Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg
- Location:
- Die Staatstheater Stuttgart - Opernhaus, Oberer Schloßgarten 6, 70173 Stuttgart
- Date
Please check the individual dates in the calendar overview.
- Price:
- from € 8.00
by Richard Wagner Opera in three acts Poetry by the composer in German with surtitles in German and English
Your own daughter's hand as a prize in a singing competition - imagine that! There could hardly be a stronger sign of belief in the systemic relevance of art. And indeed, goldsmith Veit Pogner, who offers his daughter Eva as a prize, is just one of many masters from Nuremberg for whom their art is more than just a nice-sounding sideline: no less than a community-building and society-improving force. In the Meistersinger, we encounter a group of utopians who are not interested in their origins or money, but in innovation and the future. Eva's own attitude to the whole thing is, as so often, of secondary importance. She already knows who she would let sing for her and who she would rather not. Wagner initially conceived "Die Meistersinger" as a comic opera, and so everything ends on a superficially happy note: in the end, Eva's crush Stolzing wins the competition and the bride - an impoverished squire, of all people. The future comes from the past, not only in terms of the son-in-law's origins, but also with regard to the end of the utopia: the whole thing culminates in the Meistersinger Hans Sachs, who mentored the Junker Stolzing to victory, being crowned King of Art: "Heil Sachs!" and glory to the holy German art. In Wagner's works, the monstrous often peeps through the tiniest of cracks. With the Meistersinger, Elisabeth Stöppler and Cornelius Meister also tell a piece of German history and mentality between awakening and restoration and, in this German Midsummer Night's Dream (Elisabeth Stöppler), focus on the relationship between the generations and the question of why what was is perhaps also what will be.
Price information
- Price:
- from € 8.00