Staatsoper#
State Opera: The first opera house, the Vienna Court Opera, was built as the first monumental building of artistic importance on the Ringstrasse from 1861-1869 by A. Sicard von Sicardsburg and E. van der Nuell in neo-Romantic style. The architects were severely criticised, people spoke of a "sunken box" or "another Battle of Sadowa", which caused van der Nuell to commit suicide, while Sicardsburg died of a heart attack two months later. The predecessors of the State Opera were the Kaerntnertortheater (situated approximately on the site of today´s Hotel Sacher) and the Hofburgtheater (Imperial Palace Theatre) on Michaelerplatz square ( Burgtheater). The State Opera opened with "Don Giovanni" (performed in German) by W. A. Mozart on May 25, 1869.
During World War II (on March 12, 1945) the stage was destroyed
by bombs and the building gutted by fire. The foyer and the loggia,
with frescoes by M. v. Schwind, the main stairways, the
vestibule and the tea room were spared. Almost the entire decor and
properties, the equipment for more than 120 operas with around 150,000
costumes were destroyed. The State Opera opened its temporary stages
at the Theater an der Wien and at the Volksoper on October 6, 1945.
The reconstruction of the State Opera was carried out from 1948-1955
by E. Boltenstern (auditorium, stairways, cloakrooms, upper lounges),
C. Kosak (Gobelin Hall), O. Prossinger and F. Cewela (side passages
and Marble Hall), R. H. Eisenmenger (Safety Curtain) and H.
Leinfellner (marble inlays in the bar room). The re-opening of the
State Opera took place on November 5, 1955 with Beethoven´s
"Fidelio" under K. Boehm. The State Opera can accommodate
2,276 people (previously 2,324), offering 1,709 seats and standing
room for 567. The stage is one of the largest in Europe.
The members of the Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra are chosen from the
Orchestra of the Vienna State Opera. The Vienna State Opera, one of
the most illustrious opera houses in the world, looks back on a long
tradition ( Opera); the artistic highlights from the late 19th
and early 20th centuries are closely connected with its
history and its directors (in particular G. Mahler, H. Gregor, F.
Schalk and R. Strauss).
Great conductors of the State Opera, some of whom also worked as
directors, were G. Mahler, F. Weingartner, F. Schalk, R. Strauss, C.
Krauss, K. Boehm, H. von Karajan, L. Maazel, C. Abbado, Hans
Richter, B. Walter, W. Furtwaengler, R. Muti and others. The
era of G. Mahler in particular marked the beginning of an outstanding
development: Mahler took on new stars (such as A. Bahr-Mildenburg, S.
Kurz and L. Slezak) and, in the person of A. Roller, recruited a
stage designer who changed the lavish historicist stage decor into a
sparse stage scenery corresponding to Jugendstil (art nouveau) and
modern style. Mahler also introduced the practice of having no
lighting whatsoever in the auditorium during performances, which was
not appreciated by the audience. Mahler´s determined reform
policy was continued by his successors (especially by F. Schalk and R.
Strauss).
Until the directorship was taken over by H. von Karajan, the high
standard of the opera productions was guaranteed by maintaining a
permanent ensemble (particularly famous was K. Boehm´s
"Vienna Mozart Ensemble"), which was, however, reduced
during the 1960s in favour of the internationally common practice of
engaging guest stars. Under the management of I. Holender (since
1992) the State Opera began to build up a permanent ensemble again.
Since the Austrian Federal Theatres became a holding company in 1999
the State Opera has been run as a limited liability company
(Ges. m. b. H.).
The State Opera Ballet is also inextricably linked with the State
Opera. Great ballet masters in the imperial service, such as G.
Angiolini and J. G. Noverre, influenced the European art of
dancing as did the famous dancers of the 19th century, Fanny
Elssler and Maria Taglioni. After 1850 Paolo Taglioni introduced the
concept of "ensemble spirit" to the ballet company; his
splendid ballets remained part of the programme until 1900. The ballet
moved into the new opera house on the Ringstrasse in 1869 under ballet
master K. Telle. His successor, J. Hassreiter, prepared 48 new ballet
performances (e.g. "Die Puppenfee" by J. Bayer) and
enhanced the status of the State Opera´s own ballet school
(today ballet school of the Federal Theatres). One of the outstanding
dancers of the 20th century is G. Wiesenthal, famous for her
expressive form of classical dance. H. Kroeller, who became
choreographer in 1924, was responsible for the excellent production of
the ballets "Josephs Legende" and "Schlagobers"
(by R. Strauss). His successors as choreographers were the soloists T.
Birkmeyer and W. Fraenzl (famous for his performances of the Viennese
waltz) and, in 1942, Erika Hanka, whose work aimed at a combination
of classical ballet and modern interpretive dance. A highlight in the
history of the State Opera Ballet was the engagement of R. Nureyev
who, as dancer and choreographer, worked closely with the Vienna
ensemble between 1964 and 1988 and greatly influenced its future
development.
Literature#
M. Graf, Die Wiener Oper, 1955; H. Kralik, Die Wiener Oper, 1962; F. Hadamowsky, Die Wiener Hoftheater (vol. 2: Die Wiener Hofoper), 1975; 100 Jahre Wiener Oper am Ring, 1969; V. Keil-Budischowsky, Die Theater Wiens, 1983; A. Seebohm, Die Wiener Oper, 1986; W. Sinkovicz and A. Zeininger, Das Haus am Ring, 1996; F. Endler, Karajan an der Wr. Oper, 1997; A. Oberzaucher, Wr. Staatsopernballett, 1997: E. W. Partsch, Die Aera G. Mahler, 1997.