
Wagner, Richard Richard Wagner cerpts from this work are documented under “Material”). Cities an countries * 22 May 1813 in Leipzig, Germany † 13 February 1883 in Venice, Italy Wagner’s life was turbulent, and this was reflected in fre- quent changes of residence. He spent longer periods of ti- Composer, writer on music, conductor me in his house in Tribschen near Lucerne, where he li- ved happily with Cosima von Bülow (later Cosima Wag- “When mixing the races, the blood of the nobler male is ner) and then in Bayreuth, where he realized his dream spoilt by that of the less noble female: the masculine suf- of erecting his own festival theatre. fers, its character declines, while the women gain as Biography much as enables them to take the place of the men”. (Ri- chard Wagner, The brown book. Entry of 23 October Born in Leipzig, the youngest of nine children. His father 1881.) was Friedrich Wagner (1770-1813), his mother Johanna (1774-1848). Richard never got to know his father. The fa- Profile mily moved to Dresden in 1814; Johanna returned to Wagner’s notions of gender were influenced by the gen- Leipzig in 1828, where Wagner began his music studies der dichotomy and gender hierarchy that had been propa- in 1830. Initial attempts at opera ensued. He was active gated since the Enlightenment. At the same time, he suc- in several places as stage director, composer and conduc- ceeded in creating strong female figures on stage, such as tor. Engagement with Minna Planer in 1835, who worked Brünnhilde. He assigned women more powerfully emo- as an actress but abandoned her career for him. In 1837 tional, human characteristics on account of their suppo- Wagner travelled to Riga to work at the theatre there; his sedly “inborn” ability to love. As a child of his time, Wag- wife Minna followed after. Debts subsequently compel- ner adopted nineteenth century notions of femininity led them to leave Riga in a hurry. They moved to Paris, and masculinity as natural and antithetical in character. where they lived in extreme poverty because Wagner was But just as he broke away from the bourgeois norms of unable to manage the money he earned. In 1842 they re- his times – for example, by including an incestuous pair located to Dresden, where Richard took on the post of of twins in his Ring of the Nibelung – so too did he over- Court Kapellmeister. His opera Rienzi brought him his come the boundaries of the gender roles of his day, crea- first big success. His participation in the abortive Dres- ting weak men and strong women in his operas. Thus we den May Uprising in 1849 meant he had to flee into exile find in his work both the normative conception of gen- in Switzerland. There he wrote his major texts (Art and der, and occasions when this is undermined. Revolution, The artwork of the future, Opera and Dra- In his private life, Wagner remained dependent on wo- ma) and worked on his Ring of the Nibelung. He was una- men. He married Minna Planer in 1835. As an actress, ble to attend the world première of Lohengrin in Wei- she was able to offer him valuable suggestions about sta- mar. In 1858 his love for Mathilde Wesendonck became ge practice, and she remained the person to whom he generally known and he moved to Venice (without Min- was most closely attached until his flight from Dresden, na) in order to complete Tristan and Isolde. In 1861 per- when she initially refused to follow him into exile. In Zu- formances of his Tannhäuser in Paris resulted in scan- rich, Wagner fell in love with Mathilde Wesendonck, the dal. He lived in Vienna from 1861 to 1864, where he en- wife of his patron Otto Wesendonck. Mathilde remained dured immense money problems. These might have re- the greatest (unfulfilled) love of his life, and is regarded sulted in his imprisonment, had he not been saved by as having inspired him to the particular beauties of the King Ludwig II of Bavaria, who subsequently gave him first act of the Valkyrie and of Tristan and Isolde. In Cosi- generous financial support and covered his existing, lar- ma von Bülow he found a woman who was willing to com- ge-scale debts. Wagner moved to Munich, where he plun- mit adultery for him, who enabled him to complete his te- ged into political adventures and endeavoured to influen- tralogy The Ring of the Nibelung, and shielded him from ce Ludwig II. At this point, Wagner was compelled to lea- the hostility of the outside world (a hostility that also aro- ve the city. He set up house instead in Tribschen near Lu- se because of their relationship). cerne, where he was later joined by Cosima von Bülow In his book Opera and drama, Wagner connoted music (1837-1930). They married in 1870 after the birth of as feminine and the text as masculine (corresponding ex- their son Siegfried, which meant that all three of Wag- – 1 – Wagner, Richard ner’s children (Isolde, Eva and Siegfried) ought to have 1876. borne the name of von Bülow; however, only Isolde was Reception later denied recognition as Wagner’s child, since she had been born in 1865 in Munich, when Cosima was still li- There have been repeated attempts in the Wagner litera- ving with her then husband Hans von Bülow. In 1872 the ture to downplay the importance of women in Wagner’s family left Switzerland for Bayreuth, where Wagner resi- life and work. Martin Gregor-Dellin’s comprehensive bio- ded until his death. There he built his festival theatre and graphy contains numerous derogatory remarks to this his private house “Wahnfried”, which was renovated in end. Many an author has erroneously placed Wagner’s 2015 and turned into a museum with an archive atta- political convictions centre-stage. But Wagner utilized po- ched. litics only for his own purposes, namely in order to secu- re performances of his works and to promote his artistic Appreciation beliefs. Marketing and disseminating his oeuvre was al- Wagner was repeatedly inspired by his relationships with ways the primary aim of Wagner’s activities. women. In 1854 he interrupted work on his Rheingold in In 1983, Dieter Schickling published his book Abschied order to sketch the first act of his Valkyrie. This composi- von Walhall. Richard Wagners erotische Gesellschaft (Fa- tion sketch contains in total 17 abbreviations that demon- rewell to Valhalla. Richard Wagner’s erotic society), strate his love for Mathilde Wesendonck, e.g. “O.w.i.d.l.!” which covers interesting aspects, but remains far remo- (“Oh wie ich dich liebe!”, “Oh how I love you!”), “S.m.g., ved from any consideration of gender issues – and the sa- M.!” (“Sei mir gut, Mathilde!”, “Be good to me, Mathil- me can be said of the symposium held in Bayreuth in de!”), “L.d.m.??” (“Liebst du mich??”, “Do you love 1997 entitled “Frauengestalten und Frauenstimmen bei me??”), “D.b.m.a.!!” (“Du bist mir alles!!”, “You are every- Richard Wagner” (“Female characters and female voices thing to me!!”). Seven such abbreviations are given whe- in Richard Wagner”), whose papers were published in re Sieglinde and Siegmund look at each other – sugges- book form in 2000, edited by Susanne Vill. ting that Richard and Mathilde themselves exchanged ye- Repertoire arning glances on the evenings when they came together with their spouses. In Mathilde Wesendonck’s archives The art of characterization in Wagner’s operas displays a there is a note to her in Richard Wagner’s hand: “May well-nigh breath-taking variety. We find virile, heroic fi- the poor orphan child be shown mercy! I now have to gures such as Siegfried, noble men like King Marke, art- find it a foster mother”. He thereby described the opera ful schemers like Loge and effete figures such as Erik or Valkyrie as his joint “child” with Mathilde, now wande- Gunther. The same can be said of Wagner’s female cha- ring around bereft. And a second quotation added to the racters, ranging from Brünnhilde, whom Wagner endows composition sketch was similar: “What a wonderful birth with empathy, to the malignant Ortrud. Examples of his of our sorrowful child! Do we have to live like this, then? different male types can be seen in Tristan (from Tristan Of whom could it be demanded that he should abandon and Isolde) and Wotan (from the Ring). Tristan has to his children? May God stand by us poor people! Or are die because he has allowed himself to be drawn into a we too rich? Must we alone help ourselves?” The Master- nocturnal world of complete physical gratification. As is singers, too, were influenced by his love for Mathilde We- well known, the woman does not merely figure as a being sendonck. He resumed work on this opera after having who possesses “femininity” (which is variable from one made Hans Sachs forgo the love of Eva, and he wrote to culture to another) but is also a mirror of male identity, Mathilde of this change to the plot. It coincided with his even of male creativity. It is thus natural that the alar- own sense of resignation when he realized that Mathilde ming aspect of sexuality (the danger of being overwhel- Wesendonck would never leave her family for him. med by it to the point of perishing) was culturally assig- Wagner was also supported by women patrons – the ned to woman, inasmuch as she was herself regarded as most important of these being the Countess Marie von a creature of nature.
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