Dantons Tod
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Danton's Death by Georg Büchner
Duration and Breaks: 2 hours – no intermission
Violence as a means of politics is back in vogue. "Whoever prevents me from defending myself kills me as surely as if they attacked me," says Robespierre. "Where self-defense ends, murder begins," responds Danton. How should the French Revolution continue nearly four years after the storming of the Bastille? Should it be transformed into a republic that allows people all freedoms to live their lives, to seek happiness, or to starve? Or must the revolution continue as a dictatorship until social equality is finally achieved, even if the reign of terror claims many more lives along the way?
In Danton’s Death, which deals with the indictment, arrest, and execution of the former revolutionary leader Danton and his followers by his former comrade-in-arms Robespierre, the focus is on the devastation that violence leaves behind in both victims and perpetrators, in thought and feeling, and how it destroys spaces, possibilities, alternatives, freedom, equality, and brotherhood—and certainly not sisterhood. It is a perverse and cruel game that the two opponents play with themselves, with the community, and with the future, which is our past and present.
Program and cast
Director: Johan Simons
Set and Video: Nadja Sofie Eller
Costumes: Greta Goiris
Music: Mieko Suzuki
Lighting: Friedrich Rom
Dramaturgy: Sebastian Huber
Nicholas Ofczarek – George Danton
Felix Rech – Camille Desmoulins
Johannes Zirner – Lacroix
Maximilian Pulst – Philippeau
Michael Maertens – Robespierre
Jan Bülow – St. Just
Ole Lagerpusch – Prompter
Annamária Láng – Julie
Marie-Luise Stockinger – Lucile
Andrea Wenzl – Marion
Burgtheater
The stage of the Burgtheater is one of the biggest theatre stages in the world. The stage portal is 12m wide, the main stage is 28,5m wide, 23m deep and 28m high. At the opening in 1888 the stage technology was already innovatory and has been modernized on many occasions. During the reconstruction after World War II, which was accomplished in 1955, a stage equipment was installed that is still revolutionary today. The revolving stage consists of a rotating cylinder (15m high, 21m diameter) and four hydraulic lifts (12 x 4 m each). With the help of this technical features the scenery can be changed within 40 seconds. It is the biggest automatic and computer controlled stagesystem in Europe.
The Burgtheater auditorium holds 1175 seats, it has standing room for 84 visitors and 12 places for disabled visitors.
Apart from the stage-art the Burgtheater plays an important part in architecture and interior design of the 19th century in Vienna. The magnificent decoration, especially the two imperial staircases painted by Gustav Klimt, his brother Ernst Klimt and their companion Franz Matsch as well as the main foyer and the many statues, busts and paintings of famous writers and actors can be visited during our dailyguided tour.