TOURIST TRAPP
Every year, 300,000 Sound of Music fans make the journey to Salzburg, Austria.
For more than 50 years, The
Sound of Music has captured the imagination of movie-goers and musical fans with its catchy tunes and lovable characters set against the stunning Austrian Alps.
And this has proven to be big business for the city of Salzburg, where the real-life singing von Trapp family lived and the 1965 Hollywood movie was filmed.
While Mozart and classical music remain the city’s main tourist attractions, half of all visitors who come here every year from the US, Britain, Canada and Asia make the trip because of The Sound
of Music, according to Salzburg’s tourism office. “Three-hundred thousand visitors come to Salzburg almost exclusively because of The Sound of Music, that’s just a great story, a success story,” says Herbert Brugger, managing director of Salzburg Tourism. “It’s the most successful location placement in film history.”
Bus tours take visitors around the movie’s locations twice a day, Sound of Music dinner-and-concert evenings are organised regularly and the Salzburg puppet theatre has even created its own version of the musical.
But Austria itself was slow to catch on to this worldwide craze. The story of the von Trapp family was made into several German-language films here in the 1950s and was widely known locally.
But the 1959 Broadway musical, on which the Hollywood version was based, only premiered in Vienna in 2005 and in Salzburg in 2011 — to great success.
Most Austrians have never seen the Oscar-winning film starring Julie Andrews and Christopher Plummer.
Even now, asking a Salzburg resident where one might find the steps — where Maria von Trapp teaches the children how to sing in the movie — is likely to provoke a bemused reaction.
For a Mozart-obsessed city, which prides itself on its prestigious music festival: “It just brings diversity . . . I think it adds to the greatness of Salzburg,” says Keijo Halinen, from Finland, who joined one of the Sound of Music tours with his wife Monica.
Every day, dozens of tourists of all ages and nationalities jump on a bus to see the gazebo where Liesl sang
Do-Re-Mi Sixteen going on Seventeen,
the church in Mondsee where the famous wedding scene took place and Leopoldskron Palace, where the lake scenes at the von Trapp villa were filmed.
Many sing along to the well-known music by Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein. “It’s a family film. We’ve had visitors who were here backpacking, then came with their wife, later with their children and today they come with their grandchildren,” says Stefan Herzl, who organises the Original Sound of Music Tour. The breathtaking countryside of green hillsides and deep blue mountain lakes adds to the magic for visitors, touring not just film locations but the city where the real von Trapps lived. “We probably wouldn’t have come here if it wasn’t for this to be honest . . . The Sound of Music was a massive draw,” says Matt Preston from London, who opted for the tour rather than visiting Mozart’s birthplace. “Something about the movie captures audiences’ attention,” adds Jennifer, from Texas, who was taking the tour for a second time. “It’s magical.”