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Im Gedenken an Gottfried Pilz - Deutsche Oper Berlin

21 September 1944 – 3 October 2024

In memoriam Gottfried Pilz

Gottfried Pilz once confessed that his work was not about decoration, but about making visible what was behind a wall, what lay beyond the boundaries. And each of the stage sets that Pilz created during the course of his long career does indeed reflect this examination of the essence and message of the underlying work: whether he was giving the action a specific location, as in his design for the Berlin production of Meyerbeer's THE HUGENOTS, which he set in a landscape of war-torn Berlin in 1987, or whether he created one of those more abstract, sparsely furnished spaces, defined by changes in light and colour, as for his Berlin productions of Poulenc's DIALOGUES DES CARMÉLITES or Enescu's OEDIPE. With his aim of making the essence of great works of musical theatre visible and present, the Salzburg-born director soon became a partner to a generation of directors who had set themselves the same goal: John Dew, for example, with whom he worked continuously from 1980 to 1990 and who also brought him to the Deutsche Oper Berlin for LES HUGENOTS and Gounod's FAUST. Pilz had got to know the theatre early on, in the early seventies, as assistant to Filippo Sanjust and as designer for several productions (including the 1971 premiere of Aribert Reimann's chamber opera MELUSINE), but now he became – alongside his colleague Peter Sykora – the set designer who was to have the most lasting influence on the aesthetics of the Götz Friedrich era. Gottfried Pilz was to work with Götz Friedrich himself until the latter's death, and was responsible, among others, for productions such as DER ROSENKAVALIER, UN BALLO IN MASCHERA, BORIS GODUNOW and, in December 2000, the last Friedrich premiere, Menotti's children's opera AMAHL AND THE NIGHT VISITORS. The intellectual rigour and holistic thinking that Pilz brought to his work inevitably led him – almost always in collaboration with his wife Isabel Ines Glathar – to also conceive of costume design as an integral part of his work. 18 productions are ultimately associated with Pilz at the Deutsche Oper Berlin, in addition to his collaboration with Friedrich and Dew, his work with Günter Krämer (DIALOGUES DES CARMÉLITES, AUFSTIEG UND FALL DER STADT MAHAGONNY) is particularly noteworthy. Just two weeks ago, Pilz was in his adopted home of Berlin for an event in honour of his eightieth birthday, at which a book about him and his work was presented (Kerstin Schröder (ed.): Gottfried Pilz. Bühne Kostüm Regie, Verlag Theater der Zeit). Last Thursday, he passed away unexpectedly.

The Deutsche Oper Berlin mourns the loss of one of the greats in his field and will honour his memory and his work.

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21
DEC

Advents-Verlosung: Das 21. Fensterchen

On 12 April 2025, we will celebrate the revival of DIE MEISTERSINGER VON NÜRNBERG in the production by Jossi Wieler, Sergio Morabito and Anna Viebrock, with Thomas Johannes Mayer as Hans Sachs, Elena Tsallagova as Eva, Magnus Vigilius as Walther von Stolzing and Chance Jonas-O'Toole as David, as part of our ‘Richard Wagner in April’ weeks. But today, we are giving away our DVD, which was recorded in collaboration with the NAXOS label in the premiere series in early summer 2022.

In today's Advent calendar window, we are giving away 2 DVDs of DIE MEISTERSINGER VON NÜRNBERG – Opera in three acts by Richard Wagner. If you would like to win one of the two DVDs, please write an e-mail with the subject ‘The 21st window’ to advent@deutscheoperberlin.de.

More popular than almost any other stage work by Richard Wagner, DIE MEISTERSINGER VON NÜRNBERG is loved and hated at the same time. The play combines a light-hearted comedy plot with a summer night's drunken play about the delusion and reality of love, but at the same time claims to be a founding manifesto of German national art and is therefore more historically charged in its reception than almost any other work by Richard Wagner. At the same time, however, DIE MEISTERSINGER is first and foremost a piece about music and music-making.

Telling the story of DIE MEISTERSINGER in a world dedicated to music is also the starting point for the directorial concept of Jossi Wieler, Anna Viebrock and Sergio Morabito. In it, they tell of the rules and rigid dogmas that govern this world and which thus become an example for numerous contexts in which people set rules, subordinate themselves and find refuge in them or want to break out and escape. They bring a play to the stage in which singers also play singers in order to tell a story about singing. And they show characters such as Hans Sachs, an ageing man who renounces his love for Eva in favour of a younger man and at the same time wants to reform the system, but does not shy away from demagoguery and populism - while the breath of history occasionally blows in the ghosts of the Meistersinger past.

Conductor John Fiore; Staging Jossi Wieler, Anna Viebrock, Sergio Morabito; With Johan Reuter, Albert Pesendorfer, Gideon Poppe, Simon Pauly, Philipp Jekal, Thomas Lehman, Jörg Schörner, Clemens Bieber, Burkhard Ulrich, Stephen Bronk, Tobias Kehrer, Byung Gil Kim, Klaus Florian Vogt, Ya-Chung Huang, Heidi Stober, Annika Schlicht a. o.; Chorus and Orchestra of the Deutsche Oper Berlin



Closing date: 21 December 2024, the winners will be informed by email on 23 December 2024. The DVDs will then be sent by post. Legal recourse is excluded.