jump to content jump to navigation
Richard Wagner

Die

Meistersinger

von Nürnberg

Opera

Oper in drei Aufzügen

Text Richard Wagner

Language Deutsch

Sunday 9. May 2027 2 Intermissions Main Stage
Cycle »Wagner«

Ticket information

Works by Richard Wagner are among the cornerstones of the repertoire and are considered by many to be "opera holidays". This popular cycle brings together works from various creative periods - from the early Dutchman to Parsifal.

All Dates of this Cycle

More about Cycles


Cast on
9. May 2027

Hans Sachs, Schuster

Veit Pogner, Goldschmied

Sixtus Beckmesser, Schreiber

Michael Nagy

Walther von Stolzing, ein junger Ritter aus Franken

David, Sachsens Lehrbube

Eva, Pogners Tochter

Musikalische Leitung

Inszenierung

Keith Warner

Bühne

Boris Kudlička

Kostüme

Kaspar Glarner

Licht

John Bishop

Video

Akhila Krishnan

Choreografie

Karl Alfred Schreiner

Regiemitarbeit

Katharina Kastening

3 more performances

Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg

Cast on Thursday 6. May 2027

Hans Sachs, Schuster

Veit Pogner, Goldschmied

Sixtus Beckmesser, Schreiber

Michael Nagy

Walther von Stolzing, ein junger Ritter aus Franken

David, Sachsens Lehrbube

Eva, Pogners Tochter

Musikalische Leitung

Inszenierung

Keith Warner

Bühne

Boris Kudlička

Kostüme

Kaspar Glarner

Licht

John Bishop

Video

Akhila Krishnan

Choreografie

Karl Alfred Schreiner

Regiemitarbeit

Katharina Kastening
Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg

Cast on Wednesday 12. May 2027

Hans Sachs, Schuster

Veit Pogner, Goldschmied

Sixtus Beckmesser, Schreiber

Michael Nagy

Walther von Stolzing, ein junger Ritter aus Franken

David, Sachsens Lehrbube

Eva, Pogners Tochter

Musikalische Leitung

Inszenierung

Keith Warner

Bühne

Boris Kudlička

Kostüme

Kaspar Glarner

Licht

John Bishop

Video

Akhila Krishnan

Choreografie

Karl Alfred Schreiner

Regiemitarbeit

Katharina Kastening
Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg

Cast on Sunday 16. May 2027

Hans Sachs, Schuster

Veit Pogner, Goldschmied

Sixtus Beckmesser, Schreiber

Michael Nagy

Walther von Stolzing, ein junger Ritter aus Franken

David, Sachsens Lehrbube

Eva, Pogners Tochter

Musikalische Leitung

Inszenierung

Keith Warner

Bühne

Boris Kudlička

Kostüme

Kaspar Glarner

Licht

John Bishop

Video

Akhila Krishnan

Choreografie

Karl Alfred Schreiner

Regiemitarbeit

Katharina Kastening
Included in: Abo 24
Abo 24

Einen Wochentag und Lieblingsplätze wählen und fünf Vorstellungen in einer Saison genießen.

In diesem Abo sind folgende Vorstellungen enthalten:

21. September 2025Tannhäuser
25. Jänner 2026Idomeneo
22. Februar 2026Ariadne auf Naxos
22. März 2026Le Grand Macabre
26. April 2026Giselle (Ballett)
04. Oktober 2026Macbeth
27. Dezember 2026La Damnation de Faust
25. April 2027Die tote Stadt
16. Mai 2027Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg
13. Juni 2027Woolf Works

About the Production

Hans Sachs, the respected shoemaker and Meistersinger, recognizes the talent of the young knight Walther von Stolzing, who is courting Eva.

In order to win her, however, Walther must satisfy the strict rules of the Meistersinger. He is in danger of failing in the singing competition, but Sachs cleverly supports him. Walther finally wins over the guild with a novel, inspired song. He wins Eva, while Sachs pleads for moderation, art and a sense of community.

Die

Meistersinger

von Nürnberg

Storyline

Closing hymn of a church service on the eve of the Feast of St. John. The knight Walther von Stolzing, who has come from Franconia, manages to ask Eva, the daughter of his host Veit Pogner, whether she is already a bride.

Walther is informed by Eva's nurse Magdalene: Eva's hand has been promised to the winner of the upcoming Meistersinger competition. Her father, the goldsmith Pogner, has decided this. Eva, of course, is already attracted to the Frankish knight. Walther decides to take part in the competition in order to win her love. During the preparations for a meeting of the masters, David, apprentice to the shoemaker Hans Sachs, describes the difficulties of tablature to the young knight.

Stolzing is confused by the masters' complicated system of rules. Nevertheless, he dares to skip the prescribed steps to master level and become a master on the same day. Pogner now announces to the masters that he has chosen his daughter and his fortune as the prize in the singing competition and recommends that the knight Stolzing be allowed to take part.

Sachs' suggestion that the people should also have a say in the singing contest is rejected, including by the town clerk Beckmesser, who has high hopes for Eva and initially suspects a rival in the popular Hans Sachs. However, his suspicions soon turn to Walther von Stolzing. During the rehearsal song that he is allowed to sing, Beckmesser emphatically assumes the role of »Merker«. Walther has performed his song without worrying about the master's rule. This makes it easy for Beckmesser to eliminate his presumed rival: The Junker has »sung his chance away and is utterly undone«. Only Hans Sachs recognizes the artistic value of Walther's song, which is unusual for the masters.

Magdalene learns from David, whom she has taken to her heart, that the knight Walther has failed his audition. Eva hears about this mishap through Magdalene.

Hans Sachs decides to continue working outside his house despite the evening hour. He reflects on the events of the day. Eva comes to him for advice and help. Probably to test her, Sachs now sides with the Meistersinger in Walther's affair. She reacts angrily and Sachs recognizes her true affection. Perhaps he himself would have been welcome as Eva's suitor, perhaps he too had once thought of asking Eva to marry him. But that is now over. Eva learns from Magdalene that Beckmesser wants to give her a serenade, but does not want to appear at the window under any circumstances. Magdalene is to arrange this in Eva's clothes. She herself now has a rendezvous with Walther, who, outraged by the Meistersinger, persuades her lover to flee with him. Sachs has overheard this plan. As he is well-disposed towards the two young people, he plans to prevent the ill-considered escape.

Beckmesser arrives and tries to sing his serenade. However, he is severely disturbed by Sachs. Just as Beckmesser marked Walther von Stolzing's mistakes against the rules with chalk strokes, Sachs, who is outside soling Beckmesser's shoes, now marks the town clerk's mistakes by hitting them with a hammer. David recognizes Magdalene, who is listening to this "serenade" in Eva's clothes. He jealously attacks Beckmesser, mistaking him for a rival. The l.rm attracts the neighbors and a general brawl ensues, in the course of which Sachs sends Eva to her father's house and takes the young knight into his own home.

Sachs ponders. He finds "madness" everywhere. David, who has a guilty conscience about the night's brawl, recites his saying on St. John's Day and congratulates the master on his name day.

Walther von Stolzing tells of a wondrous dream and puts it into verse on Sachs' advice. Sachs writes down two verses of the poem and leaves the sheet on the table. Beckmesser, deeply disturbed by the previous night's failure, secretly pockets the sheet, on which he believes he recognizes Sachs' entry for the prize singing competition. So that Beckmesser does not look like a thief, Sachs gives him the paper and swears never to claim authorship of the song. Beckmesser gains new hope of success at the prize singing competition. Eva comes to find out for sure. She receives it through the third verse of Walther's new song. Sachs baptizes Stolzing's prize song with the name "selige Morgentraum-Deutweise" according to the old mastersong custom. He then makes David a journeyman, which also makes Magdalene very happy.

Hans Sachs is reverently received by the crowd. As the Meistersinger's spokesman, Sachs gives the oldest candidate, Beckmesser, priority in the singing contest. However, the town clerk makes a fool of himself with Walther's misunderstood, mutilated song. Furious, he names Hans Sachs as the author. The latter, however, calls out the true poet and singer and gives Walther the opportunity to prove himself worthy of the prize. The people cheer Stolzing. But he initially rejects the prize of the masters. Sachs explains to him the dignity and value, meaning and significance of art.

Act 1 85 minutes
Intermission 30 minutes
Act 2 60 minutes
Intermission 30 minutes
Act 3 120 minutes

An important aspect of Keith Warner's production is the dream. Warner imagines Sachs' dream as a creative need, in the sense that he creates a story about his feelings. At the same time, he wanted this dreaming to be contagious. That those who allow themselves to be infected and have the necessary talent can create their own worlds, a kind of illusion. Suddenly Sachs begins to immerse himself in Walther's imagination, he wanders through his worlds and, conversely, Walther can access Sachs' worlds, and Eva also joins in. The relationship between reality and the artist's inner imagination or individual dream becomes fluid.

"The Mastersingers form – precisely through their apparent contrast – a unity with Tristan und Isolde, Wagner’s Opus metaphysicum, in which his entire oeuvre can, as it were, be seen through the lens of a magnifying glass. Moreover, it is only through the combined perspective of these two works that one can finally grasp what was important to Wagner. For he presents everything that was brought to perfection in Tristan as an antithesis in Die Meistersinger: chromaticism versus diatonicism, for instance, or harmony versus counterpoint, heroes versus commoners, tragedy versus comedy.” (Premiere conductor Philippe Jordan)

The Mastersingers of Nuremberg, too, had a long gestation period – as was so often the case with Richard Wagner. As early as 1845, he wrote a first prose draft for what would later become a three-act opera, but it took around two decades before the score was available in its final form. On 21 June 1868, the work – originally conceived as a comic counterpart to Tannhäuser – received its world premiere at the Munich Court Opera.

Auf einer bunt gestalteten Bühne tanzen Gruppen in pinken und grünen Kostümen, darüber sitzt ein Chor in weißen Uniformen.
Eine Gruppe von Personen sitzt in zwei Reihen auf der Bühne, mittig steht ein Mann im schwarzen Anzug.

This production is sponsored by

Frequently asked questions

Tickets for standing room can be purchased online or at the Bundestheater box office from 10 am on the day of the performance. BundestheaterCard holders can book standing room tickets online the day before the performance.

In addition, a fixed contingent of standing room tickets is available for regular evening performances from 80 minutes before the start of the performance at our standing room box office (Operngasse entrance).

Our operas are sung in the original languages, which is listed just beneath the title – these vary depending on the work.

Subtitles in different languages can be switched on or off individually at each seat via a separate subtitle screen. In addition to the original language of the opera, German and English, you can choose from up to six additional languages: Italian, French, Russian, Japanese, Spanish, Chinese (Mandarin).

In the event of a change of performance, you can of course return or exchange your tickets.

As changes to the cast cannot be ruled out due to illnesses or other hindrances of artists, there is no entitlement to a refund of the ticket price or exchange in this case.

Tickets cannot be returned or exchanged in the event of non-admission to the auditorium due to late arrival (even after the interval).

About Your Visit

Cloakroom

The cloakrooms are located next the the entrances at the Operngasse. You can find additional cloakrooms on the left and right side of the balcony and the gallery and in the boxes. All cloakrooms are free of charge.

Be on Time

We kindly ask you to arrive on time for the performances. Latecomers can only be admitted during the intermission. After the intermission, re-entry will not be possible.

Food and Drink

Our gastronomy opens at the same time entry is permitted. You can enjoy some snacks and drinks before the performance starts or you can book a table for the break.

Practical Information

You can find more practical information regarding your visit (e.g. Dresscode, barrier-free-access, …) here.

 

Discounts, Subscriptions, Cycles

Discounts

The Vienna State Opera has the following offers for discounted tickets:

  • U27
  • Children's Tickets
  • BundestheaterCard
  • Ballet Bonus
  • Ö1-Club
  • Culture Pass "Hunger auf Kunst und Kultur"
  • Disability Pass
More Info

Subscriptions

Choose a day of the week and your favorite seats and enjoy five performances.

  • 4x opera, 1x ballet
  • spread over the whole season
  • total savings of up to 30 % compared to the regular price
More Info

Cycles

Buy several performances bundled in a package!

  • large selection of different cycles
  • summarized according to composers, performers or themes
  • spread over the whole season
  • up to 10 % discount compared to the regular price
More Info

Dear visitor,

We want to improve our website and your online Opera experience. Thus we invite you to participate in a short anonymous survey.
Thank you for your time and feedback!
Best regards,
The Team of the Vienna State Opera