尼伯龙人的指环 1979-1980年拜罗伊特音乐节版

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尼伯龙人的指环 1979-1980年拜罗伊特音乐节版

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opening date: 1979-08-02 ~ 1980-08-23
1979-1980年拜罗伊特音乐节版
troupe: Bayreuther Festspielorchester 拜罗伊特音乐节管弦乐团 ; Bayreuther Festspielchor 拜罗伊特音乐节合唱团
theater: Bayreuther Festspielhaus 拜罗伊特音乐节剧院
language: German 德语
director: Patrice Chéreau
playwright: Richard Wagner
composer: Richard Wagner
actor: Gwyneth Jones (as Brünnhilde) / Manfred Jung (as Siegfried) / Donald McIntyre (as Wotan ; Der Wanderer) / Hanna Schwarz (as Fricka) / Peter Hofmann (as Siegmund) / Jeannine Altmeyer (as Sieglinde ; Gutrune) / Heinz Zednik (as Loge ; Mime) / Hermann Becht (as Alberich) / Fritz Hübner (as Fafner ; Hagen) / Ortrun Wenkel (as Erda) / Matti Salminen (as Fasolt ; Hunding) / Carmen Reppel (as Freia) / Siegfried Jerusalem (as Froh) / Martin Egel (as Donner) / Franz Mazura (as Gunther) / Gwendolyn Killebrew (as Waltraute) / Norma Sharp (as Woglinde) / Ilse Gramatzki (as Wellgunde) / Marga Schiml (as Floßhilde)

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part of : 尼伯龙人的指环
overview

The plot revolves around a magic ring that grants the power to rule the world, forged by the Nibelung dwarf Alberich from gold he stole from the Rhine maidens in the river Rhine. The Ring itself as described by Wagner is a Rune-magic taufr ("tine", or "talisman") intended to rule the feminine multiplicative power by a fearful magical act termed as 'denial of love' ("Liebesverzicht"). With the assistance of the god Loge, Wotan – the chief of the gods – steals the ring from Alberich, but is forced to hand it over to the giants, Fafner and Fasolt in payment for building the home of the gods, Valhalla, or they will take Freia, who provides the gods with the golden apples that keep them young. Wotan's schemes to regain the ring, spanning generations, drive much of the action in the story. His grandson, the mortal Siegfried, wins the ring by slaying Fafner (who slew Fasolt for the ring) – as Wotan intended – but is eventually betrayed and slain as a result of the intrigues of Alberich's son Hagen, who wants the ring for himself. Finally, the Valkyrie Brünnhilde – Siegfried's lover and Wotan's daughter who lost her immortality for defying her father in an attempt to save Siegfried's father Sigmund – returns the ring to the Rhine maidens as she commits suicide on Siegfried's funeral pyre. Hagen is drowned as he attempts to recover the ring. In the process, the gods and Valhalla are destroyed.
Details of the storylines can be found in the articles on each music drama.
Wagner created the story of the Ring by fusing elements from many German and Scandinavian myths and folk tales. The Old Norse Edda supplied much of the material for Das Rheingold, while Die Walküre was largely based on the Völsunga saga. Siegfried contains elements from the Eddur, the Völsunga saga and Thidrekssaga. The final Götterdämmerung, draws from the 12th-century German poem, the Nibelungenlied, which appears to have been the original inspiration for the Ring.
The Ring has been the subject of myriad interpretations. For example, George Bernard Shaw, in The Perfect Wagnerite, argues for a view of The Ring as an essentially socialist critique of industrial society and its abuses. Robert Donington in Wagner's Ring And Its Symbols interprets it in terms of Jungian psychology, as an account of the development of unconscious archetypes in the mind, leading towards individuation.

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