BAYREUTH.- American director Jay Scheib was looking at a bank of monitors inside the Bayreuth Festival Theater here on a recent afternoon.
He was rehearsing his new production of Richard Wagners Parsifal, which opens the storied Bayreuth Festival on Wednesday, and as performers circled a large metallic monolith onstage, the screens showed 3D flowers floating through blank space psychedelic animations that will come to life for audience members who see them with augmented-reality glasses.
Through those glasses, Scheib said, the flowers, and other items during the performance, will appear to float through the auditorium. In keeping with the operas themes, he added, these moments are meant to provide the audience with sacred visions of a world where wonder still exists.
Scheibs production is one of the most ambitious, and high-profile, attempts to incorporate augmented reality into opera performance. But it also caps months of tumult at Bayreuth, after plans to outfit nearly 2,000 audience members with the glasses for each performance were downscaled because of an apparent money dispute between the festivals artistic and financial leadership. The compromise, in which only 330 attendees will be provided with the glasses to experience the productions signature flourishes, has left many fuming, and concerned that internal conflicts at one of the most important events in opera were undermining its relevance.
Founded by Wagner in 1876 as a showcase for his work, the Bayreuth Festival draws opera fans from around the world for one month every summer to hear a handful of the composers works in repertory including a new production at the start of each edition. A major event on the German cultural calendar, the opening is usually attended by prominent political figures including Angela Merkel, the countrys former chancellor.
The festival remains treasured worldwide for the pristine acoustics of its theater, a hilltop opera house that Wagner had a hand in designing, and for its connection to the composer: It has been led by a family member since his death in 1883. His great-granddaughter Katharina Wagner took over creative leadership with her half sister, Eva Wagner-Pasquier, in 2008, before becoming the sole artistic director in 2015.
In recent years, though, a new leadership structure has added a layer to the festivals decision making. In 2008, the budget came under the control of four members of an independent board representing outside shareholders that collectively provide about 40% of the budget: the city of Bayreuth, the state of Bavaria, the German federal government and a group of private donors called the Society of Friends of Bayreuth, who currently chair the board.
Although the funders are meant to refrain from interfering with choices made by Bayreuths artistic leadership, some in the media have argued that the decision to withhold the money for the purchase of 2,000 glasses represented an attempt by the shareholders to rein in Katharina Wagners approach to the festival and her great-grandfathers work.
Since World War II, Bayreuth directors including Richard Wagners descendants have brought a modern or experimental sensibility to the composers works. In 2013, Katharina Wagner invited Frank Castorf to re-imagine the Ring as an anti-capitalist epic about oil; the next Ring, Valentin Schwarzs production, which opened last year, recast the cycle as, in part, an allegory about the anxieties of aging.
Toni Schmid, a former high-ranking Bavarian civil servant who led the festivals board of shareholders until 2020, said the decision not to fund the glasses was emblematic of the Society of Friends of Bayreuths more conservative idea of how a Wagner opera should look today, which is at odds with Katharina Wagners vision.
The largely older members of the donor group, Schmid said, would like to have the productions they saw 50 years ago, back when they were young but thats not art, its a museum. He added that he wished the shareholders board was occupied by representatives who know what theyre talking about and described the decision to not finance the full number of glasses as a joke.
Manuel Brug, a German journalist and critic for Die Welt, said in a phone interview that the current festival structure allowed too much power to Friends of Bayreuth. The group is too old, with many people who joined because it makes it easier to get tickets, he said, arguing that the donors should be excluded from the governing body in the future. The Bavarian arts minister Markus Blume said in an article in the Nordbayerischer Kurier on Thursday that the state of Bavaria might take over some of the donor groups shares in the future.
Georg von Waldenfels, chair of the shareholders board and head of Friends of Bayreuth, disputed that he had interfered in Katharina Wagners decision making and said in a phone interview that the decision to downscale the number of glasses was purely a decision of the artistic leadership. He added that the shareholders had merely stuck to the business plan. Katharina Wagner, however, said that the original plan failed because of the financing and divergent views about the glasses and that the outcome was unfortunate.
This disagreement reflects a broader debate about Richard Wagners legacy and adds another chapter to the festivals history of public arguments and reckonings. Winifred Wagner the English-born wife of Richards son, Siegfried who oversaw the festival from 1930 to 1944, was an avowed fan of Adolf Hitler until her death in 1980. Following World War II, the composers grandsons, Wieland and Wolfgang, opened the festival anew as something more apolitical.
More recently, the festival has been a subject of chatter, including long-standing rumors of a feud between Katharina Wagner and her former musical director, Christian Thielemann, who left his post in 2020. Last year, he publicly criticized her decision to replace the word Führer (leader) with the word Schützer (protector) in a production of Lohengrin, a change that had been made out of sensitivity to Bayreuths past associations with Nazism.
In a phone interview, Thielemann denied any feud with Katharina Wagner, and said that Bayreuth has long been plagued by gossip. There is something about Wagner that poisons people, he added. He is both an intoxicant and a perfume.
Katharina Wagners contract will be up for renewal this fall, pending a vote by the festivals board of directors. She said that if the offer were made, her acceptance would be contingent on changes to the festivals organization. You need to make this place ready for the future, and if some structural things dont change, then its impossible to do the work, she said, though she declined to provide specifics.
If she were to depart the festival, it would likely mean the end of the Wagner familys creative leadership: No other relative has publicly expressed an interest in taking over.
Katharina Wagner said that her push to find innovative ways of staging her great-grandfathers work was necessary, given the limited repertoire of the festival Richard Wagners 10 mature works and global competition among high-profile theaters staging his operas. If Bayreuth just continued to mount old-fashioned productions, she added, people can just watch a DVD.
The idea of incorporating augmented reality into Parsifal emerged in early 2019. Among the challenges was adapting the technology, which is conceived for looking at nearby objects in brightly lit spaces, for a large, darkened theater. Ultimately, Scheibs team solved the problem by creating a laser scan of the entire auditorium, down to the millimeter.
Scheib said that augmented reality would emerge during crucial scenes, and would include a gigantic floating tree and a flaming horse. When Parsifal naively kills a swan, a pair of enormous ones will appear to fly near the auditoriums ceiling, spouting blood.
This Parsifal, however, can also be experienced without the glasses, with sets, lighting and costume design depicting what Scheib described as a post-human landscape in which the last group of people are hanging on, trying to make sense of faith, forgiveness and belonging. But, he noted, the uncertainty about the glasses has been a distraction.
The use of the technology, Scheib said, was in keeping with Richard Wagners own way of approaching opera. He carried out so many innovations, with lighting and architecture, he added. Ultimately, he wanted the theater to completely disappear.
This article originally appeared in
The New York Times.