Margravial Opera House
![]() The Margravial Opera House in 2013 | |
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Location | Bayreuth, Bavaria, Germany |
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Coordinates | 49°56′40″N 11°34′43″E / 49.94444°N 11.57861°E |
Type | Opera house |
Construction | |
Built | 1744–1748 |
Architect |
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Official name | Margravial Opera House Bayreuth |
Criteria | Cultural: (i), (iv) |
Reference | 1379 |
Inscription | 2012 (36th Session) |
Area | 0.19 ha (0.47 acres) |
Buffer zone | 4.22 ha (10.4 acres) |
The Margravial Opera House (
Description
Located in a widened part of the street so that carriages could pull up in front, the opera house is 71.5 meters long, 31 meters wide, and 26 meters tall.[3] The building was constructed according to plans designed by the French architect Joseph Saint-Pierre (ca. 1709 – 1754), court builder of the Hohenzollern margrave Frederick of Brandenburg-Bayreuth and his wife Princess Wilhelmine of Prussia.[2] The sandstone façade was designed to blend with the surrounding buildings and to reference the Place Vendôme in Paris, with large Corinthian columns. A balustrade stretched across the entire façade, with sculptures of Minerva, Apollo, and 6 Muses placed atop.[3]
The wooden interior was designed by Giuseppe Galli Bibiena (1696–1757)[4] and his son Carlo from Bologna in an Italian Late Baroque style. The auditorium was built in a bell shape and can seat roughly 500 people.[2] Intricately covered in gold accents, with a trompe-l'œil ceiling, the interior may have attempted to imitate precious stones like lapis lazuli.[3] Some areas of the interior are covered with painted canvas in order to avoid cracks and improve acoustics.[3]
The Court
History
The Bayreuth Opera House was inaugurated on the occasion of the marriage of their daughter
More than one hundred years later, the stage's great depth of 27 metres (89 ft)[6] attracted the composer Richard Wagner, who in 1872 chose Bayreuth as festival centre and had the Festspielhaus built north of the town. The foundation stone ceremony was held on 22 May, Wagner's birthday, and included a performance of Beethoven's Symphony No. 9, directed by the maestro.
Parts of the 1994 biopic
The theatre closed on October 2012 for extensive refurbishment and redevelopment and reopened on 12 April 2018.[6][8][9]
References
- ^ Goldmann, A. J., Inch by Inch, an Operatic Jewel Is Polished, The New York Times, 16 April 2018, photographs by Gordon Welters
- ^ a b c "Margravial Opera House Bayreuth". UNESCO. Retrieved 10 September 2022.
- ^ a b c d e Margravial Opera House Bayreuth – Outstanding monument of baroque theatre culture (PDF) (Report). The Bavarian Department for State-owned Palaces, Gardens and Lakes. December 2009. Retrieved 10 September 2022.
- ^ "Margravial Opera House Bayreuth – World Heritage Site – Pictures, info and travel reports". www.worldheritagesite.org. Retrieved 6 November 2017.
- ^ Kotnik, Vlado (6 July 2017). "The Adaptability of Opera: When Different Social Agents Come to Common Ground" (PDF). sfopera.com.
- ^ a b "UNESCO-Weltkulturerbe Markgräfliches Opernhaus" [UNESCO World Heritage Site: Margravial Opera House] (in German). City of Bayreuth: Tourism, Culture and Leisure. Retrieved 22 January 2016.
- ^ Berg, Karl Georg (24 September 2020). "Erfolgreiche Premiere des neuen Festivals Bayreuth Baroque". Die Rheinpfalz (in German). Ludwigshafen. Retrieved 8 October 2022.
- ^ Brug, Manuel (14 April 2018). "Bayreuth hat seinen schönsten Kulturtempel zurück". Die Welt (in German). Retrieved 16 April 2018.
- ^ "Markgräfliches Opernhaus Bayreuth in neuem Glanz wiedereröffnet". Deutsche Welle (in German). 12 April 2018. Retrieved 16 April 2018.
External links
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