The Flying Dutchman | Operavision (2024)

The Flying Dutchman | Operavision (1)

Christian Kleiner

The Flying Dutchman | Operavision (2)

Christian Kleiner

Nationaltheater Mannheim

Wagner

This performance is no longer viewable as video-on-demand for rights reasons but other material about the production is still available.

until

Live on Available until

Sung in

German

Subtitles in

English

German

A captain is cursed to sail the seas of the world forever, only allowed to make landfall once every seven years. Will he find the love of a faithful woman to break the curse?

Richard Wagner came across the legend of The Flying Dutchman in 1838 through Heinrich Heine’s From the Memoirs of Herr von Schnabelewopski. After a stormy voyage from Riga to London – Wagner was again on the run from creditors – he chose the material for his next opera and began to compose it, with the unpredictable power of the sea still fresh on his face. Against the backdrop of this wild nature, Wagner exposes in Holländer his utopia of a love that transcends, offered as an antidote to the 19th century zeitgeist of pounding industrialisation and economic growth. Roger Vontobel’s new production from Mannheim is streamed live on the opening night and audiences around the world can share in some of the most rousing music written in opera.

Cast

Daland

Sung Ha

Senta

Daniela Köhler

Erik

Jonathan Stoughton

Mary

Marie-Belle Sandis

Steersman

Juraj Hollý

The Dutchman

Michael Kupfer-Radecky

Dream Senta

Delphina Parenti

Dream Dutchman

Michael Bronczkowski

Chorus

Opernchor des Nationaltheaters Mannheim

Orchestra

Nationaltheater-Orchester

...

Music

Richard Wagner

Text

Richard Wagner

Conductor

Jordan de Souza

Director

Roger Vontobel

Sets

Fabian Wendling

Lighting

Florian Arnholdt

Costumes

Ellen Hofmann

Chorus Master

Dani Juris

...

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Video

CopyrightChristian Kleiner

Trailer

Sneak peek at The Flying Dutchman

Did you meet the ship in the sea, with blackened mast and crimsoned sail?

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Extract

Steuerman lass die Wacht

In this extract from Act III ofThe Flying Dutchman,sailors celebrate their safe return to land. They call out to the Dutchman’s ship, inviting the crew to join them, but the ship remains dark and silent.Daland’s sailors deride the mysterious crew and their captain.

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The story

Act I

A storm has driven the sea captain Daland's ship ashore. The voyage has exhausted the crew and soon they all go to rest. The Steersman tries to keep up his spirits with a song but falls asleep on the watch. Suddenly a strange vessel pulls alongside Daland's ship. Its captain is the Flying Dutchman, who has been condemned to eternal wandering unimpeded by storms or pirates. Once in seven years he is permitted to land. The Dutchman offers Daland unheard-of wealth, pleading in return for lodging and the hand of his daughter, Senta. Daland accepts the Dutchman's proposal, and the ships set sail.

Act II

Waiting for the return of Daland's ship, the girls are working on their spinning wheels and singing. Senta's friends tease her about the huntsman Erik, her ardent suitor. Senta, heedless of facetious remarks, sings a ballad about the Flying Dutchman, which she came to love already in childhood, and discloses her innermost secret: with a faithful love she wishes to save the harried seaman. Senta's words surprise Erik, who is overtaken by a strange foreboding. He relates a dream in which he saw her embrace the mysterious captain. The Dutchman and Senta's father appear, and the father announces the marriage arrangement. Senta is transfixed by the Dutchman. The Dutchman does not turn his eyes from Senta, hoping that her love and faithfulness will lift his curse.

Act III

Sailors celebrate their safe return to land. They call out to the Dutchman's ship, inviting the crew to join them, but the ship remains dark and silent. Daland's sailors deride the mysterious crew and their captain. A storm rises and apparitions approach the shore over the waves, and with that the invited guests have arrived.

Erik tries to dissuade Senta from binding her life with the eerie stranger. Senta is unwilling to listen to him, for she has made an oath and is called by a supreme mission. Erik then reminds her of his love for her. The Dutchman, seeing Senta together with Erik, is stricken by desperate jealousy and a sense of loss, believing that Senta, too, has failed to render him undying faithfulness. He reveals his secret and sets off towards his ship to continue this endless roaming prescribed by the curse. Senta throws herself into the sea from the top of a cliff thus redeeming the Dutchman's sins with her death. The Flying Dutchman's ship disintegrates against the cliffs, and his odyssey comes to an end.

Insights

Was it all a dream?

Dramaturg Marion Tiedtke interviews the director Roger Vontobel, set designer Fabian Wendling, costume designer Ellen Hoffmann, choreographer Zenta Haerter and video artist Stefan Bischoff.

Marion Tiedtke: During our preparations, we constantly asked ourselves: How can we interpret this opera, which is almost 180 years old and has been performed countless times, for modern times?

Roger Vontobel: My approach to these old stories always relates to a particular and deliberate way of storytelling – a kind of gateway to interpreting the opera. Very early on, Wagner was very critical of the development of capitalism – not dissimilar to the way we view the climate change catastrophe today: we too want to break out of an environment that oppresses and makes us ill, but in our powerlessness, we tend to escape into a substitute or illusory world to distract ourselves. Senta's story is an escape from a patriarchal and capitalist world where there are no values other than material ones. She longs for a greater purpose, for happiness of a different kind. She loses herself in this longing, numbs herself with daydreams that point to a schizophrenic, ultimately lethal state of mind from which there seems to be no escape.

MT: How did you come up with the idea of ropes in the set and what do they portray?

Fabian Wendling: The set design is based on the spinning mill at the beginning of the second act, which we decided to use as the starting point for our interpretation. We maintained the idea of the spun threads, but chose the rougher variant of rope, which can equally symbolise the rugged working world of the men at sea and the rough factory world of the women in the spinning mill. Senta’s everyday life takes place in this mill, from which she wants to escape with the Dutchman, so it made sense to depict her dreams and longings as distortions of this setting. In the end, the rope becomes the cord with which the women tie their bodices and with which Senta ultimately kills herself. In the opening scene, 53 rope winches form a kind of prison and a raised platform serves as a surveillance post for the guards

MT: Since Senta’s ballad was Wagner‘s starting point for the composition, we decided to interpret the opera from Senta’s point of view: we find ourselves in a world in which dreams and reality intertwine. This allows for a new freedom with the costumes, which often appear as quotations of contemporary culture. What were your main inspirations?

Ellen Hofmann: For me, The Flying Dutchman is a horror tale that could just as easily take place in a dystopian novel from the eighties as in a modern Hollywood film by Quentin Tarantino. When we talked as a team about the group of spinning girls in the second act, we often talked about Margaret Atwood's novel The Handmaid’s Tale and the series that came out of it. They are basically forced labourers in Daland's house, making their own corsets and dresses to please the arriving sailors. They are 'groomed' for the marriage market in order to be 'presented to the man' in the best possible way. In our production, these are costumes in the style of the fifties, when the women still dressed in a very feminine way. Senta's governess Mary is based on Aunt Lydia in Atwood's novel: a guardian who on the one hand enjoys the confidence of her girls, but on the other hand punishes and tortures them so that no one dares break out of the system. The costume for Daland is inspired by Leonardo Di Caprio as Calvin Candie in Django Unchained.

MT: What stylistic dance techniques do you use in your work and how do you develop your choreography with them?

Zenta Haerter: I am influenced by classical and modern dance, but over the years, I have developed my own choreographic language. For some time now, I have been working mainly with dancers who are familiar with new dance techniques that I did not learn in my training. I find it enriching to be able to benefit from dance techniques that are unknown to me and I select my dancers accordingly. However, they have to know my basics so that we have a common starting point. I use a mixture of improvisation and choreographic elements. Specifically in this opera, we combine classical ballet language with moments of dreaming, longing, beauty, lightness - the dream of redemption, which other modern dance techniques deliberately counteract.

MT: In the overture, which unites all the musical elements of the opera and has often been called a 'Meeressinfony' (sea symphony), the audience experiences a cinematic journey through Senta's eye into the world of her soul, which ultimately leads us into the first act. What visual associations and techniques were important to you in the creation of the dream journey into Senta's mind?

Stefan Bischoff: With the video we created an opening to the opera where dream and nightmare motifs intertwine in Senta's head. In other words, I worked with the film technique of collage. We filmed with the singer and added footage from the ocean depths, fjord landscapes and a journey to the place where the story begins. It feels like a rush, a trip, before Senta takes her own life. At the end, everything rewinds back at a hurtling pace. We are familiar with these techniques from cinema films, for example. They allow us to combine several planes: reality and dream, time and space.

Gallery

The Flying Dutchman | Operavision (6)

© Christian Kleiner

The Flying Dutchman | Operavision (7)

© Christian Kleiner

The Flying Dutchman | Operavision (8)

© Christian Kleiner

The Flying Dutchman | Operavision (9)

© Christian Kleiner

The Flying Dutchman | Operavision (10)

© Christian Kleiner

The Flying Dutchman | Operavision (11)

© Christian Kleiner

The Flying Dutchman | Operavision (12)

© Christian Kleiner

The Flying Dutchman | Operavision (13)

© Christian Kleiner

The Flying Dutchman | Operavision (14)

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The Flying Dutchman | Operavision (2024)

FAQs

Was there a real Flying Dutchman? ›

According to maritime legend, the Flying Dutchman can never be anchored, and anyone who sees the ship is doomed to sail the seven seas for eternity. Although the Flying Dutchman never existed, the story of the cursed ship became a legendary symbol of calamity for sailors.

When was the Flying Dutchman last seen? ›

There have been many sightings over the years, although the last reported one was by a Nazi submarine in WWII. Some sightings involved the Flying Dutchman sailing quickly through calm waters while the majority of sailors have spotted it during extremely stormy weather with wind and waves crashing all around.

What is the curse of the Flying Dutchman? ›

In this version, the Dutchman (Wayne Tigges) has sold his soul to Satan and is forced to live at sea. He can only return to land every seven years to find a woman who will be with him until death, it is only then that the Dutchman is able to break the curse and find redemption.

Who was the Flying Dutchman before he died? ›

In real life the Flying Dutchman was a 17th century Dutch merchantman, captained by Captain Hendrick Van Der Decken, a skilled seaman but one of few scruples, and in 1680 was proceeding from Amsterdam to Batavia in the Dutch East Indies.

Is Davy Jones a real person? ›

The character of Davy Jones in the Pirates of the Caribbean movie franchise is a fictional character and not based on a real person. While the franchise drew inspiration from various legends and folklore, the depiction of Davy Jones with a squid or octopus face is purely fictional and not historically accurate.

Was the Black Pearl a real ship? ›

Armed with thirty-two guns and bearing the appearance of a ghost ship, the Black Pearl, albeit entirely fictional, is now the most famous pirate ship of all time.

Why is the Flying Dutchman doomed? ›

In the most common version, the captain, Vanderdecken, gambles his salvation on a rash pledge to round the Cape of Good Hope during a storm and so is condemned to that course for eternity; it is this rendering which forms the basis of the opera Der fliegende Holländer (1843) by the German composer Richard Wagner.

Why did the Flying Dutchman disappear? ›

The Flying Dutchman was a sea captain who once found himself struggling to round the Cape of Good Hope during a ferocious storm. He swore that he would succeed even if he had to sail until Judgment Day. The Devil heard his oath, and took him up on it; the Dutchman was condemned to stay at sea forever.

What did the Flying Dutchman look like? ›

The Flying Dutchman is said to appear as a ghostly, glowing ship. It will materialise suddenly and then, just as suddenly, vanish. Some claim the ship, doomed to sail the seas forever, will attempt to make contact with other travellers, and that seeing the Flying Dutchman is a sign of horrible misfortune to come.

What is the myth in Dutchman? ›

The subway car itself, endlessly traveling the same course, is symbolic of "The Course of History." Another layer of the title's symbolism is the myth of the Flying Dutchman, a ghost ship which, much like the subway car Clay rides on, endlessly sails on with a crew that is unable to escape the confines of the vessel.

How did the Flying Dutchman crash? ›

On Nov. 10, 1942, the C-47 nicknamed The Flying Dutchman (S/N 41-18564) hit a strong down-draft over the Owen Stanley Range while carrying U.S. Army troops from Port Moresby to Pongani, New Guinea. It crashed into the side of Mount Obree, killing seven of the 23 onboard and destroying most of the food it carried.

What did Disney do with the Flying Dutchman? ›

After filming for Dead Man's Chest and At World's End was completed, the Flying Dutchman was put on display at Castaway Cay. As of November 2010, the Dutchman was dismantled and no longer on display.

What happens if Davy Jones steps on land? ›

However, Jones could not step on land but once every ten years and by abandoning his duty as the ferryman to the afterlife he brought a curse upon himself and his crew, which caused their transformation into fish-men.

What ship is the Black Pearl? ›

The Black Pearl (formerly known as the Wicked Wench) is a fictional ship in the Pirates of the Caribbean film series. In the screenplay, the ship is easily recognized by her distinctive black hull and sails. Captained by Captain Jack Sparrow, the Black Pearl is said to be "nigh uncatchable".

What's the ghost name in SpongeBob? ›

The Flying Dutchman (voiced by Brian Doyle-Murray) is an irritable, mischievous pirate ghost who glows green. He is named after the ghost ship of the same name.

What type of ship is the Flying Dutchman in real life? ›

The Flying Dutchman's History

Not to be mistaken for the legendary ghost ship The Flying Dutchman that can never make port, doomed to sail the oceans forever within nautical folklore; The Flying Dutchman today is a renamed tall-ship schooner built in 1903 with the original name of “KW33”.

Where is the Flying Dutchman ship now? ›

After filming for Dead Man's Chest and At World's End was completed, the Flying Dutchman ship prop was put on display at Castaway Cay.

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