Nike Wagner
Nike Wagner (German pronunciation: [ˈniːkə ˈvaːɡnɐ])[1] (born 9 June 1945) is a German dramaturge, arts administrator and author. She directed the festival Kunstfest Weimar , and has been the director of the Beethovenfest from 2014. The daughter of Wieland Wagner, she is a great-granddaughter of Richard Wagner, and a great-great‑granddaughter of Franz Liszt. She devoted books to the Wagner family and its cultural and political influence. CareerWagner was born in Überlingen on Lake Constance in Germany, the daughter of Wieland Wagner and the choreographer Gertrud Reissinger. Her paternal great-grandfather was Richard Wagner, and she is also the great-great‑granddaughter of Franz Liszt.[2] She grew up in Wahnfried, Bayreuth,[3] until her father's death in 1966, whereupon her uncle Wolfgang Wagner had the house measured and asked her widowed mother to pay rent.[4] She studied musicology, literature and theatre in Berlin,[3] and holds a Ph.D. from Northwestern University in Evanston, Illinois, obtained in 1980 under the direction of Erich Heller. She is the author of several important books on a variety of subjects, which include Karl Kraus (Geist und Geschlecht: Karl Kraus und die Erotik der Wiener Moderne, Frankfurt am Main, Suhrkamp, 1982 — a work based on her doctoral dissertation) and the Wagner family (The Wagners: The Dramas of a Musical Dynasty, Princeton, New Jersey, Princeton University Press, 2001). Her article questioning the propriety of public subsidies given to high-profile cultural events in general, and the Bayreuth Festival in particular (at present c. US$6.5 million annually), Im Fadenkreuz der Kulturpolitik, published in the July 2006 issue of Cicero: Magazin für politische Kultur, engendered controversy within Germany. In 1999 Wagner became a member of the Deutsche Akademie für Sprache und Dichtung, and has served as its vice president since 2011.[3] In 2001, she made a bid for directorship of the Bayreuth Festival, together with Gérard Mortier, who had changed the Salzburg Festival, but did not expect to win.[5] In 2004, Wagner became the director of the Kunstfest Weimar , which she named Pèlerinages in honour of Liszt. She stood down from the post in September 2013. In 2013 she was named the director of the Beethovenfest,[6] and assumed this post in January 2014.[7] She has recognized Wagner's relation to Beethoven, who modeled his first composition on Beethoven's works.[5] She focused less on Beethoven's symphonies, but presented more chamber music, often in contrast with contemporary works in the genre.[8] Other activities
Selected publications
Awards
See alsoNotes
References
Further reading
|