• Sun, 4. April 2027 and further dates
  • 09:00
  • Innsbruck, Main Hall

Lohengrin

A woman stands alone before a tribunal, accused of fratricide—in a kingdom that, in the wake of a power vacuum, is desperately seeking a new order. Desperate and without an advocate, she hopes for salvation from another world. Then Lohengrin, the mysterious Knight of the Swan, appears. He is willing to fight for Elsa—on one radical condition: she must never ask him his name or where he comes from. Blind trust becomes the decisive test.

*Lohengrin* tells the story of a society so desperately seeking direction that it is willing to submit to the leadership of a stranger. While Elsa wavers between love and doubt, Ortrud schemes for power in Brabant. And Lohengrin himself remains an ambivalent figure: savior, instrument of higher powers, or a projection of collective longing? How much control by others—through supposedly divinely sent charismatic figures—can a person endure? And how much autonomy can reasonably be expected of them?

In his libretto, Wagner combines the historical figure of Henry I with the legend of the Holy Grail. Both fairy-tale-like and highly political, the opera—which premiered in 1850—addresses issues that remain relevant to this day, not least the failure of unconditional love in politically unstable times.

Musically, *Lohengrin* already points the way toward the through-composed music drama. Ethereal, floating soundscapes, gripping characterizations, and powerful choruses transform this grand Romantic opera—oscillating between the promise of redemption and tragedy—into a highly evocative musical theater experience. Gerrit Prießnitz, chief conductor of the Tyrolean State Theater, serves as music director, while director Jasmina Hadžiahmetović’s production explores the question of what happens when blind trust becomes the standard for major decisions.