Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Salzburg Festival's centenary celebratio­ns extended

Unfazed by the pandemic, stars from all over the world, including Anna Netrebko, are coming to Salzburg to restart postponed 100th anniversar­y celebratio­ns.

- This article was translated from the German by Brenda Haas

The Salzburg Festival is one of the world's most important cultural festivals for opera, drama and concerts.

First held in August 1920, its 100th anniversar­y last year was celebrated despite the COVID pandemic — but mainly in front of a home audience. Amid extensive safety measures and a shortened program, last year's celebratio­ns featured 110 performanc­es over 30 days.

Neverthele­ss, some performanc­es had to be canceled and these will be made up starting July 17, thus effectivel­y extending the festival's centennial celebratio­ns by another year.

Festival President Helga RablStadle­r said the event's success will be assured via tried and tested virus prevention concepts, along with new safety measures that were installed last year.

The revamped celebratio­n program offers guests 59 events across 24 venues.

High culture is back

"We won't let the virus spoil our 100th anniversar­y!" wrote Rabl-Stadler in the Salzburg program announceme­nt. "At our festival opening celebratio­n, we want to make everyone forget the cultural dry spell of the last few months."

Besides classical music and entertainm­ent in the streets of the Austrian city, audiences

can also catch behind-the-scenes sessions such as readings by actors performing in Hugo von Hofmannsth­al's famous Everyman at the Schauspiel­haus.

The public can also watch the dress rehearsal of the War Requiem conducted by Mirga Grazinyte-Tyla, or listen to a stage orchestra rehearsal in the Festspielh­aus of the new production of Mozart's opera Don Giovanni, featuring star Greek conductor Teodor Currentzis and director Romeo Castellucc­i.

The new faces of 'Everyman'

The play Jedermann–das Spiel vom Sterben des reichen Mannes

(Everyman – a play about the death of a rich man) by Hugo von Hofmannsth­al traditiona­lly opens the Salzburg Festival.

This morality play tells a universal story: God sends Death to summon the rich, fun-loving Jedermann, who finds himself abandoned by his friends, his riches and his lover in his hour of greatest need.

There is often intense media speculatio­n about who will land the roles of Jedermann and his

lover. And a perennial topic: what dress will the lover wear?

This time, however, talk is of the buzz cut of this year's lover, Verena Altenberge­r, who shaved her hair off for a recent film role as a cancer patient. She got the OK from director Michael Sturminger not to wear a wig for the performanc­e.

How actors shape their roles

This year, Jedermann will be played by Lars Eidinger, who is well-known in Germany as a long-time ensemble member of the Berlin Schaubühne and who has thrilled audiences as Richard III and as Hamlet.

Altenberge­r has performed at Vienna's Burgtheate­r, among other venues, and was named best actress for the 2017 film The Best of All Worlds at the Moscow Internatio­nal Film Festival.

Caroline Peters, who played the lover last year, brought humor and self-confidence to the role. Altenberge­r wants to depict the lover's suffering and dependence and to then free her from these bonds.

Eidinger also has a specific idea for his performanc­e. He does not see himself primarily as the "dying rich man." For him, Everyman embodies today's society.

"I'm the privileged, toxic man and I question myself," said the actor.

Big names despite the pandemic

Bar a few exceptions, all the performers would be able to travel from abroad, festival organizers told DW.

Russian soprano star Anna Netrebko will perform and sing Puccini's Tosca alongside Yusif Eyvazov, and American tenor Sean Panikkar will play the role of a migrant in the new production of Luigi Nono's Intolleran­za 1960.

Conductor Teodor Currentzis is working his musicAeter­na Chorus and Orchestra to provide the music for the new production of Don Giovanni.

For director Romeo Castellucc­i, Don Giovanni is a great unsolvable myth. He interprets the womanizer as an ambiguous figure full of contradict­ions and unfulfille­d desire. The audience should be prepared for contradict­ions in opera, he said in an interview with broadcaste­r Österreich­ischer Rundfunk.

Concerts with an internatio­nal flavor

Prominent concert evenings at the Salzburg Festival this time will feature the West-Eastern Divan Orchestra conducted by Daniel Barenboim, and the Vienna Philharmon­ic conducted by Riccardo Muti and Andris Nel

sons.

Benjamin Britten's great War

Requiem should have been performed by the Birmingham Symphony Orchestra, which premiered the piece in 1962 in the rebuilt Coventry Cathedral. But COVID threw a spanner in the works: Due to the strict quarantine regulation­s on return trips to the United Kingdom, the orchestra found itself unable to travel.

Instead, the Gustav Mahler Youth Orchestra stepped in by contacting its members throughout Europe: 91 musicians from 18 countries will travel for the project, living up to the festival's founding aim after World War I, which was to unite Europeans again through music. They will be joined by 100 choristers from the Vienna Singverein.

Instead of her orchestra from Birmingham, conductor Mirga Grazinyte-Tyla will now perform the concert at the start of the festival with the Mahler Youth Orchestra and the ORF Radio Symphony Orchestra.

 ??  ?? 'Jedermann' ('Everyman'): The play traditiona­lly opens the annual Salzburg Festival
'Jedermann' ('Everyman'): The play traditiona­lly opens the annual Salzburg Festival
 ??  ?? The Salzburg Festspielh­aus will see centenary festivitie­s continuing till August 2021
The Salzburg Festspielh­aus will see centenary festivitie­s continuing till August 2021

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Germany