Bayreuth Festival 2016 - The Richard Wagner Society
Transcription
Bayreuth Festival 2016 - The Richard Wagner Society
The Richard Wagner Society Inc. Bayreuth Festival 2016 Information Booklet 13 January 2016 The Bayreuther Festspiele (Bayreuth Festival) 2016 runs from Monday 25 July 2016 to Sunday 28 August 2016 Tickets available for purchase by members of The Richard Wagner Society (Victoria) are for operas to be performed during the period Thursday 18 August 2016 to Thursday 25 August 2016 Page 1 of 30 Registration Number: A0004004P ABN: 62057122885 PO Box 7367, Melbourne VIC 3004 Bayreuth Festival 2016 - Information Booklet Introduction Attending the Bayreuther Festspiele is truly a remarkable experience. The Richard Wagner Society (Victoria) has put together this information booklet in order to assist not only those of you who will be attending the Festspiele for the first time but also repeat visitors. The material is intended only as a guide to your Bayreuth experience and does not represent an endorsement of any particular hotel, restaurant, or event. The aim of this booklet is to provide you with information about the Bayreuth Festival 2016 to help you plan your visit to Bayreuth so you can attend one or more of the operas to be performed during the Festival. Tickets available for purchase by members of The Richard Wagner Society (Victoria) are for these operas: 1. Der Ring des Nibelungen starting on Saturday 20 August 2016. 2. Parsifal on Wednesday 24 August 2016. 3. Der fliegende Holländer on Thursday 18 August 2016. This booklet has information about: The Festspiele Experience – see page 3. The town of Bayreuth – see page 5. o How to get there – see page 6. o Getting around – see page 6. o Bayreuth Attractions – see page 7. o Bayreuth Churches – see page 9. o Bayreuth Museums – see page 10. o Bayreuth Parks – see page 16. o Where to Stay – see page 17. The Bayreuth Festival Theatre – see page 18. o Location map – see page 20. o Seating plan – see page 21. The operas for which the Society has received an allocation of tickets in 2016 – see page 22. o The cast for each opera – starts on page 23. Page 2 of 30 Registration Number: A0004004P ABN: 62057122885 PO Box 7367, St Kilda Road VIC 8004 Bayreuth Festival 2016 - Information Booklet The Festspiele Experience Getting to the Theatre People arrive at the Festspielhaus (Festival Theatre) well before the curtain – usually an hour or so before. The park around the Festspielhaus is quite lovely and makes for pleasant strolls and picnics. The #5 bus (Hohe Warte) provides the closest public transportation alternative. Some hotels offer bus transport for free or for a small charge. Parking at the Theatre Parking at the Festspielhaus is ample and free, but you will certainly want to arrive about an hour before the curtain. Parking lots can be found behind the Festspielhaus. Comfort Factors Since this is a summer festival, most people dress for the occasion. At least half wear evening clothes with the occasional white tie and tails; others wear suits with ties or sport coats with ties and pretty dresses or pants suits. No matter what one wears, the key is comfort. The Festspielhaus is not air conditioned, and the theatre doors are closed during the intervals. There is a chilled air blower which comes on during interval. However, the theatre can become warmer as the night progresses. The weather can be hot or cool and/or rainy, so you need to plan accordingly and check the weather prior to leaving home. Theatre Seating There are 4 main seating areas in the Festspielhaus: 1. Parkett – Stalls. 2. Loge – Boxes. 3. Balkon – Balcony. 4. Galerie – Gallery. The seats in the Parkett have no arms and are not particularly well padded, nor are the seat backs. Most people, therefore, bring thin cushions - not thick ones, please, that obstruct the view of those behind you. Some hotels supply comfortable cushions, so you may want to ask if they provide this service when you make your hotel reservations. There are a limited number of cushions available for hire at the Festspielhaus cloak room. The seats in the Balkon and the Loge are padded and quite comfortable. Theatre Etiquette Fifteen minutes prior to the curtain, a brass ensemble arrives on the balcony and signals the time with a fanfare taken from the act to follow. Five minutes later, the brass repeats the fanfare twice; and at five minutes prior to the curtain, the ensemble plays the theme three times. For Das Rheingold, there is only the single set of fanfares, as there is no intermission. After the doors are locked, no one will be admitted. If you're late, you're out of luck. The audience is among the best behaved in the world - no applause during the performance or until the house is completely dark and the last note has drifted into the stratosphere. There are no surtitles, so come prepared. Page 3 of 30 Registration Number: A0004004P ABN: 62057122885 PO Box 7367, St Kilda Road VIC 8004 Bayreuth Festival 2016 - Information Booklet Bookshop with Festival Artists Signing During the Festival the centrally located Markgrafen bookshop displays a timetable of the artists who attend for photos and signing. Early arrival on the set "Signierstunde" days is advised as there is always a queue. Markgrafen Buchhandlung Book Shop Address: Opernstraße 1-3, 95444 Bayreuth, Germany Phone: +49 921 63009 Page 4 of 30 Registration Number: A0004004P ABN: 62057122885 PO Box 7367, St Kilda Road VIC 8004 Bayreuth Festival 2016 - Information Booklet Bayreuth1 Bayreuth is a sizeable town in northern Bavaria, Germany, on the Red Main River in a valley between the Franconian Jura and the Fichtelgebirge Mountains. The town's roots date back to 1194 and it is nowadays the capital of Upper Franconia with a population of 72,576 (2009). It is world-famous for its annual Bayreuth Festival, at which performances of operas by the 19th-century German composer Richard Wagner are presented. The town is best known for its association with the composer Richard Wagner, who lived in Bayreuth from 1872 until his death in 1883. Wagner's villa, "Wahnfried", was constructed in Bayreuth under the sponsorship of King Ludwig II of Bavaria, and was converted after World War II into a Wagner Museum. In the northern part of Bayreuth is the Festival Hall, an opera house specially constructed for and exclusively devoted to the performance of Wagner's operas. The premieres of the final two works of Wagner's Ring Cycle ("Siegfried" and "Götterdämmerung"); the cycle as a whole; and of Parsifal took place here. Every summer, Wagner's operas are performed at the Festspielhaus during the month-long Richard Wagner Festival, commonly known as the Bayreuth Festival. The Festival draws thousands each year, and has persistently been sold out since its inauguration in 1876. Currently, waiting lists for tickets can stretch for 10 years or more. Owing to Wagner's relationship with the then unknown philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche, the first Bayreuth festival is cited as a key turning point in Nietzsche's philosophical development. Though at first an enthusiastic champion of Wagner's music, Nietzsche ultimately became hostile, viewing the festival and its revellers as symptom of cultural decay and bourgeois decadence - an event which led him to turn his eye upon the moral values esteemed by society as a whole - "Nietzsche clearly preferred to see Bayreuth fail than succeed by mirroring a society gone wrong." 1 Information obtained from Wikipedia. Page 5 of 30 Registration Number: A0004004P ABN: 62057122885 PO Box 7367, St Kilda Road VIC 8004 Bayreuth Festival 2016 - Information Booklet Getting There2 By Train Frequent train services connect Bayreuth to other regions of Franconia and Northern Bavaria. Regular services exist seven days a week to and from: Nuremberg o Regional-Express (RE) trains once an hour (66 minutes travel time). Many times these trains separate en route, so make certain to board the correct train segment. o As a stop on the Interregio-Express (IRE) service between Nuremberg and Dresden (49 minutes from Nuremberg, 3.5 hours from Dresden). Würzburg o Direct RE trains every two hours (2.5 hours). o Otherwise a change in Nuremberg or Lichtenfels is necessary. Dresden - With the IRE in 3.5 hours. Bamberg - 1.5 hours by RE, sometimes a change in Lichtenfels is necessary. The Hauptbahnhof (main train station) is located approximately 1 km north of the city centre, easily accessed by foot. Several buses also run from the train station to the central bus station in the town centre (Lines 2, 3, 5, 8, 9, and 13). By Car Bayreuth is easily accessible on the autobahn A9, approximately 70 km north of Nuremberg and 40 km south of Hof. By Plane The nearest airport with regular commercial service is in Nuremberg. Many international flights arrive in Germany via Frankfurt or Munich, however. The nearby Airport Bayreuth is available for private planes or to charter planes. Getting Around3 The bus network around Bayreuth provides extensive coverage of the city and surrounding areas, with most buses running in 20-minute intervals. The central bus station (Zentrale Omnibus Haltestelle, ZOH) is located one block north of Maximilianstrasse near the city hall (Rathaus). The bus plan and schedule can be found at the website for BVB-Bayreuth (in German only). Day passes (Tageskarte) are available. Compared to larger cities, Bayreuth is relatively easy to tackle by car. The pedestrian-only area in the centre of town is confined to a few streets, and parking garages are easy to find. Biking is easy and convenient in Bayreuth. Many scenic bike paths radiate from Bayreuth into the surrounding areas. Most sights of interest are easily reached by foot within the city. Exceptions to this are the Festspielhaus and the Eremitage, both of which are easily accessed by bus or bike. Taxis do not cruise but can be ordered from hotels or the nearest commercial establishment. Taxi stands are at the Bahnhof and at Citibank (Marktplatz), and they do line up at the Festspielhaus following the performance. 2 3 Information obtained from Wikitravel. Information obtained from Wikitravel. Page 6 of 30 Registration Number: A0004004P ABN: 62057122885 PO Box 7367, St Kilda Road VIC 8004 Bayreuth Festival 2016 - Information Booklet Things to Do in Bayreuth One can easily keep occupied right in Bayreuth for the length of the Festival, taking advantage of the many concerts, lectures, and local attractions. What one does is predicated upon just how deeply one wants to become immersed in the Festival Experience. Wagner was not the only famous person who lived in Bayreuth. The Margrave of Brandenburg-Bayreuth got here first and left his mark. Bayreuth Card The Bayreuth Card is a three-day pass which covers public transportation, a city tour, and free entry into nine museums (Historisches Museum, Richard-Wagner-Museum at Haus Wahnfried, Jean-Paul-Museum, Franz-Liszt-Museum, Masonic Museum, Fayence Museum, Maisel Beer Museum, Urwelt Museum in Oberfranken, and Art Museum). You can purchase a Bayreuth Card at the Tourist Information office (which is located at Luitpoldplatz 9, between the city centre and the train station), at many attractions, and at some hotels. Margravine Wilhelmine Palaces Combination Ticket The Margravine Wilhelmine Palaces Combination Ticket covers these attractions: Bayreuth New Palace, Margravial Opera House, Hermitage Old Palace, Garden Museum Fantaisie Palace, Oriental Buildung at Sanspareil Rock Garden, and Zwernitz Castle. Bayreuth Attractions4 Most attractions in Bayreuth hail from the residence of Margravine Wilhelmine and her husband Margrave Friedrich. A diligent supporter of the arts and culture, Wilhelmine brought Italian architects and French builders to construct many of the town's historical landmarks. As such, much of the architecture reflects heavy baroque and rococo influences. With its wide pedestrian streets, the city centre is easy to stroll, and provides a pleasant contrast to many other Bavarian towns loaded with medieval architecture. During the summer many cafes and ice cream parlours set up outdoor seating on the main shopping streets, Maximilianstrasse, Sophienstrasse, and Von-Römer-Strasse. Festival Theatre (Festspielhaus), Festspielhügel 1-2 (Bus 5 to Am Festspielhaus), ☎ +49 (09 21) 7 87 80. Open Daily except Mon. 10AM and 2PM (Dec-Apr) or 10AM, 11AM, 2PM, and 3PM (Sept-Oct). Built in 1872, this opera house still ranks among the best in the world in design and acoustics. Home to the Richard Wagner Festival every summer. Just north of the main train station, take bus 5 to Am Festspielhaus. The grounds are crowded, tours seldom, and tickets rare during the annual Richard Wagner Festival in late July-August each year. 4 Information obtained from Wikitravel. Page 7 of 30 Registration Number: A0004004P ABN: 62057122885 PO Box 7367, St Kilda Road VIC 8004 Bayreuth Festival 2016 - Information Booklet Garden Museum Fantaisie Palace and Park (Schloss and Park Fantaisie), Bambergerstr. 3, 95488 Eckersdorf/Donndorf (Take bus 8231, 8433, 8446, or 8449 towards Donndorf to stop Fantaisie), ☎ +49 (09 21) 73 14 00 11. Open Daily except Mon. 9AM-6PM (Apr-Sept) or 10AM-4PM (Oct 1st15th), closed Oct. 16th to Apr 1st. The 18th century palace designed by the daughter of Margrave Friedrich and Margravine Wilhelmine, features Germany's first garden design museum. Located 5 km west of Bayreuth, take bus 8231, 8433, 8446, or 8449 towards Donndorf to stop Fantaisie. Hermitage/Old Palace (Eremitage/Altes Schloss), Eremitage 1 (Take Bus 2 or 3 to Eremitage), ☎ +49 (09 21) 7 59 69 37 (sgvbayreuth@bsv.bayern.de). Open Daily 9AM-6PM (AprSept) or 10AM-4PM (Oct 1st-15th), closed Oct. 16th to Apr 1st. The old palace of Margrave Georg Wilhelm on the outskirts of town, the palace was expanded and the gardens created by Wilhelmine as a summer residence. The ornate fountains begin their waterworks on the hour from 10AM to 5PM. Guided tours are available. The Eremitage is approximately 6 km outside Bayreuth, take bus 2 or 3 to Eremitage. Margravial Opera House (Markgräfliches Opernhaus), Opernstr. 8, ☎ +49 (09 21) 7 59 69 22 (sgvbayreuth@bsv.bayern.de). Open Daily 9AM-6PM (AprSept) or 10AM-4PM (Oct-Mar). The baroque opera house, commissioned by Margravine Wilhelmine and designed by famous Giuseppe Galli Bibiena and son Carlo from Italy, was completed in 1748 and remained Germany's largest opera house until 1871. This ornate opera house partially drew Richard Wagner's attention to Bayreuth. New Palace (Neues Schloss), Ludwigstr. 21, ☎ +49 (09 21) 7 59 69 21 (sgvbayreuth@bsv.bayern.de). Open Daily except Mon. 9AM-6PM (Apr-Sept) or 10AM-4PM (Oct-Mar). The new residence of the Margrave Friedrich and his wife Wilhelmine after their old residence burnt down. It was designed and built by the French builder Joseph Saint-Pierre, and completed in 1754. The entrance fee includes entrance to the two museums inside: The Museum "Margravine Wilhelmine's Bayreuth" and the museum "Bayreuth Faience Rummel Collection," featuring porcelain manufactured in Bayreuth in the 18th century. Rooms of interest include the Garden Rooms, Cedar Room, Old Music Room, and the Cabinet of Fragmented Mirrors (designed by Wilhelmine herself). Page 8 of 30 Registration Number: A0004004P ABN: 62057122885 PO Box 7367, St Kilda Road VIC 8004 Bayreuth Festival 2016 - Information Booklet Bayreuth Churches5 Castle Church and Tower (Schlosskirche and Schlossturm), Schlossberglein 5, 95444 Bayreuth, ☎ +49 (09 21) 885 88. Opens for prearranged tours. The court chapel and tower were also commissioned and built by Friedrich and Wilhelmine, completed in 1758. The burial vault of the Friedrich and Wilhelmine is located here. The spiral staircase in the tower features a ramp to bring supplies up to the guardroom, which has a great view over the town and to the nearby Fichtelgebirge. Spitalkirche (Spitalkirche). The hospital church is located at the west end of the main market street Maximilianstrasse. It is Lutheran and is managed by the town of Bayreuth as part of the Hospital Foundation. Stadtkirche (Stadtkirche). The Stadtkirche is a Gothic three nave basilica dedicated to the Holy Trinity. The oldest parts of the church date back to the 12th century. In a side nave there is the crypt of the Hohenzollern Dynasty, for the margraves of Brandenburg-Bayreuth. 5 Information obtained from Wikitravel. Page 9 of 30 Registration Number: A0004004P ABN: 62057122885 PO Box 7367, St Kilda Road VIC 8004 Bayreuth Festival 2016 - Information Booklet Bayreuth Museums6 For a town of its size, Bayreuth is rich in museums; over two dozen can be found in and around the city. Noteworthy among the many are the Richard Wagner Museum and FranzLiszt-Museum, documenting the lives of these prominent German and Hungarian composers, the Guinness Book of World Records recognized Maisel's Brewery and Cooper's Museum, as well as the museums located in the New Palace: Bayreuther Faiences - The Rummel Collection, The State Galleries and Margravine Wilhelmine's Bayreuth. Every fall the museums offer a Bayreuth Museum Night (Bayreuther Museumsnacht). On this night, a single ticket allows entry to every museum in the city from 8PM until 2AM. Archaeological Museum (Archäologisches Museum), Ludwigstr. 21 (Italian Building of the New Palace), ☎ +49 (0) 9 21 / 6 53 07. End of April to beginning of November: 10AM3PM on Saturdays, or by appointment. Archeological finds from Upper Franconia and laid out in eight rooms, spanning the stone age through the middle ages. Most text descriptions might be only in German. Bayreuther Faiences - The Rummel Collection (Sammlung Bayreuther Fayencen), In the New Palace, ☎ +49 (0) 9 21/7 59 69 21. A collection of porcelain manufactured in Bayreuth between 1716 and 1788. See New Palace above for more information. Catacombs of Bayreuth's Aktien Brewery (Katakomben der Bayreuther AKTIEN-Brauerei), Kulmbacherstr. 60, ☎ +49 (0) 9 21 / 401-234 (katakomben@bayreutherbierbrauerei.de). Tours Saturdays at 4PM, or group tours by prior arrangement. Aktien Breweries provides an interesting tour through the sandstone beer caverns that operated from the 16th through the 19th centuries. Since the caverns stay very cool throughout the year, appropriate clothing is recommended. 6 Information obtained from Wikitravel. Page 10 of 30 Registration Number: A0004004P ABN: 62057122885 PO Box 7367, St Kilda Road VIC 8004 Bayreuth Festival 2016 - Information Booklet Fire Brigade Museum (Feuerwehrmuseum), An der Feuerwache 4, ☎ +49 (0) 9 21/4 82 99. Open upon prior arrangement. A collection of fire engines from different eras and regions. Franz-Liszt-Museum, Wahnfriedstr. 9, ☎ +49 (0) 9 21 / 5 16 64 88. Sep - Jun: 10AM-noon & 2PM-5PM; Jul - Aug: 10AM5PM. The house of Franz Liszt, the famous Hungarian composer and father-in-law to Richard Wagner. Very near the Richard Wagner museum. German Freemason Museum (Deutsches FreimaurerMuseum), Im Hofgarten 1, ☎ +49 (0) 9 21 / 6 98 24 (museum.bayreuth@freimaurer.org). Tu-F 10AM-noon and 2PM-4PM; Sa 10AM-noon. A museum run by the German Freemason's presenting the history of the organization. Page 11 of 30 Registration Number: A0004004P ABN: 62057122885 PO Box 7367, St Kilda Road VIC 8004 Bayreuth Festival 2016 - Information Booklet German Typewriter Museum (Deutsches Schreibmaschinenmuseum), Bernecker Str. 11, ☎ +49 (0) 9 21/2 34 45. M-F by telephone appointment. A collection of typewriters dating back to 1864. The collection in Bayreuth began in 1936, and has expanded ever since. Historical Museum (Historisches Museum), Kirchplatz 6, ☎ +49 (0) 9 21 / 7 64 01 11 (historischesmuseum@bayreuth.de). Tu-Su 10AM-5PM; Jul Aug: also open Mondays. This museum chronicles the history of Bayreuth from a small Bavarian village to one of the most culturally-important small cities in Germany. The 17th century building provides a suitable setting for the historical collections. Iwalewa House (Iwalewa-Haus), Münzgasse 9, ☎ +49 (0) 9 21/55 36 81. Tu-Su 2PM-6PM. Afro-cultural center of the University of Bayreuth. Jean Paul Museum, Wahnfriedstr. 1, ☎ +49 (0) 9 21 / 5 07 14 44 (info@wagnermuseum.de). Sep - Jun: 10AM-noon & 2PM-5PM; Jul - Aug: 10AM-5PM. A small museum dedicated to the life and works of the German poet, who lived his last years from 1804 - 1825 in Bayreuth. The museum is in the former residence of Richard Wagner's daughter Eva. Page 12 of 30 Registration Number: A0004004P ABN: 62057122885 PO Box 7367, St Kilda Road VIC 8004 Bayreuth Festival 2016 - Information Booklet Little Poster Museum (Kleines Plakatmuseum), FriedrichPuchta-Str. 12, ☎ +49 (0) 9 21/8 24 58. Tu & Th 4PM-6PM and by appointment. A collection of contemporary poster art primarily concerning popular culture advertisements (such as movie and performance advertisements). Maisel's Brewery and Coopers Museum (Maisel's Brauerei und Büttnerei Museum), Kulmbacherstr. 40, ☎ +49 (0) 9 21 / 40 12 34 (brauereimuseum@maisel.com). Daily 2PM. The Guinness Book Of World Records' Most Comprehensive Beer Museum occupies the first brewery building of Maisel's Brewery (taken out of commission in the 1970s). The 90 minute tour covers the entirety of the brewing process, and of course finishes with a glass of Maisel's Weissbier. Group tours for 12 or more people can be booked by calling in advance. Museum of Agricultural Tools and Equipment (Museum für bäuerliche Arbeitsgeräte), Adolf-Wächter-Str. 17, ☎ +49 (0) 9 21/5 75 15. May - Oct: M-F 9:30AM-noon, Su 2PM5PM; Rest of the year and for groups, irregularly or by appointment. A collection of agricultural equipment highlighting the tools and techniques of farmers from Upper Franconia. What started as a private collection by Günter Schmidt was taken over by the city and offered as a public museum starting in 1972. Housed in a historic farmhouse. Page 13 of 30 Registration Number: A0004004P ABN: 62057122885 PO Box 7367, St Kilda Road VIC 8004 Bayreuth Festival 2016 - Information Booklet Museum of Art (Kunstmuseum), Maximilianstr. 33, ☎ +49 (0) 9 21/7 64 53 10. Tu-Su 10AM-5PM; Jul - Aug: also open Mondays. Housed in the former city hall's Renaissance-style building, the Museum of Art offers alternating collections of sculpture and painting. Museum of Natural History (Urwelt-Museum Oberfranken), Kanzleistr. 1, ☎ +49 (0) 9 21 / 51 12 11 (verwaltung@urweltmuseum.de). Tu-Su 10AM-5PM; Jul - Aug: also open Mondays. The museum in the main pedestrian shopping area highlights the life, geology and minerology during the last 500 million years of Upper Franconia. In front of the museum looms a giant dinosaur statue, along the main shopping street. Museum of Wilhelmine's Bayreuth, Museum Das Bayreuth der Wilhelmine. Museum highlighting the life and culture of Bayreuth during the time of Margravine Wilhelmine. The collections are part of the New Palace, see above for more information. Page 14 of 30 Registration Number: A0004004P ABN: 62057122885 PO Box 7367, St Kilda Road VIC 8004 Bayreuth Festival 2016 - Information Booklet Natural Science Museum (Naturkundemuseum), Karolinenreuther Str. 58, ☎ +49 (0) 9 21/75 94 20. Nov Feb: Tu-F 9AM-4PM, Su 10AM-3PM; Mar - Oct: Tu-F 9AM4PM, Sa-Su 1PM-5PM. This small museum in a farmhouse just outside the city describes the flora and fauna of Bayreuth and Upper Franconia. The museum is especially designed to engage and educate children. Richard Wagner Museum, Richard-Wagner-Str. 48, ☎ +49 (0) 9 21/7 57 28 16. Apr - Oct: 9AM-5PM M,W,F,Sa,Su, & 9AM-8PM Tu,Th; Nov - Mar: 10AM-5PM daily. The composer's old residence (Wahnfried House, Haus Wahnfried) has been converted to a museum chronicling his life and works. The composer, his wife, and their dog are buried in the garden. The museum may be of lesser interest to non-German speakers, as it has few English translations. State Gallery in the New Palace (Staatsgalerie im Neuen Schloss), Ludwigstraße 21 (In the New Palace), ☎ +49 (0) 9 21 / 7 59 69-0. Apr - Sept: 9AM-6PM daily; Oct - Mar: 10AM4PM (closed M). Occupying three rooms of the palace, this exhibition features 80 works of art from the late baroque. Page 15 of 30 Registration Number: A0004004P ABN: 62057122885 PO Box 7367, St Kilda Road VIC 8004 Bayreuth Festival 2016 - Information Booklet Bayreuth Parks 7 Court Garden (Hofgarten), (Behind the Neues Schloss). Open 24 hours a day year round. The court garden of the Neues Schloss, this park provides a welcome bit of green in the middle of the city. On sunny days, you can find many residents here relaxing or exercising with a little sport. Hermitage (Eremitage). See Hermitage/Old Palace above for information. 7 Information obtained from Wikitravel. Page 16 of 30 Registration Number: A0004004P ABN: 62057122885 PO Box 7367, St Kilda Road VIC 8004 Bayreuth Festival 2016 - Information Booklet Hotels in the City 8 Gasthof zum Brandenburger, St. Georgen 9, ☎ +49 (0) 9 21 / 78906-0. Another small guesthouse in the city part of the attached restaurant. Gasthof Kolb, Wendelhöfen 8, ☎ +49 (0) 9 21 / 24216. Small family-run guest house in Bayreuth with restaurant and an attached Biergarten. Goldener Löwe, Kulmbacher Str. 30, ☎ +49 (0) 9 21 / 746060. Hotel Goldener Hirsch, Bahnhofstr. 13, ☎ +49 (0) 9 21 / 23046 (Goldener.Hirsch@bayreuth-online.de). Highly reviewed hotel near the train station. Staff can speak English, French, and Italian. Hotel Lohmühle, Badstr. 37, ☎ +49 (0) 9 21 / 5306-0. This self-proclaimed "Franconian" hotel sits a short walk from the city center. add on Kolping Hotel Bayreuth, Kolpingstr. 5, ☎ +49 (0) 9 21 / 151238-0. Arvena Kongress Hotel, Eduard-Bayerlein-Str. 5a, ☎ +49 (0)921 727 -0. Hotel Goldener Anker, Opernstr. 6, ☎ +49 (0) 9 21 / 65051. Highly reviewed hotel very near the Margravial Operahouse, featuring wireless internet and on-site parking Hotel Bayerische Hof, Bahnhofstr. 14, ☎ +49 (0) 9 21 / 7860-0. Hotels Outside the City 9 8 9 Hotel-Gasthof Opel, Bayreuther Str. 1, 95500 Heinersreuth, ☎ +49 (0) 9 21 / 41884 (service@gasthof-opel.de). This hotel occupies a 19th century building around 3 km from the center of Bayreuth and run by the Opel family. Free wireless internet and free parking is available. Best Western Transmar-Travel-Hotel, Bühlstraße 12 95463 Bindlach, ☎ +49 (0) 9 20 / 8686-0 (info@transmar-travel.bestwestern.de). checkin: 3PM; checkout: Noon. Chain hotel near the autobahn. Offers normal amenities such as breakfast, free parking, and wireless internet. Grunau Hotel, Kemnather Straße 27, ☎ +49 (0) 9 21 / 7980-0. Larger hotel located 3.5 km east of the city center. Features wireless internet and bicycle rental. Hotel Bürgerreuth, An der Bürgerreuth 20, ☎ +49 (0) 9 21 / 7840-0. Hotel Eremitage, Eremitage 6, ☎ +49 (0) 9 21 / 79997-0. Upscale hotel located at the Hermitage (Eremitage). Information obtained from Wikitravel. Information obtained from Wikitravel. Page 17 of 30 Registration Number: A0004004P ABN: 62057122885 PO Box 7367, St Kilda Road VIC 8004 Bayreuth Festival 2016 - Information Booklet The Bayreuth Festival Theatre10 The Bayreuth Festspielhaus or Bayreuth Festival Theatre (German: Bayreuther Festspielhaus, is an opera house north of Bayreuth, Germany, dedicated solely to the performance of operas by the 19th-century German composer Richard Wagner. It is the venue for the annual Bayreuth Festival, for which it was specifically conceived and built. Its official name is RichardWagner-Festspielhaus. Wagner adapted the design of the Festspielhaus from an unrealised project by Gottfried Semper for an opera house in Munich, without the architect's permission, and supervised its construction. Ludwig II of Bavaria provided the primary funding for the construction. The foundation stone was laid on 22 May 1872, Wagner's 59th birthday. The building was first opened for the premiere of the complete four-opera cycle of Der Ring des Nibelungen (The Ring of the Nibelung), from 13 to 17 August 1876. Only the entry façade exhibits the typical late-19th-century ornamentation, while the remainder of the exterior is modest and shows mostly undecorated bricks. The interior is mainly wood and has a reverberation time of 1.55 seconds. The Festspielhaus is a carpenter's building; in fact, it is the largest free standing timber structure ever erected. Unlike the traditional opera house design with several tiers of seating in a horse-shoe shaped auditorium, the Festspielhaus's seats are arranged in a single steeply-shaped wedge, with no galleries or boxes. This is also known as continental seating. Many contemporary movie Theatres have adopted this style of seating, which gives every seat an equal and uninterrupted view of the stage. The capacity of the Festspielhaus is 1,925 and has a volume of 10,000 cubic metres. Figure 1: The Auditorium The Festspielhaus features a double proscenium, which gives the audience the illusion that the stage is further away than it actually is. The double proscenium and the recessed orchestra pit create – in Wagner's term – a "mystic gulf" between the audience and the stage. 10 Information obtained from Wikipedia. Page 18 of 30 Registration Number: A0004004P ABN: 62057122885 PO Box 7367, St Kilda Road VIC 8004 Bayreuth Festival 2016 - Information Booklet This gives a dreamlike character to performances, and provides a physical reinforcement of the mythic content of most of Wagner's operas. The architecture of Festpielhaus accomplished many of Wagner's goals and ideals for the performances of his operas including an improvement on the sound, feel, and overall look of the production. The Festpielhaus was originally planned to open in 1873, but by that time Wagner had barely raised enough money to put up the walls of his theatre. He began to raise money by traveling and putting on concerts in various cities and countries throughout Europe. Even after Ludwig began funding the project, Wagner had to continue putting on concerts to keep the building project financially afloat. The tours were very taxing on Wagner's health and would eventually be a key element to his death later on in 1883. Figure 2: The Orchestra Pit A significant feature of the Festspielhaus is its unusual orchestra pit. It is recessed under the stage and covered by a hood, so that the orchestra is completely invisible to the audience. This feature was a central preoccupation for Wagner, since it made the audience concentrate on the drama onstage, rather than the distracting motion of the conductor and musicians. The design also corrected the balance of volume between singers and orchestra, creating ideal acoustics for Wagner's operas, which are the only operas performed at the Festspielhaus. However, this arrangement has also made it the most challenging to conduct in, even for the world's best conductors. Not only is the crowded pit enveloped in darkness, but the acoustic reverberation makes it difficult to synchronise the orchestra with the singers. Conductors must therefore retrain themselves to ignore cues from singers. The orchestra layout deployed at Bayreuth is unusual in three ways: 1. The first violins are positioned on the right-hand side of the conductor instead of their usual place on the left side. This is in all likelihood because of the way the sound is intended to be directed towards the stage rather than directly on the audience. This way the sound has a more direct line from the first violins to the back of the stage where it can be then reflected to the audience. 2. Double basses, cellos and harps (when more than one used, e.g. Ring) are split into groups and placed on either side of the pit. 3. The rest of the orchestra is located directly under the stage. This makes communication with the conductor vital as most of the players are unable to see or hear the singers, but creates the huge, rich sounds Wagner sought to compose. Page 19 of 30 Registration Number: A0004004P ABN: 62057122885 PO Box 7367, St Kilda Road VIC 8004 Bayreuth Festival 2016 - Information Booklet Festival Theatre - Location Map Figure 3: Location Map A larger map can be viewed using google maps: https://goo.gl/maps/1kgktcr6nXx Page 20 of 30 Registration Number: A0004004P ABN: 62057122885 PO Box 7367, St Kilda Road VIC 8004 Bayreuth Festival 2016 - Information Booklet Festival Theatre - Seating Plan Figure 4: Seating Plan Page 21 of 30 Registration Number: A0004004P ABN: 62057122885 PO Box 7367, St Kilda Road VIC 8004 Bayreuth Festival 2016 - Information Booklet The Operas Tickets available for purchase by members of The Richard Wagner Society (Victoria) are for these operas: 1. Der Ring des Nibelungen starting on Saturday 20 August 2016. 2. Parsifal on Wednesday 24 August 2016. 3. Der fliegende Holländer on Thursday 18 August 2016. Performance Times Opera Date Seating Area Start Time Das Rheingold Saturday 20 August 2016 Sunday 21 August 2016 Tuesday 23 August 2016 Thursday 25 August 2016 Wednesday 24 August 2016 Thursday 18 August 2016 Parkett (Stalls) 6:00 PM Parkett (Stalls) 4:00 PM Parkett (Stalls) 4:00 PM Parkett (Stalls) 4:00 PM Mitteloge (Centre Boxes) Loge (Boxes) 4:00 PM Die Walküre Siegfried Götterdämmerung Parsifal Der fliegende Holländer 6:00 PM Running Time (approx.) 2 hours & 30 minutes 5 hours & 40 minutes 5 hours & 50 minutes 6 hours & 40 minutes 5 hours & 45 minutes 2 hours & 30 minutes Page 22 of 30 Registration Number: A0004004P ABN: 62057122885 PO Box 7367, St Kilda Road VIC 8004 Bayreuth Festival 2016 - Information Booklet Das Rheingold - Saturday 20 August 2016 Synopsis The first act of this first opera begins with a scene in which a dwarf named Alberich seizes the gold of the Rhinemaidens. Alberich denounces love in order to gain possession of the magic ring which gives its wearer ultimate power. This scene sets up the Ring as the most desirable object in the world, and thus it establishes the fundamental intrigue that lasts throughout the entire cycle of the Ring. Rhinegold is the story of the gods, possibly more so than the rest of the operas. One learns of the suffering of Wotan and the problems the gods have in repaying Fafner and Fasolt, the giants who built Valhalla. Since Wagner created Rhinegold to be the "Prelude" to the Ring, this opera perhaps is not as "free-standing" as the other works. Nevertheless, Rhinegold introduces the main lines of The Ring's dramatic conflict and many of the cycle's main musical ideas. The Cast Conductor Marek Janowski Director Frank Castorf Stage design Aleksandar Denić Costumes Adriana Braga Peretzki Lighting Rainer Casper Video Andreas Deinert Jens Crull Technische Einrichtung 20132014 Karl-Heinz Matitschka Wotan Iain Paterson Donner Markus Eiche Froh Tansel Akzeybek Loge Roberto Saccà Fricka Sarah Connolly Freia Caroline Wenborne Erda Nadine Weissmann Alberich Albert Dohmen Mime Andreas Conrad Fasolt Andreas Hörl Fafner N.N. Woglinde Alexandra Steiner Wellgunde Stephanie Houtzeel Floßhilde Wiebke Lehmkuhl Page 23 of 30 Registration Number: A0004004P ABN: 62057122885 PO Box 7367, St Kilda Road VIC 8004 Bayreuth Festival 2016 - Information Booklet Die Walküre - Sunday 21 August 2016 Synopsis Brunnhilde and her father Wotan respectively struggle with their pride in order to decide the ultimate destiny of mortals. The Valkyries deals with the deep, but difficult relationship between gods and mortals. These gods also play games with one another, picking favourites and taking sides. Nobleness, especially in love, seems to come second to oaths - the divine promises - of the gods. Siegmund, the mortal hero, essentially dies because his father, Wotan, is under obligation to obey his lawful wife, Fricka. The Cast Conductor Marek Janowski Director Frank Castorf Stage design Aleksandar Denić Costumes Adriana Braga Peretzki Lighting Rainer Casper Video Andreas Deinert Jens Crull Technische Einrichtung 20132014 Karl-Heinz Matitschka Siegmund Christopher Ventris Hunding Andreas Hörl Wotan John Lundgren Sieglinde Jennifer Wilson Brünnhilde Catherine Foster Fricka Sarah Connolly Gerhilde Caroline Wenborne Ortlinde Dara Hobbs Waltraute Stephanie Houtzeel Schwertleite Nadine Weissmann Helmwige Christiane Kohl Siegrune Simone Schröder Grimgerde Wiebke Lehmkuhl Rossweisse Alexandra Petersamer Page 24 of 30 Registration Number: A0004004P ABN: 62057122885 PO Box 7367, St Kilda Road VIC 8004 Bayreuth Festival 2016 - Information Booklet Siegfried - Tuesday 23 August 2016 Synopsis Siegfried is often called the Scherzo of The Ring, suggesting that it is the lightest of the four dramas. It is the story of a hero, Siegfried, and how he grows into manhood to discover fear and love. Raised by the Nibelung Mime, Siegfried is young, innocent and cocky. With the help of a mysterious Wanderer (who is really Wotan in disguise), Siegfried finds the pieces of his father's sword, Notung, reforges them and uses the instrument to kill the dragon Fafner who guards the hoard of Nibelung gold that formerly belonged to the Rhinemaidens. As a result of his killing of Fafner, Siegfried comes into possession of Alberich's cursed ring. But, Siegfried faces his ultimate challenge when he follows a birdsong to find the sleeping Brunnhilde whom fate has destined Siegfried to awaken and fall in love with. At the end of the opera, Siegfried gives the Ring to Brunnhilde to prove and symbolize his oath of love and fidelity to her. The Cast Conductor Marek Janowski Director Frank Castorf Stage design Aleksandar Denić Costumes Adriana Braga Peretzki Lighting Rainer Casper Video Andreas Deinert Jens Crull Technische Einrichtung 20132014 Karl-Heinz Matitschka Siegfried Stefan Vinke Mime Andreas Conrad Der Wanderer Thomas J. Mayer Alberich Albert Dohmen Fafner N.N. Erda Nadine Weissmann Brünnhilde Catherine Foster Waldvogel Ana Durlovski Page 25 of 30 Registration Number: A0004004P ABN: 62057122885 PO Box 7367, St Kilda Road VIC 8004 Bayreuth Festival 2016 - Information Booklet Götterdämmerung - Thursday 25 August 2016 Synopsis An ambiance of doom overabides The Twilight of the Gods. Wotan and the rest of the cycle's characters face the consequences of the choices they made throughout the stories of the first three operas. As predicted by the three Norns in the "Prelude" to this opera, the Nibelung Alberich's curse upon the Ring proves to be prophetic. Everyone who comes into possession of it is ultimately destroyed. Although Wotan's disempowerment was foreshadowed in Siegfried by the breaking of his spear by Siegfried, the doomed fate of the gods and their AllFather Wotan is sealed when Alberich's evil son, Hagen dupes and cruelly murders the brave mortal hero Siegfried. Thus, The Twilight of the Gods , which is a panorama of love and betrayal, good and evil, subconscious and overt events, grand, pictorial and private, intimate scenes is the climax of the whole Ring cycle and shows Wagner at zenith of his powers. The Cast Conductor Marek Janowski Director Frank Castorf Stage design Aleksandar Denić Costumes Adriana Braga Peretzki Lighting Rainer Casper Video Andreas Deinert Jens Crull Choral Conducting Eberhard Friedrich Technische Einrichtung 20132014 Karl-Heinz Matitschka Siegfried Stefan Vinke Gunther Markus Eiche Alberich Albert Dohmen Hagen Stephen Milling Brünnhilde Catherine Foster Gutrune Allison Oakes Waltraute Marina Prudenskaya 1. Norn Wiebke Lehmkuhl 2. Norn Stephanie Houtzeel 3. Norn Christiane Kohl Woglinde Alexandra Steiner Wellgunde Stephanie Houtzeel Floßhilde Wiebke Lehmkuhl Page 26 of 30 Registration Number: A0004004P ABN: 62057122885 PO Box 7367, St Kilda Road VIC 8004 Bayreuth Festival 2016 - Information Booklet Parsifal - Wednesday 24 August 2016 Synopsis The plot is drawn from medieval legend. Christian knights in Spain guard two special relics in their castle: the Holy Grail and the Holy Spear that pierced Jesus on the cross. The knights have been in trouble since their leader Amfortas decided to attack a nearby sorcerer’s lair armed with the spear. The sorcerer, named Klingsor, was a would-be knight who after rejection from the order castrated himself in a rage. His servant, Kundry, seduced Amfortas allowing Klingsor to steal the spear and stab him for good measure. Only a man made wise by compassion can save Amfortas. Enter Parsifal, an unpromising candidate. He has defiled the castle by shooting a swan and seems to have as little interest in what happens around him as he does in his own past. But when he witnesses a wounded Amfortas unveiling the Holy Grail – to glowing, transcendent music – his sympathy is stirred. He travels to Klingsor’s castle where he must defy the temptations of the flower-maidens and Kundry – whom, we learn, is a female version of The Flying Dutchman, cursed to wander the earth for laughing at Jesus on the Via Dolorosa – win back the spear and heal the order. The Cast Conductor Andris Nelsons Director Uwe Eric Laufenberg Stage design Gisbert Jäkel Costumes Jessica Karge Lighting Reinhard Traub Choral Conducting Eberhard Friedrich Amfortas Ryan McKinny Titurel N.N. Gurnemanz Georg Zeppenfeld Parsifal Klaus Florian Vogt Klingsor Gerd Grochowski Kundry Elena Pankratova 1. Gralsritter Tansel Akzeybek 2. Gralsritter Timo Riihonen 1. Knappe Alexandra Steiner 2. Knappe Mareike Morr 3. Knappe Charles Kim 4. Knappe Stefan Heibach Klingsors Zaubermädchen Netta Or Klingsors Zaubermädchen Katharina Persicke Klingsors Zaubermädchen Mareike Morr Klingsors Zaubermädchen Alexandra Steiner Klingsors Zaubermädchen Bele Kumberger Klingsors Zaubermädchen Ingeborg Gillebo Altsolo Wiebke Lehmkuhl Page 27 of 30 Registration Number: A0004004P ABN: 62057122885 PO Box 7367, St Kilda Road VIC 8004 Bayreuth Festival 2016 - Information Booklet Der fliegende Holländer - Thursday 18 August 2016 Synopsis The mysterious Dutchman is condemned to sail the seas with his ghostly crew until redeemed by the pure love of a woman. After a stormy overture Daland's ship puts in to land, and a stranger ship puts in alongside, hailed by Daland's steersman, but not answering his call or the invitations offered by the local people, who celebrate the return of their men-folk. The Dutchman himself, captain of the ghostly ship, allowed now, after seven more years, to land in his quest for release, asks Daland for hospitality, offering him rich reward and showing an interest in Senta, his daughter. In Daland’s house, where the women sit spinning, Senta has long been preoccupied by the story of the Dutchman and fascinated by his portrait. Erik, a huntsman, loves her and tells her his dream, in which he saw Daland bringing home a stranger. Senta, however, is still more preoccupied with her vision of the strange seafarer, whom her father now brings home. Senta's love, it seems, will bring the Dutchman the redemption he seeks. He overhears Erik, however, reproaching Senta for her infidelity and resolves to leave her. As The Flying Dutchman sails out into the open sea, Senta, who has struggled free from Erik and those who seek to restrain her, leaps from the cliff in a pure act of love. The Dutchman's ship and crew sink at once in the waves, and he and Senta are seen united for ever. The Cast Conductor Axel Kober Director Jan Philipp Gloger Stage design Christof Hetzer Costumes Karin Jud Lighting Urs Schönebaum Video Martin Eidenberger Dramaturgy Sophie Becker Choral Conducting Eberhard Friedrich Technische Einrichtung 20122014 Karl-Heinz Matitschka Daland Peter Rose Senta Ricarda Merbeth Erik Andreas Schager Mary Christa Mayer Der Steuermann Benjamin Bruns Der Holländer John Lundgren Page 28 of 30 Registration Number: A0004004P ABN: 62057122885 PO Box 7367, St Kilda Road VIC 8004 Bayreuth Festival 2016 - Information Booklet Index Archaeological Museum ..................10 Bayreuth Bayreuth Attractions ......................7 Bayreuth Churches ........................9 Bayreuth Museums ......................10 Bayreuth Parks .............................16 Getting Around................................6 Getting There ..................................6 The Town of Bayreuth ...................5 Things to Do in Bayreuth ..............7 Bayreuth Attractions...........................7 Festival Theatre ..............................7 Garden Museum Fantaisie Palace and Park.......................................8 Hermitage/Old Palace ...................8 Margravial Opera House ...............8 New Palace .....................................8 Bayreuth Card .....................................7 Bayreuth Churches Spitalkirche ......................................9 Stadtkirche.......................................9 Bayreuth Churches ............................9 Castle Church and Tower .............9 Bayreuth Festival Theatre ...............18 Location Map.................................20 Seating Plan ..................................21 Bayreuth Museums ..........................10 Archaeological Museum ..............10 Bayreuther Faiences....................10 Catacombs of Bayreuth's Aktien Brewery ......................................10 Fire Brigade Museum ..................11 Franz-Liszt-Museum ....................11 German Freemason Museum ....11 German Typewriter Museum ......12 Historical Museum........................12 Iwalewa House .............................12 Jean Paul Museum ......................12 Little Poster Museum ...................13 Maisel's Brewery and Coopers Museum .....................................13 Museum of Agricultural Tools and Equipment .................................13 Museum of Art...............................14 Museum of Natural History .........14 Museum of Wilhelmine's Bayreuth .................................................... 14 Natural Science Museum ........... 15 Richard Wagner Museum ........... 15 State Gallery in the New Palace 15 Bayreuth Parks ................................. 16 Court Garden ................................ 16 Hermitage ...................................... 16 Bayreuther Faiences ....................... 10 Bookshop with Festival Artists Signing ............................................. 4 Castle Church and Tower ................. 9 Catacombs of Bayreuth's Aktien Brewery ......................................... 10 Comfort Factors ................................. 3 Court Garden .................................... 16 Das Rheingold - Saturday 20 August 2016 ............................................... 23 Der fliegende Holländer - Thursday 18 August 2016 ............................ 28 Die Walküre - Sunday 21 August 2016 ............................................... 24 Etiquette .............................................. 3 Festival Theatre ................................. 7 Festival Theatre - Location Map .... 20 Festival Theatre - Seating Plan ..... 21 Fire Brigade Museum ...................... 11 Franz-Liszt-Museum ........................ 11 Garden Museum Fantaisie Palace and Park .......................................... 8 German Freemason Museum ........ 11 German Typewriter Museum ......... 12 Getting to the Theatre ....................... 3 Götterdämmerung - Thursday 25 August 2016 .................................. 26 Hermitage .......................................... 16 Hermitage/Old Palace ....................... 8 Historical Museum ........................... 12 Hotels in the City .............................. 17 Hotels Outside the City ................... 17 Iwalewa House ................................. 12 Jean Paul Museum .......................... 12 Little Poster Museum....................... 13 Maisel's Brewery and Coopers Museum ......................................... 13 Page 29 of 30 Registration Number: A0004004P ABN: 62057122885 PO Box 7367, St Kilda Road VIC 8004 Bayreuth Festival 2016 - Information Booklet Margravial Opera House ...................8 Margravine Wilhelmine Palaces Combination Ticket ........................7 Museum of Agricultural Tools and Equipment .....................................13 Museum of Art...................................14 Museum of Natural History .............14 Museum of Wilhelmine's Bayreuth 14 Natural Science Museum ................15 New Palace .........................................8 Parking at the Theatre .......................3 Parsifal - Wednesday 24 August 2016 ............................................... 27 Richard Wagner Museum ............... 15 Siegfried - Tuesday 23 August 2016 ........................................................ 25 Spitalkirche ......................................... 9 Stadtkirche .......................................... 9 State Gallery in the New Palace.... 15 The Festspiele Experience ............... 3 Theatre Seating .................................. 3 Things to Do in Bayreuth .................. 7 Page 30 of 30 Registration Number: A0004004P ABN: 62057122885 PO Box 7367, St Kilda Road VIC 8004