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30 July – 31 August

The programme in 1932 clearly documents the growing dominance of music theatre over straight drama. The Festival had sensational success with Carl Maria von Weber’s Oberon under Bruno Walter and Richard Strauss’s Die Frau ohne Schatten. After an absence of several years, Strauss conducted once again in Salzburg in 1932.

Die Frau ohne Schatten had received its world première in 1919 under Franz Schalk at the Vienna State Opera in set designs by Alfred Roller. The new production under Clemens Krauss celebrated its first night in February 1931 in Vienna. In both ­Salzburg performances, the singers – as in Vienna – were acclaimed: Viorica Ursuleac as ­Empress; Lotte Lehmann as Dyer’s Wife.

The sketchbook for Die Frau ohne Schatten is a gift of Karl Böhm to the Vienna ­Philharmonic Orchestra. The composer had dedicated it to Böhm on the latter’s 50th birthday in August 1944. 30 years later, Karl Böhm conducted a new production in Salzburg, likewise once more with the Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra.