heinrich Schaar in Munich sends me from time to time cuttings from the Israel Nachrichten including this one Herr Schaar appears to suspect that this was my doing or at my behest since otherwise he would not have sent me the press cutting In the first place I had no idea you had laid a wreath and in the second I seldom go to RW s resting place since it is now permanently open to the public it is never possible to visit the grave alone I myself never heard Frau Metzger Lattermann in Bayreuth but I know that my husband had a very high impression of her Frau Gottlieb sang here in my time and I had a high opinion of her as well Herr Breitenfeld is unknown to me But were all three really killed at Auschwitz I would doubt that in the case of Frau Lattermann since she must have been terribly old With best wishes also to your wife whom I recently greeted in front of Wahnfried The casualness of this brush off the brutal indifference to the murder of three old singers speaks volumes about the attitude in Bayreuth to its past And so the monument that the festival visitor sees today on the Green Hill the massive copy of the bust of a glowering Wagner made for Hitler by the Nazi sculptor Arno Breker is properly viewed a brazen symbol of Bayreuth s a href Template Cite magazine html title Template Cite magazine cite magazine a Missing or empty title help title missing author missing excessive quote Emmerich Peter 1992 Wagner in Bayreuth A Documentary Belgium Philips Classics Productions Baarn pp 69 71 Bernard Shaw The Perfect Wagnerite 1883 online at www marxists org Shaw s examination of Wagner s approach to the cycle a b Daughters chosen to run Bayreuth BBC News 1 September 2008 Retrieved on 1 September 2008 Obituary Der Spiegel 28 November 2007 Bayreuth Festival s Wolfgang Wagner to Retire Deutsche Welle 29 April 2008 Hickley Catherine 1 September 2008 Wagner Sisters Katharina Eva Named to Lead Bayreuth Update2 Bloomberg Retrieved 1 September 2008 McGroarty Patrick Ron Blum 1 September 2008 Bayreuth names Wagner half sisters as co directors International Herald Tribune Retrieved 1 September 2008 Roger Boyes Wagner hits a note of peace over Bayreuth The Times London 2 September 2008 Service Tom 26 February 2014 Eva Wagner to leave Bayreuth what does this mean for the festival The Guardian Guardian News amp Media Limited Retrieved 29 April 2020 Gereben Janos 25 February 2014 Bayreuth And Then There Was One San Francisco Classical Voice San Francisco Classical Voice Retrieved 29 April 2020 Suspension Bayreuth Festival 2020 Bayreuther Festspiele 31 March 2020 Retrieved 31 March 2020 Bayreuth Festival 2014 Bayreuther Festspiele Retrieved 24 September 2013 a b Bayreuther Festspiele Spielfolge Programme 2014 leaflet issued September 2013 Lucas Wiegelmann Mit den Forderzielen des Bundes nicht vereinbar Die Welt 24 June 2011 Gotterdammerung The Economist 20 June 2011 Retrieved 24 September 2013 Was lange wahrt Reform der Ticketvergabe in Bayreuth kommt voran Klassik Magazine in German Retrieved 24 September 2013 Tommasini Anthony 1 August 2013 At Bayreuth Boos and Dropped Jaws The New York Times Archived from the original on 7 December 2017 Retrieved 11 August 2018 Kettle Martin 3 August 2013 Castorf has become the villain of the Bayreuth Ring cycle The Guardian Retrieved 3 July 2022 Further reading Edit Bayreuth Time magazine 11 August 1924 Wagner in Bayreuth Documentary film on the festival narrated by Wolfgang Wagner In German with English subtitles Polygram Video 1992 Wagner wins Bayreuth battle BBC News Online 14 December 2001External links Edit Wikisource has original text related to this article Friedrich Nietzsche Richard Wagner in Bayreuth Media related to Bayreuth Festival at Wikimedia Commons Bayreuth Festival in German and English How can I get tickets to the Bayreuth Festival faqs org Review of Patrice Chereau s Centennial Ring Portal Opera Coordinates 49 57 36 N 11 34 47 E 49 96000 N 11 57972 E 49 96000 11 57972 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bayreuth Festival amp oldid 1152117443, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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