Wiener Staatsoper: Lohengrin

Венская опера: Лоэнгрин

Cast & Crew

König Heinrich – Georg Zeppenfeld
Lohengrin – David Butt Philip
Elsa von Brabant – Malin Byström
Telramund – Martin Gantner
Ortrud – Anja Kampe
Directors – Jossi Wieler, Sergio Morabito
Conductor – Christian Thielemann
Set & Costume Designer – Anna Viebrock
Lighting designer – Sebastian Alphons

Description

Once upon a time there was a king who died and left behind two children, a son and a daughter. But the daughter was a year older than the son. And one day the two royal children argued with each other about which of them should be king, for the brother said, 'I am a prince, and when there are princes, princesses do not get to reign But the daughter objected: 'I am the first-born and the eldest, I should take precedence...

War, power struggle and a real murder? The Salzburg Easter Festival production of Lohengrin by directorial duo Jossi Wieler and Sergio Morabito comes to Vienna. The pair stages the Wagner classic as a crime thriller with a twist. At the podium is Christian Thielemann, who more than proves his reputation as the Wagner-expert par excellence, as he “feels obliged to reach new heights and leads the orchestra of the Vienna state Opera like no other conductor today” (Bachtrack). On stage, David Butt Philip as the titular Lohengrin is a “heldentenor with radiance and stamina” (Kleine Zeitung), while Malin Byström portrays an Elsa who might not be as innocent as the libretto suggests and convinces with “dramatic furore” (Der Standard). Anja Kampe sings her Ortrud “beautifully, yet so expressively, with such diction” (Kurier) and Martin Gantner’s Telramund is “flawless in its precision” (News). With excellent communication and balance between the stage and the pit, the production becomes a musical tour de force: When could Ortrud and Telramund express their lust for power and love-hate relationship more quietly, more distinctly and with more nuance than on Thielemann's soundscape? When have we heard a more plausible account of Elsa's struggle for a viable relationship with her saviour? When has the Staatsoper Chorus sung Wagner's powerful sound clusters more delicately and more comprehensibly” (Kleine Zeitung)? At the end, Christian Thielemann was rewarded with the loudest cheers. 

Summary


ACT I
King Henry's Saxon army marches into the Duchy of Brabant on the banks of the Scheldt. The leaderless neighboring country is to join Henry's campaign against the Hungarians. However, the question of succession in the duchy must first be decided. Henry favors Count Frederick of Telramund. He accuses Elsa of Brabant, the first-born daughter of the deceased duke, of having drowned her younger brother Gottfried, the heir to the throne. Elsa is summoned to court. Instead of defending herself, she conjures up the image of an unknown knight who will prove her innocence in a court of God, marry her and succeed her father.

The appeal of a defender who would be prepared to fight Frederick of Telramund "to the death" initially goes unanswered until an unknown man approaches across the water, whose strangeness casts a spell over everyone. After an address of loyalty to King Henry and before he faces the duel with Frederick of Telramund, Elsa must promise him never to ask his name and identity, whereupon he declares his love for her. The subsequent judgment of God decides against Frederick of Telramund. Brabants and Saxons cheer the Nameless One.

ACT II
Only Ortrud, the wife of Friedrich von Telramund, doubts the divine legitimacy of the Nameless One. The outsider, who has not converted to Christianity, claims to have witnessed Elsa's murder of Gottfried. She persuades her husband, who has been declared outlawed, to attempt to disenchant the Nameless One: she herself will manipulate Elsa into asking the forbidden question after all, he should publicly accuse the Nameless One of sorcery; even if she succeeds in seizing a limb of his body, however small, his power would be broken. Ortrud succeeds in being accepted back into Elsa's grace.

The Nameless One has himself declared 'Protector of Brabant' and agrees with King Henry that, following his marriage to Elsa, he will lead the Brabant army to war alongside Henry's troops. Fuelled by the belief in the new ruler's divine mission, the general mobilization of Brabant begins at the same time as the wedding preparations.

On the way to the wedding, Ortrud confronts the bride and publicly raises doubts about the identity of the nameless man, before Frederick also questions the legitimacy of God's judgment, as he has failed to establish the name and origin of his rival. The battle-ready Saxons and Brabants are not interested in such a clarification. However, it is only when Elsa publicly declares her own doubts about the "Protector of Brabant" to be overcome that the wedding can take place.

ACT III
Elsa and the Nameless One are led into the bridal chamber. Elsa demands a share in her husband's secret so that she can take conscious responsibility for keeping it, for which she would be prepared to risk her life. The Nameless One refuses, but in return offers her the chance to forgo a precise clarification of the background to her brother's disappearance.

Nevertheless, Elsa asks the forbidden question - regardless of herself or him. At this moment, Frederick of Telramund, who had been in hiding, emerges and is struck down by the Nameless One. 

At dawn, the Nameless One declares his resignation before the marching armies of Saxony and Brabant: by asking the forbidden question, Elsa has stripped him of all power, for the success of his mission was linked to the secret of his identity. lnce he now reveals himself as Lohengrin and son of the Grail King, he must withdraw. With his final disappearance, he gives Brabant back the lost heir to the throne, Gottfried.

Screenings

26 March 2025, Wednesday, 19:00
Rodina

Runtime

3 h. 42 min.with two intermissions

Language

Recorded screening: German, russian subtitles

16+

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