Staatsoper Hamburg: The Glass Menagerie Tickets | Event Dates & Schedule | GoComGo.com

The Glass Menagerie Tickets

Staatsoper Hamburg, Hamburg, Germany
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Available Dates: 11 - 13 Oct, 2024 (3 events)
Important Info
Type: Modern Ballet
City: Hamburg, Germany
Duration: 2h 30min with 1 interval
Acts: 2
Intervals: 1

E-tickets: Print at home or at the box office of the event if so specified. You will find more information in your booking confirmation email.

You can only select the category, and not the exact seats.
If you order 2 or 3 tickets: your seats will be next to each other.
If you order 4 or more tickets: your seats will be next to each other, or, if this is not possible, we will provide a combination of groups of seats (at least in pairs, for example 2+2 or 2+3).

Cast
Performers
Choose the date to see the peformers
Creators
Composer: Charles Ives
Composer: Ned Rorem
Composer: Philip Glass
Choreography: John Neumeier
Playwright: Tennessee Williams
Overview

"The Glass Menagerie" was the foundation of Tennessee Williams's fame as one of the most important writers in the US of the 20th century. Although the success of this production on Broadway was entirely unexpected for the 33-year-old author, he had been working towards the premiere with great determination. With his drama, Williams aspired to show a new form of theater. He intended to project the essence of human nature by telling the story from the perspective of individual memories – as a "memory play".

Tom looks back on his years in a fatherless lower middle class American family, between his mother and his dreamy, elflike, handicapped sister. In John Neumeier’s choreography, this Tom is more: he stands for Tennessee Williams himself, as well as for any artist whose creativity threatens to burst out of his shackled environment. For The Glass Menagerie, Neumeier chose music by Charles Ives, Philip Glass, and Ned Rorem: American composers of the twentieth century, independent, undogmatic, and unpretentious. "So beautiful, it brings tears to the eyes," wrote ballett-journal after the Hamburg premiere in 2019.

By John Neumeier:

"When I was seventeen, I saw a play, "The Glass Menagerie", at a theatre attached to the university I would soon attend. I did not know then that the director, Father John Walsh S. J., would become the most important mentor of my life – I had no idea that Joan Schwartz who played Laura would become my "adopted" sister.

The effect of Tennessee Williams's drama has never left me. For years, I considered how it could possibly become a ballet, how I might transform Tennessee Williams's extraordinary and moving poetry into meaningful movement. It was Alina Cojocaru and our work together creating "Liliom" that convinced me: The time must be now.

The most difficult challenge in choreographically orchestrating this drama quartet is Laura. How to choreograph an evening­long ballet whose central figure is physically impaired? At the present stage of rehearsal, the question is more important than the answer – although the experience of creation develops a specific dance language.

The story is very simple. It concerns a family. The conflicts, aggressions and love of a family seated around the kitchen table. A mother, Amanda, who is abandoned, her artistically minded son Tom who has to work in a shoe factory, and her fragile, dreaming daughter Laura Rose who loves glass animal figures – particularly a unicorn. The concerns of these three people begin to centre on a kind of saviour – the gentleman caller – Jim O'Connor. The limited dimensions of their St. Louis apartment seem unable to contain the enormity of each character's hopes, desires and dreams. These hopes, desires and dreams expressed but sometimes written "between the lines" in Tennessee Williams's brilliant dramatic poetry, are the (wordless) inspiration for my choreography.

Tennessee Williams calls his autobiographical drama a "memory play": All action and emotion are remembered from Tom/Tennessee's past. In my "memory ballet", drama and biography, past and present exist simultaneously and interact."

Synopsis

A MEMORY PLAY
By John Neumeier

Tennessee Williams calls his autobiographical drama a "memory play": All action and emotion are remembered from Tom/Tennessee's past. In my "memory ballet", drama and biography, past and present exist simultaneously and interact.

On a ship, the successful painter known as Tennessee, is haunted by memories of the family that he, like his father before him, abandoned.

In memory, he reconstructs the St. Louis apartment and feels the presence of his dominating mother Amanda, his fragile, physically impaired sister Laura Rose and remembers himself as "Tom", a dreaming child and insecure young man.

He thinks of Ozzie, their adored nurse who thrilled and enchanted the children with ghost stories and also inspired his sister's "glass menagerie" with the gift of a chrystal star. Tennessee recalls the family table – centre for affection and contact but also for conflicts, desires and dreams.

Amanda who sells women's magazines to support her family, lives in illusionary memories of the past, of lawns covered over with her favourite jonquils and her many "Gentleman Callers".

Tom hates his job at the Continental Shoe Factory, loves to draw and is desperate for escape and the freedom of an artist's life.

Laura Rose is forced to attend Rubican's Business College, but often takes refuge at a movie and finds comfort in her collection of tiny glass animals – especially with her favourite – the unicorn.

Amanda is determined that Laura Rose must marry. Finding Tom's sketch of his colleague, Jim O'Connor, she visualizes him as the ideal "Gentleman Caller" for Laura Rose.

Laura Rose remembers Jim as the basketball hero she secretly loved in high school.

The Gentleman Caller arrives. But, the evening ends badly, sadly. Jim has a fiancée, Betty. Witnessing his past again does not exorcise Tennessee's guilt connected to the sister he abandoned. In a world blinded by the flaming chaos of World War II, he wishes Laura Rose might blow out her candles – the candles of her memory ...

Venue Info

Staatsoper Hamburg - Hamburg
Location   Große Theaterstraße 25

Staatsoper Hamburg is the oldest publicly accessible musical theater in Germany, located in Hamburg. It was founded in 1678. With the emergence of the Hamburg Opera House, researchers attribute the formation of a national German opera school.

Opera in Hamburg dates to 2 January 1678 when the Oper am Gänsemarkt was inaugurated with a performance of a biblical Singspiel by Johann Theile. It was not a court theatre but the first public opera house in Germany established by the art-loving citizens of Hamburg, a prosperous member of the Hanseatic League.

The Hamburg Bürgeroper resisted the dominance of the Italianate style and rapidly became the leading musical center of the German Baroque. In 1703, George Friedrich Handel was engaged as violinist and harpsichordist and performances of his operas were not long in appearing. In 1705, Hamburg gave the world première of his opera Nero.

In 1721, Georg Philipp Telemann, a central figure of the German Baroque, joined the Hamburg Opera, and in subsequent years Christoph Willibald Gluck, Johann Adolph Hasse and various Italian companies were among the guests.

To replace the aging wooden structure, the first stone was laid on 18 May 1826 for the Stadt-Theater on the present-day site of the Staatsoper Hamburg. The new theater, with seating for 2,800 guest, was inaugurated less than a year later with Beethoven's incidental music to Egmont.

In 1873, both the exterior and interior of the structure were renovated in the reigning "Gründerzeit" style of the time, and again in 1891, when electric lighting was introduced.

Under the direction of Bernhard Pollini, the house mounted its first complete Ring Cycle in 1879. In 1883, the year of Wagner's death, a cycle comprising nine of his operas commenced. The musical directors Hans von Bülow (from 1887 to 1890) and Gustav Mahler (from 1891 to 1897) also contributed to the fame of the opera house.

In the beginning of the 20th century, opera was an important part of the theatre's repertoire; among the 321 performances during the 1907–08 season, 282 were performances of opera. The Stadt-Theater performed not only established repertoire but also new works, such as Paul Hindemith's Sancta Susanna, Igor Stravinsky's The Soldier's Tale, Ernst Krenek's Jonny spielt auf, and Leoš Janáček's Jenůfa. Ferruccio Busoni's Die Brautwahl (1912) and Erich Wolfgang Korngold's Die tote Stadt (1920) both had their world premieres in Hamburg. In the 1930s, after Hitler came to power, the opera house was renamed Hamburgische Staatsoper.

On the night of 2 August 1943, both the auditorium and its neighbouring buildings were destroyed during air raids by fire-bombing; a low-flying airplane dropped several petrol and phosphorus containers onto the middle of the roof of the auditorium, causing it to erupt into a conflagration.

The current Staatsoper opened on 15 October 1955 with Mozart's Die Zauberflöte. Hamburg continued to devote itself to new works, such as Hans Werner Henze's The Prince of Homburg (1960), Stravinsky's The Flood (1963), Gian Carlo Menotti's Help, Help, the Globolinks! (1968), and Mauricio Kagel's Staatstheater (1971).

In 1967, under the direction of Joachim Hess, the Staatsoper Hamburg became the first company to broadcasts its operas in color on television, beginning with Die Hochzeit des Figaro (a German translation of Le Nozze di Figaro). Ten of these television productions have been released on DVD by ArtHaus Musik as Cult Opera of the 1970s, as well as separately. All of these were performed in German regardless of the original language (six were written in German, one in French, two in English, and one in Italian).

More recently, Hamburg gave the world premières of Wolfgang Rihm's Die Eroberung von Mexico (1992) and Helmut Lachenmann's Das Mädchen mit den Schwefelhölzern (1997), for which it received much international acclaim. The company has won the "Opera House of the Year" award by the German magazine Opernwelt in 1997 and in 2005.

Important Info
Type: Modern Ballet
City: Hamburg, Germany
Duration: 2h 30min with 1 interval
Acts: 2
Intervals: 1

E-tickets: Print at home or at the box office of the event if so specified. You will find more information in your booking confirmation email.

You can only select the category, and not the exact seats.
If you order 2 or 3 tickets: your seats will be next to each other.
If you order 4 or more tickets: your seats will be next to each other, or, if this is not possible, we will provide a combination of groups of seats (at least in pairs, for example 2+2 or 2+3).

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