Wagner's Theatre: In Search of a Legacy

Author:   Patrick Carnegy
Publisher:   James Clarke & Co Ltd
ISBN:  

9780718897406


Pages:   179
Publication Date:   26 September 2024
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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Wagner's Theatre: In Search of a Legacy


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Full Product Details

Author:   Patrick Carnegy
Publisher:   James Clarke & Co Ltd
Imprint:   Lutterworth Press
ISBN:  

9780718897406


ISBN 10:   0718897404
Pages:   179
Publication Date:   26 September 2024
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

Table of Contents

Introduction by John Deathridge Prelude Part One: The Master's Dream 1. Wagner and his Shakespeare 2. Reckoning up the Ring: a Mathematician's Diary of Bayreuth 1876 3. Designs on the Ring: the Mystery Surrounding Josef Hoffmann's Sketches Unravelled Part Two: Arts of Interpretation 4. Tristan und Isolde, Vienna 1903: 'Wie hör' ich das Licht!' (Gustav Mahler and Alfred Roller) 5. Damming the Rhine (Patrice Chéreau's Ring at Bayreuth 1976) 6. Reinventing Wagner after Hitler (Wieland Wagner, Joachim Herz, Patrice Chéreau and Hans- Jürgen Syberberg) 7. A Touch of Wagnermania Part Three: A Quartet of Conductors 8. Toscanini: Champion of the Divine Art 9. Klemperer: Sufferings and Greatness 10. Karajan: The Conductor as Supreme Being 11. Solti: Still Climbing the Mountain Part Four: Opera Backstage: the Dramaturg's Story 12. Phantom at the Royal Opera 13. Blood on the Carpet: English National Opera in Retrospect 14. Michael Tippett on Opera (A Conversation with the Composer) Selected Writings Index Illustration Credits

Reviews

This is a book for all who love Opera - that combination of music, drama, word and song, story-telling and the deep workings of the unconscious. Who better than Patrick Carnegy to investigate this mysterious and elusive world? He delves into German Shakespeare, the first Ring of 1876, Mahler and Roller's 'right to come up with answers undreamt of by the composer', through to more recent times - four great conductors, Opera in London, and Michael Tippett. All endlessly fascinating. Sir John Tomlinson, Wagnerian bass-baritone Wagner's Theatre is a front-row report of the landmark stagings of Wagner´s work, interspersed by new discoveries around stage design and technology. Carnegy's description of highlights from the productions is a stimulating exploration into the historical, musical, and political background of Wagnerian opera-staging, and thoroughly engaging reading. It is entertaining, but also highly informative for Wagner fans and experts alike. Eva Rieger, author of Minna Wagner: A life, with Richard Wagner A treasure trove of fascinating insights, this engaging book explores Wagner's theatre from many different angles. At its heart is a tantalisingly evocative chapter on the groundbreaking 1903 Mahler/Roller Vienna production of Tristan und Isolde, as well as vivid assessments of productions by Herz, Wieland Wagner and Cherau, and a brilliant elucidation of Syberberg's 1982 Parsifal film. Finally, there is a lovely quote by Michael Tippett of having learnt from Wagner how to fill the stage with music (the glorious sunlit opening of Act 2 Midsummer Marriage). Anthony Negus, Conductor, Coach, Music Director Longborough Festival Opera Carnegy writes with all the authority and insight one might expect from someone so intimately involved with the theory and practice of opera production over a long and distinguished career. Wagner's Theatre is simply a 'must have' for anyone interested in not just Wagner himself but also the wider history of, and possible future for, opera as drama. This is a wonderful collection of essays, offering us a cornucopia of fine scholarship, sharp critique, and pragmatic observation, all beautifully written and illustrated. Peter Tregear, Conductor and Principal Fellow, Melbourne Conservatorium of Music About [Carnegy's 2006 book] Wagner and the Art of the Theatre, Pierre Boulez said . . . that he truly believed it to be 'one of the best documented publications in all the recent literature on Wagner.'. It still is. With even richer documentation, a third of it this time in colour, this new book ventures into broader ramifications of Wagner's legacy. John Deathridge, from his Introduction to Wagner's Theatre Patrick Carnegy gives vivid accounts of the radical reinvention of the Wagnerian stage, and of the post-war rehabilitation of the composer and his work after Hitler's appropriation. Mastersingers newsletter 04/2024 ' . . . [Carnegy's] enthralling exploration of the intricacies of the process whereby Hoffmann's original sketches for the sets of the Ring have only recently come to light are greatly to be welcomed.' 'This finely nuanced account [of the Mahler-Roller Tristan und Isolde in Vienna, 1903] is one of the best I have read . . . .' '. . . highly informative and lively written essays on key conductors of the 20th century - Karajan, Toscanini, Klemperer and Solti . . .' Simon Williams In Wagner Notes, Journal of Wagner Society New York, Volume XLVIII, No. 4, July 2024. Thanks to Wagner's Theatre, we know that Pringsheim defended the master's creation by striking a sceptic on the nose with his beer mug, thereby earning the sobriquet ""Schoppen-hauer"" (tankard-brawler) and engendering that rarest of things, a good German pun. Better still, that Otto Klemperer, remembered in later life as the austere and gloomy colossus of the magisterial tempo, was soothed on his arrival in Los Angeles in 1933 by the wife of an orchestra manager who chirped ""We'll have to call you 'Klempie'."" ""You may call,"" came the reply, ""But I won't come."" Jonathan Gaisman In The Critic Magazine, 76, August/September, 2024


"This is a book for all who love Opera - that combination of music, drama, word and song, story-telling and the deep workings of the unconscious. Who better than Patrick Carnegy to investigate this mysterious and elusive world? He delves into German Shakespeare, the first Ring of 1876, Mahler and Roller's 'right to come up with answers undreamt of by the composer', through to more recent times - four great conductors, Opera in London, and Michael Tippett. All endlessly fascinating. Sir John Tomlinson, Wagnerian bass-baritone Wagner's Theatre is a front-row report of the landmark stagings of Wagner´s work, interspersed by new discoveries around stage design and technology. Carnegy's description of highlights from the productions is a stimulating exploration into the historical, musical, and political background of Wagnerian opera-staging, and thoroughly engaging reading. It is entertaining, but also highly informative for Wagner fans and experts alike. Eva Rieger, author of Minna Wagner: A life, with Richard Wagner A treasure trove of fascinating insights, this engaging book explores Wagner's theatre from many different angles. At its heart is a tantalisingly evocative chapter on the groundbreaking 1903 Mahler/Roller Vienna production of Tristan und Isolde, as well as vivid assessments of productions by Herz, Wieland Wagner and Cherau, and a brilliant elucidation of Syberberg's 1982 Parsifal film. Finally, there is a lovely quote by Michael Tippett of having learnt from Wagner how to fill the stage with music (the glorious sunlit opening of Act 2 Midsummer Marriage). Anthony Negus, Conductor, Coach, Music Director Longborough Festival Opera Carnegy writes with all the authority and insight one might expect from someone so intimately involved with the theory and practice of opera production over a long and distinguished career. Wagner's Theatre is simply a 'must have' for anyone interested in not just Wagner himself but also the wider history of, and possible future for, opera as drama. This is a wonderful collection of essays, offering us a cornucopia of fine scholarship, sharp critique, and pragmatic observation, all beautifully written and illustrated. Peter Tregear, Conductor and Principal Fellow, Melbourne Conservatorium of Music About [Carnegy's 2006 book] Wagner and the Art of the Theatre, Pierre Boulez said . . . that he truly believed it to be 'one of the best documented publications in all the recent literature on Wagner.'. It still is. With even richer documentation, a third of it this time in colour, this new book ventures into broader ramifications of Wagner's legacy. John Deathridge, from his Introduction to Wagner's Theatre Patrick Carnegy gives vivid accounts of the radical reinvention of the Wagnerian stage, and of the post-war rehabilitation of the composer and his work after Hitler's appropriation. Mastersingers newsletter 04/2024 ' . . . [Carnegy's] enthralling exploration of the intricacies of the process whereby Hoffmann's original sketches for the sets of the Ring have only recently come to light are greatly to be welcomed.' 'This finely nuanced account [of the Mahler-Roller Tristan und Isolde in Vienna, 1903] is one of the best I have read . . . .' '. . . highly informative and lively written essays on key conductors of the 20th century - Karajan, Toscanini, Klemperer and Solti . . .' Simon Williams In Wagner Notes, Journal of Wagner Society New York, Volume XLVIII, No. 4, July 2024. Thanks to Wagner's Theatre, we know that Pringsheim defended the master's creation by striking a sceptic on the nose with his beer mug, thereby earning the sobriquet ""Schoppen-hauer"" (tankard-brawler) and engendering that rarest of things, a good German pun. Better still, that Otto Klemperer, remembered in later life as the austere and gloomy colossus of the magisterial tempo, was soothed on his arrival in Los Angeles in 1933 by the wife of an orchestra manager who chirped ""We'll have to call you 'Klempie'."" ""You may call,"" came the reply, ""But I won't come."" Jonathan Gaisman In The Critic Magazine, 76, August/September, 2024"


Author Information

Since 1967 and his first visit to Bayreuth for The Times, Patrick Carnegy's principal research interest has been the stage history of Wagner's works. He was the first person to be appointed Dramaturg (literary and production adviser) at the Royal Opera House and was Stratford-upon-Avon theatre critic for The Spectator, 1998 - 2013. Dr Carnegy's books include Faust as Musician: a study of Thomas Mann's ""Doktor Faustus"" (1973), and the critically acclaimed Wagner and the Art of the Theatre (2006), which won a Royal Philharmonic Society Music Award, and, in the USA, a George Freedley Memorial Award for its 'outstanding contribution to the history of the theatre'.

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