Alma á Venezia
"Alma á Venezia" is the story of Alma Mahler-Werfel,
the wife of composer
Gustav Mahler, also married to architect Walter Gropius and
poet Franz Werfel. Among several others she had fervent love
affairs with the painters Oskar Kokoschka and Gustav Klimt,
bringing together some of the most creative spirits
of the 20th century.
The speciality of the play is that it does not take place
on a theatre stage, but in an entire building (the Palazzo
Zenobio in Venice), fully equipped with furniture and props
which resemble more the location of a film than a stage design.
From July-September 2002 the show will be produced in Venice
as "Alma á
Venezia" (25 performances, from August 8th till September
15th).
The guests will be invited to abandon the immobilized position
of a spectator in a conventional drama, replace it with the
mobile activity of a traveller, and watch a so-called "theatrical
journey", since the scenes of Alma's life are performed
simultaneously on all floors and in all rooms of the building.
You choose the events, the path, and the person to follow
after each event, thus constructing your personal version
of a Polydrama.
When Gustav Mahler dies at half-time, his funeral banquet
can be followed
interactively to his music, and the spectators are subsequently
invited to a sumptuous buffet-dinner, which of course is included
in the ticket prize.
Based on the internationality of the play, reflecting half
a century of European cultural history, it is certain to attract
tourists and locals at the same time. As it will be performed
in English it can be reviewed internationally. But since some
scenes will even be in Italian, also the Italian audience
will be able to follow the story.
The Viennese production of the play for the Vienna Festival
Week has been such a tremendous success that the idea rose
to bring it to another city, and Venice will be without any
doubt the ideal place. Alma lived here for a long time at
Casa Mahler near the Frari church, making Venice to the second
important city of her life.
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