|
|
|
|
Genesis of the play
|
|
|
|
Sanatorium Purkersdorf,
Vienna |
Alma in Vienna
The play, first performed in 1996 at the Vienna Festival
Week and made into a film in 1999, has long since been a cult
among connoisseurs. There are fans who have seen the performance
a dozen times; indeed the biggest "Almaniac" boasts
a total of 73 performances. Six summers long, the famous Sanatorium
Purkersdorf outside Vienna served as a venue for the show,
an empty Jugendstil building whose rooms had been fitted out
in turn-of-the-century style. One hundred and forty performances
took place there, all of them sell-outs, and in the process
23,044 candles and 2,736 torches were burnt, and at the funeral
banquet in honour of Gustav Mahler the audience was treated
to a vast quantity of baked chicken wings, boiled fillet of
beef and Viennese apple cake, as well as 3,762 bottles of
wine.
|
|
|
Palazzo Zenobio,
Venice |
Alma a Venezia
In its seventh year, the production found itself looking
for a new venue, and set off on tour. The first stop was Venice,
the city in which the young Alma once received her first kiss
from Gustav Klimt, and the place where she later travelled
with Oskar Kokoschka. In 1922, she bought a house there with
Franz Werfel, which she named Casa Alma. It was also in Venice
that, in 1934, her daughter Manon, born of her marriage with
Walter Gropius, fell ill. The girl, who was considered a stunning
beauty, died of polio just one year later, at the age of thirteen.
Alban Berg composed his Violin Concerto in her honour, dedicating
it to "the memory of an angel"; and naturally, besides
Mahler's symphonies, the audience hears this work too as they
trace the path of Alma's life.
On the Italian tour, English was the main language spoken,
though the scenes with Werfel were in Italian, some others
also in German. The beautiful Palazzo Zenobio on the Fondamenta
del Soccorso was rented for the show, a building dating from
the late 17th century. As in Vienna, here too, all interior
and exterior spaces were used for the performance, from a
splendid hall of mirrors on the first floor to the rooms leading
into the courtyard and the neighbouring garden. The rooms
were decorated in the style of the period, faithful down to
the smallest detail, and using exquisite furniture, old carpets
and paintings, music manuscripts, documents and letters. There
was a luxurious bathing hall and a steaming kitchen, an Alma
memorial and an Italian cafe. Everywhere were chandeliers,
burning candles, and all the props had been brought over from
Vienna - a process of "Almafication".
The atmosphere along the narrow canals of the Dorsoduro district
were ghostly, and the flames of torches burnt in the streets
around the magnificent Palazzo Zenobio. Through the arched
windows of the Palace shined, sumptuously decorated, shimmering
gold stuccoed ceilings. A funeral march by Gustav Mahler resounded
through the night. Death in Venice: in a gondola Mahler's
corpse was taken away for burial ...
|
|
|
|
Convento dos Inglesinhos,
Lisbon |
Alma in Lisbon
In the summer of 2003, the production went to Lisbon, where
Alma spent challenging and decisive months of her life. The
Werfels flew Vienna in 1938 for France when Austria fell to
the German army. In 1940, the Werfels along with Heinrich
Mann and his nephew Golo Mann flew by foot over the rugged
Pyrenees to Spain, ultimately leaving Europe for the United
States on board the Nea Hellas, the last regular ship from
Lisbon. Lisbon meant rescue for them. "There's no country
which helped as many refugees as Portugal in those days."
The small country became a transition for many well-known
refugees such as Heinrich Mann, Lion Feuchtwanger and Franz
Werfel.
An important part in the Portuguese version was given to
Consul-General Aristides de Sousa Mendes who was in charge
of the Portuguese Consulate in Bordeaux, in 1940. When history
catapulted him overnight to the position of custodian of human
lives hanging in the balance, he proved that he was far more.
He issued transit visas for entry into Portugal to an astounding
30.000 refugees, and opened up a refugee escape route where
none had existed. He rebelled against service orders and used
his office to overturn them, on behalf of humanity.
In her autobiography, Alma wrote: "I can never forget
those days of paradisiacal peace in a paradisiacal country,
after the torment of the previous months!" She is said
to have held court there like a fallen queen. And indeed this
is what she was: the queen among artists' muses. Lisbon was
a stage as if designed to tell of love and death and the depths
of desire, to tell the story of the last femme fatale
to whom this evening of theatre is dedicated: Alma Mahler-Werfel.
Archive
Vienna 1996 2001
Venice
2002
Lisbon
2003
|
|