Featuring an international Australian cast, the new Melbourne Opera production will be conducted by internationally acclaimed Wagner maestro Anthony Negus and directed by Suzanne Chaundy, the team who delivered Australia’s award-winning first regional production of Wagner’s masterpiece, The Ring Cycle in Bendigo in 2023.
Four performances of Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg will be given in an intimate theatrical setting specially designed to showcase the beautifully restored Royal Exhibition Building, creating a spectacular environment for Wagner’s epic work.
Wagner’s sublime and profound comedy “Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg” (The Mastersingers of Nuremberg) premiered in Munich in 1868. The opera is set in 16th-century Nuremberg and revolves around a guild of amateur poets and musicians called the Mastersingers. The story follows the cobbler Hans Sachs, a wise and respected Mastersinger, who becomes entangled in a complicated love affair involving a young knight named Walther von Stolzing and a beautiful young woman named Eva. Talented and innovative, Walther, an outsider, impulsively decides to compete in the Mastersingers’ song contest in order to win Eva’s hand. He is up against all sorts of musical pedantry, especially from rival contestant and Town Clerk, Sixtus Beckmesser. The visionary Sachs can see the worth and truth in Walther’s songs. Central to the work is Wagner’s belief that political parties come and go; leaders come and go but a community’s art provides the truest measure of its essential values. “Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg” is known for its rich and intricate music, which combines Wagner’s signature leitmotif technique with elements of German folk music and choral writing.
Meistersinger is central to understanding Wagner’s ideas on the role of music in society, on the renunciation of will and on the solace music can bring in a world full of delusion, folly, self-deception.
Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg occupies a unique place in Wagner’s oeuvre. It is the only comedy among his mature operas (he had come to reject his early Das Liebesverbot) and is also unusual among his works in being set in a historically well-defined time and place rather than in a mythical or legendary setting. It is the only mature Wagner opera based on an entirely original story, and in which no supernatural or magical powers or events feature. It incorporates many of the operatic conventions that Wagner had railed against in his essays on the theory of opera: rhymed verse, arias, choruses, a quintet, and even a dance.
Melbourne Opera and Richard Wagner
Now in its third decade of operatic performances in Melbourne and beyond, Melbourne Opera has regularly presented works by Richard Wagner. Prior to its ground-breaking presentation of the epic complete Ring Cycle in Bendigo in 2023, the company has also presented Rheingold (2021), Die Valkyrie (2022), Siegfried (2022, concert) The Flying Dutchman (2019) Tristan and Isolde (2018), Lohengrin (2017), Tannhauser (2016), and Rienzi (2013, concert).
- OPERA MAGAZINE
Interview with Warwick Fyfe
Cast
Hans Sachs – Warwick Fyfe
Walther von Stolzing – James Egglestone
Sixtus Beckmesser – Christopher Hillier
Eva (Pogner’s daughter) – Lee Abrahmsen
David (Sachs’ apprentice) – Robert Macfarlane
Magdalene (Eva’s companion) – Deborah Humble
Meisters
Veit Pogner – Steven Gallop
Fritz Kothner – Michael Lampard
Kunz Vogelsang – Henry Choo
Konrad Nachtigal – Darcy Carroll
Balthasar Zorn – Bradley Daley
Ulrich Eisslinger – Christopher Busietta
Augustin Moser – Asher Reichman
Hermann Ortel – MIchael Honeyman
Hans Schwartz – Alex Pokryshevsky
Hans Fotlz – Peter Tregear
Nightwatchman – Henry Shaw
Apprentices: Amanda Windred, Breanna Stuart, Lily Ward, Leah Phillips, Josh Erdelyi-Gotz, James Penn, Timothy Daly, Hartley Trusler, Daniel Felton and Finn Gilheany.
Performances of Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg are proudly sponsored by Henkel Brothers, the Victorian Wagner Society and the NSW Wagner Society.
Conductor: Anthony Negus
Director: Suzanne Chaundy
Set Design: Andrew Bailey
Costume Design: Karine Larché
Lighting Design: Philip Lethlean
Movement Director: Lisa Petty
Performances
Sunday 16 February 2025, 3pm
Tuesday 18 February 2025, 5pm
Thursday 20 February 2025, 5pm
Saturday 22 February 2025, 3pm
Sung in German with English surtitles.
The performance runs 4.5 hours, plus two intervals (approx. 50 minutes and 70 minutes)
Venue
Royal Exhibition Building, Melbourne
The World Heritage listed Royal Exhibition Building has been a leading character in the story of Melbourne for over 140 years.
Designed by Joseph Reed and built by David Mitchell for the 1880 Melbourne International Exhibition, the Exhibition Building epitomised the wealth, opulence, excitement, energy and spirit of Marvellous Melbourne. Together the 1880 and 1888 International Exhibitions attracted over three million visitors, brought cultures, technology and ideas from across the world to Melbourne, and were a place to see and be seen.
The Exhibition Building cemented its status Melbourne’s leading event venue and a tourist icon on 9 May 1901, hosting the opening of Australia’s Federal Parliament. Since that time baby shows, home shows, motor shows, bicycle races and pole sitting competitions are just some of the events that have found a home in the Exhibition Building.
On 1 July 2004, the Royal Exhibition Building and Carlton Gardens became both the first Victorian place and the first built heritage site in Australia to be added to the World Heritage List.