Bayreuth premiere cast of Parsifal

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Hermann Winkelmann as Parsifal, 1882

The Bayreuth premiere cast of Parsifal lists the contributors to the new productions of Richard Wagner's inaugural stage play Parsifal, including the premiere, which took place on 26 July 1882 at the Bayreuth Festival.

About the performance history[]

In the last performance of the premiere series in 1882, Richard Wagner personally took over the baton from Hermann Levi in Act III, unnoticed by the audience, since the overbuilt orchestra pit of the Festspielhaus made the conductor and the orchestra invisible to the public. It was the only time the composer conducted in his house himself.[1]

Parsifal was composed especially for the Bayreuth Festival Theatre and, as Wagner stated in a letter to King Ludwig II of Bavaria in 1880, was to be performed there exclusively. The premiere production was virtually sacrosanct in Bayreuth and remained almost unchanged on the festival programme for 51 years. Hermann Levi remained conductor until 1894, only in 1888 (and then in 1897) Felix Mottl conducted Felix Mottl. Later, Franz Fischer and Karl Muck also took over the musical direction of the Parsifal festival performances.[2]

The protection period of 30 years after the composer's death ended on December 31, 1913, but as early as 1901, the widow of the composer and director of the Festival, Cosima Wagner, turned to the German Reichstag with the request to secure the sole performing rights for Bayreuth. The request was rejected.[3] Already before the end of the protection period, unauthorized performances took place, for example at the Metropolitan Opera in New York on 24 December 1903,[4] on Cosima's 66th birthday, and in Amsterdam.[5]

After the end of the protection period, forty productions of the work were staged within the month of January 1914. The first of these legal productions began on New Year's Eve 1913 at 11:30 a.m. in the Teatro Liceu of Barcelona.[5][6] To this day Parsifal is the most frequently performed work of the Bayreuth Festival.

1934[]

It was not until 1934 that a new production with stage designs by Alfred Roller, Hitler's favourite stage designer, was shown, commissioned by Hitler. [7] After the politically motivated cancellation of Arturo Toscanini, who was supposed to conduct the new production, Richard Strauss stepped in.

After the beginning of the Second World War, the work - presumably because of its message of reconciliation - was no longer allowed to be performed in Bayreuth at Hitler's behest. As if by a miracle, the Bayreuth Festival Theatre was not destroyed in the Allied bombing war, but two thirds of the city lay in ruins. Half of the Villa Wahnfried was also destroyed on 5 April 1945, and the hall, including the rotunda and the floor above it, as well as the southeastern part of the house were blown up.

1951[]

When the Bayreuth Festival was able to reinstate itself in 1951, the new artistic director of the Festival, Wieland Wagner presented a radical new version of Parsifal as the first production of the "New Bayreuth". He dispensed with a detailed naturalism and placed the music in the foreground through abstraction and suggestive lighting direction. The events on stage were expressively condensed and only underlined by extremely withdrawn, stylized and meaningful gestures and movements. His Bayreuth staging style became a much-copied model for numerous Wagner productions up to the 1970s.[8][9] The new production was conducted by Hans Knappertsbusch and has also been released on record.[10] Wieland Wagner's production remained on the Bayreuth repertoire for more than twenty years and reached 101 performances. The premiere was cast with the world's best Wagner singers, including Wolfgang Windgassen in the title role, Martha Mödl as Kundry and George London as Amfortas.

Premiere castings[]

The sixth column shows the number of performances of each production.

Amfortas
Titurel
Gurnemanz
Parsifal Kundry
Klingsor
Voice from above
Two Knights of the Grail
Four Squires
Klingsor's Maiden of Sorcery [11]
26 July 1882 premiere, staging: Richard Wagner, conductor: Hermann Levi, stage design: Max Brückner, Paul von Joukowsky, Siegfried Wagner, Kurt Söhnlein[11]
This production was shown at the Bayreuth Festival until 1933.
Theodor Reichmann
August Kindermann
Emil Scaria
Hermann Winkelmann Amalie Materna
Karl Hill
Sophie Dompierre
Anton von Fuchs, Eugen Stumpf
Hermine Galfy, Mathilde Keil,
Max Mikorey, Adolf von Hübbenet
Pauline Horson, Johanna Meta,
Carrie Pringle, Johanna André,
Hermine Galfy, Luise Reuss-Belce
205
1934–1936 staging: Heinz Tietjen, conductor: Richard Strauss, stage design: Alfred Roller, Emil Preetorius[12][13][11]
Herbert Janssen
Franz Sauer
Ivar Andresen
Helge Rosvaenge Marta Fuchs
Robert Burg
Rut Berglund
Fritz Marcks, Hans Wrana
Irmingard Scheidemantel, Edith Neudahm,
Gerhard Witting, Edwin Heyer
Käthe Heidersbach, Irene Hoebink,
Hildegard Weigel, Franziska von Dobay,
Irmingard Scheidemantel, Margery Booth
11
1937–1939 staging: Heinz Tietjen, conductor: Wilhelm Furtwängler, stage design and costumes: Wieland Wagner
Herbert Janssen
Michael von Roggen
Josef von Manowarda
Max Lorenz Marta Fuchs
Robert Burg
Rut Berglund
Ferdinand Bürgmann, Carl Schlottmann
Hilde Scheppan, Beate Asserson,
Erich Zimmermann, Edwin Heyer
Käthe Heidersbach, Elfriede Marherr,
Beate Asserson, Anny von Stosch,
Hilde Scheppan, Rut Berglund
15
1951–1973 staging: Wieland Wagner, conductor: Hans Knappertsbusch, furnishings: Wieland Wagner, Charlotte Vocke
George London
Arnold van Mill
Ludwig Weber
Wolfgang Windgassen Martha Mödl
Hermann Uhde
Ruth Siewert
Walter Fritz, Werner Faulhaber
Hanna Ludwig, Elfriede Wild,
Günter Baldauf, Gerhard Stolze
Lore Wissmann, Erika Zimmermann,
Hanna Ludwig, Paula Brivkalne,
Maria Lacorn, Elfriede Wild
101
1975–1981 staging: Wolfgang Wagner, conductor: Horst Stein, furnishings: Wolfgang Wagner, Reinhard Heinrich
Bernd Weikl
Karl Ridderbusch
Hans Sotin
René Kollo Eva Randová
Franz Mazura
Ortrun Wenkel
Heribert Steinbach, Nikolaus Hillebrand
Trudeliese Schmidt, Hanna Schwarz,
Martin Finke, Martin Egel
Hannelore Bode, Trudeliese Schmidt,
Hanna Schwarz, Yoko Kawahara,
Irja Auroora, Alicia Nafé
39
1982–1988 staging: Götz Friedrich, conductor: James Levine, furnishings:
Simon Estes
Matti Salminen
Hans Sotin
Peter Hofmann Leonie Rysanek
Franz Mazura
Hanna Schwarz
Toni Krämer, Matthias Hölle
Ruthild Engert-Ely, Sabine Fues,
Helmut Pampuch, Peter Maus
Monika Schmitt, Anita Soldh,
Hanna Schwarz, Francine Laurent-Gérimont,
Deborah Sasson, Margit Neubauer
33
1989–2001 staging: Wolfgang Wagner, conductor: James Levine, furnishings: Wolfgang Wagner, Reinhard Heinrich
Bernd Weikl
Matthias Hölle
Hans Sotin
William Pell Waltraud Meier
Franz Mazura
Hitomi Katagiri
Richard Brunner, Sándor Sólyom-Nagy
Carmen Anhorn, Annette Küttenbaum,
Helmut Pampuch, Peter Maus
Christiane Hossfeld, Carmen Anhorn,
Alexandra Bergmeister, Hilde Leidland,
Deborah Sasson, Jane Turner
65
2004–2007 staging: Christoph Schlingensief, conductor: Pierre Boulez, furnishings: Thomas George, Daniel Angermahr, Tabea Braun, lighting:
Alejandro Marco-Buhrmester
Kwangchul Youn
Robert Holl
Endrik Wottrich Michelle de Young
John Wegner
Simone Schröder
Tomislav Mužek, Samuel Youn
Julia Borchert, Atala Schöck,
Norbert Ernst, Miljenko Turk
Julia Borchert, Martina Rüping,
Carola Guber, Anna Korondi,
Jutta Maria Böhnert, Atala Schöck
21
2008–2012 staging: Stefan Herheim, conductor: Daniele Gatti, furnishings: , , video: Momme Hinrichs, Torge Møller
Detlef Roth
Diógenes Randes
Kwangchul Youn
Christopher Ventris Mihoko Fujimura
Thomas Jesatko
Simone Schröder
Arnold Bezuyen,
Julia Borchert, Ulrike Helzel,
Clemens Bieber, Timothy Oliver
Julia Borchert, Martina Rüping,
Carola Guber, Anna Korondi,
Jutta Maria Böhnert, Ulrike Helzel
29
2016 staging: Uwe Eric Laufenberg, conductor: Hartmut Haenchen, furnishings: , Jessica Karge, lighting:
Ryan McKinny
Karl-Heinz Lehner
Georg Zeppenfeld
Klaus Florian Vogt Elena Pankratova
Gerd Grochowski
Wiebke Lehmkuhl
Tansel Akzeybek, Timo Riihonen
Alexandra Steiner, Mareike Morr,
Charles Kim, Stefan Heibach
Anna Siminska, Katharina Persicke,
Mareike Morr, Alexandra Steiner,
Bele Kumberger, Ingeborg Gillebo
6

Sources[]

References[]

  1. ^ "How wonderful! - the King longs to hear about Parsifal". Die Entstehungsgeschichte von Richard Wagners "Parsifal". In Thalia: Festspiel-Magazin Bayreuth 2016 Aktuelle Informationen zu den 105. Richard-Wagner-Festspielen. Edited by Thalia.de, p. 9 to 11, Description of the conducting performance on p. 11.
  2. ^ Wagneropera.net: Conductors Parsifal Bayreuth, retrieved on 22 July 2020.
  3. ^ Bélart: Friedrich Nietzsches Freundschaftstragödie mit Richard Wagner und Cosima Wagner-Liszt, Hamburg 2013, ISBN 978-3-86347-477-5, p. 111
  4. ^ Metropolitan Opera. (New York): The United States Premiere of Richard Wagner's Parsifal, December 24, 1903, see: [1], with an announcement of the US premiere with indication of the complete cast, retrieved 22 July 2020
  5. ^ a b Christian Wildhagen: History of "Parsifal": The Grail Robbery of Bayreuth Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, 22 January 2014, retrieved on 22 July 2020.
  6. ^ Wagneropera.net: Parsifal, retrieved on 22 July 2020.
  7. ^ Oskar Pausch: Alfred Roller's visit to Adolf Hitler 1934. A lost document. Retrieved via [5153_OEZG_2_2012_S237-244_Pausch.pdf] on July 18, 2016.
  8. ^ Wagner Operas: Parsifal, retrieved 22 July 2020.
  9. ^ Der Spiegel (Hamburg): obituary: Wieland Wagner, 5.1.1917-17.10.1966, 24 October 1966, N. 44/1966, retrieved on 28 September 2016.
  10. ^ Amazon: de/Richard-Wagner-Parsifal-Gesamtaufnahme-Bayreuth/dp/B000000SH0 Richard Wagner: Parsifal (complete recording) (Live, Bayreuth 1951) Box-Set, retrieved 22 July 2020.
  11. ^ a b c Bayreuther Festspiele: Archived (Date missing) at bayreuther-festspiele.de (Error: unknown archive URL) retrieved 22 July 2020.
  12. ^ For the year 1934, only a cast list of the performance of 23 August is available so far. This was a reprise, not the premiere, and was conducted by Franz von Hoesslin. There may also have been changes in the singers' line-ups since the premiere.
  13. ^ The cast list lists Ruth Berglund, but here the spelling Rut Berglund was chosen because this was also chosen on the cast list in 1937 and in later recordings, see [2]. In the case of the soprano Käthe Heidersbach the 1934 spelling was chosen, because this was also the common spelling in the post-NS period.
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