Synopsis
- Long after the Paris world premiere in 1896 Oscar Wilde’s tragedy “Salomé” remained a thorn in the flesh of the establishment across Europe. In Wilhelminian Germany and the Danube Monarchy, too, official art adjudicators considered the subject “repulsive” and the text “an insult to morality”. In the minds of the guardians of public morals the New Testament story of Herod’s daughter was as ill-suited to the stage as it was to pictorial representation, which was experiencing a boom at the time. Salomé’s stepfather, Herod, the Roman’s client king of Judea, Galilee and Samaria who is said to have ordered the massacre of the innocents around Bethlehem, persuades her to dance for him. Encouraged by her mother, she demands to be given the head of John the Baptist as a reward.
Conductor: Alain Altinoglu; Stage Director: Claus Guth; Set Design, Costume Design: Muriel Gerstner; Lighting: Olaf Freese; With Burkhard Ulrich, Jeanne-Michèle Charbonnet, Catherine Naglestad, Michael Volle, Thomas Blondelle, Annika Schlicht et al.
Premiere at the Deutsche Oper Berlin: 24. January 2016
Crew
- Director: Claus Guth, Sommer Ulrickson
- Production Design: Muriel Gerstner, Olaf Freese
- Score: Alain Altinoglu, Richard Strauss
- Line producer: Ruth Tromboukis