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26 July – 31 August

Baron Heinrich Puthon, the Festival’s longstanding president who stepped down the preceding year, died on 23 April at the age of 91. The Grosses Festspielhaus was given over to spoken drama with a new production by Leopold Lindtberg of Goethe’s Faust, Part 1 – an experiment which, apart from performances of Jedermann during poor weather, was never repeated.

A new staging of Jedermann by Max Reinhardt’s son Gottfried, with music by Ernst Krenek and imaginative costumes by the Hollywood designer Tony Duquette, raised many eyebrows: this interesting and timely production, though lauded in the press, was rejected by audiences. The Festival’s tradition of annual world premières came to an end with a production of Rudolf Wagner-Régeny’s Das Bergwerk zu Falun. Already in the mid-50s Karajan proposed mounting only new works that had proved their worth in the repertoire and thus did not harbour any dangers. This view, with its aim of risk avoidance, now found majority support. It opened a period of restoration for which the name of Karajan stands in the annals of the Festival. In contrast, the chamber concert series witnessed the première of a “classical modern composer” as the Borodin Quartet gave the first performance of Dmitri Shostakovich’s String Quartet no. 8.