The Salzburg Festival
(Salzburger Festspiele) is a prominent festival of music and drama. It is held each summer (for five weeks starting in late July) within the Austrian town of Salzburg, the birthplace of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart. In modern time there is also an annual Salzburg Easter Festival
held by the same organization.
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History
The summer festival was first founded in 1877 but was discontinued in 1910. At the close of
World War I in 1918, its revival was championed by five men now regarded as the founders: poet and dramatist
Hugo von Hofmannsthal, composer
Richard Strauss, scenic designer
Alfred Roller, conductor
Franz Schalk and the director of the Salzburg City Theater,
Max Reinhardt.
The Festival was officially reborn on
22 August 1920 with a performance of Hofmannsthal's play
Jedermann
on the steps of Cathedral Square. The practice has become a tradition, and Jedermann is now always performed at Cathedral Square.
In 1926 the old Archbishop's stable
Felsenreitschule was converted into a theater and the Festival Hall (
Salzburger Festspielhaus) opera house opened its doors. As this summer festival gained fame and stature as the premier venue for opera, drama play, and classical concert presentation, its musical repertory concentrated on Mozart and Strauss, but other works, such as
Verdi's
Falstaff
and
Beethoven's
Fidelio
were also performed.
1934 to 1937 represents a golden period when the famed conductors
Arturo Toscanini and
Bruno Walter conducted many performances. In 1936, the festival featured a performance by the
Trapp Family Singers, whose story was later dramatized as the musical and film
The Sound of Music
(featuring a shot of the Trapps singing in Felsenreitschule Theater). In 1937,
Boyd Neel and his orchestra premiered
Benjamin Britten’s
Variations on a Theme of Frank Bridge
at the Festival.
[1]
The Festival's popularity suffered a major blow once Austria was
annexed into Germany in 1938, though it remained in operation until closing temporarily in 1943. With the end of
World War II, the Salzburg Festival reopened in 1945 immediately following the Allied victory in Europe.
Post World War II Festivals
The post-war Festival slowly regained its prominence as the premier summer opera festival, especially in works by Mozart.
In 2006, the festival celebrated the 250th anniversary of Mozart's birth by staging all 22 of his operatic works (including two unfinished operas), to great acclaim. All 22 were filmed and were released to the general public in November 2006. Since 2002 the festival has been led by Artistic Director
Markus Hinterhäuser.
Alexander Pereira is scheduled to succeed Hinterhäuser after the 2011 summer festival.
Salzburg Whitsun Festival
The Salzburg Whitsun Festival (Salzburger Pfingstfestspiele) is an extension of the traditional Salzburg Summer Festival, and presents productions of operas along with works from the great
baroque orchestral repertoire at the Grosses Festspielhaus during
Whitsun (or Pentecost) weekend. In 2005, it presented
Handel's
Acis and Galatea
and his oratorio
Solomon
.
See also
References
- ''The Gramophone'', June 1972, p. 178