Heidelberg Thingstätte

Heidelberg Thingstätte

The Heidelberg Thingstätte is an open-air theatre on the Heiligenberg in Heidelberg which was built during the Third Reich for performances and events as part of the Thingspiel movement. It is now used primarily for unofficial Walpurgis Night celebrations. It is a protected cultural monument.

Third Reich

The Heiligenberg theatre is one of the official Thingstätten or Thingplätze built in the first part of the Nazi era as part of the Thingspiel movement. It is in the form of an egg-shaped amphitheatre and has a capacity of approximately 8,000 seats or 15,000 standees. The architect was Hermann Alker. The original design was to seat 10,300 people with room for an additional 20,000 standees and include a dance ring behind the stage; work began in late April 1934 and was to have been completed in July, but paused and resumed on the reduced plan, and the facility was completed in June 1935 and dedicated on the 22nd of that month.[1][2] Approximately 20,000 people attended,[3] and in his address to them Joseph Goebbels spoke of the 'holy mountain' that was the site and characterised the Thingstätten as "the Lagtagen [State diets or parliaments] of our time";[4] he described the theatre as "National Socialism in stone" and compared the construction of Thingstätten to that of the autobahns.[5] The opening festivities concluded with a summer solstice celebration during which Franz Philipp's cantata Heiliges Vaterland was performed.[1][6] Originally, the theatre was to have been the venue for the première of Richard Euringer's German Passion 1933 during the Reichsfestspiele theatre festival in Heidelberg in 1934; since the theatre was not ready, the performance instead took place in the courtyard of Heidelberg Castle.[7]

The total cost for building the theatre, including creating parking and access roads and the provision of water and electrical power, appears to have been approximately 600,000 RM, all but 40,000 RM borne by the city. The participation of Reich Labour Service workers was exaggerated for propaganda purposes; the majority of the work was done by professional builders.[8] In Alker's original plan, there was no artificial amplification: the building at the back of the stage incorporating the actors' dressing rooms was to have formed a high visual barrier which also reflected the sound back at the audience. However, the early Thingstätten, notably that at the Brandberge outside Halle, proved not to have the good acoustics of the Greek amphitheatres. The theatre at Heidelberg was therefore built with 8 microphone lines fed by 17 on-stage microphones, and 7 loudspeakers at the edge of the stage and on the stage building, which was lower than originally planned and provided with stairs on either side so that it could serve as additional stage space; for example, the entire theatre could now be surrounded by a line of flag- or torch-bearers. Two towers at the rear of the theatre, at the top of the stands, housed the controls for the sound and for lighting, including a mixing board; the installation made it possible to play sound recordings and pipe in radio broadcasts to the stage as well as to amplify lead actors, who were more important to the Thingspiel dramas than had originally been envisaged by architects.[9] The plans for the Thingstätten on the Lorelei rock and at Rostock were modified based on this theatre.[10]

The Thingstätte was located in Heidelberg partly as a counterpart to a cemetery of honour for the fallen of the First World War that was created on another peak above the city.[11] Together with the Reichsfestspiele, one of its purposes was to present a picture of Nazi culture to foreign visitors; however, by the time it opened the Thing movement had already begun to fall out of favour, and in summer 1936, the Mayor of Heidelberg announced its renaming from Thingstätte to Feierstätte (celebration site).[12][13] It was used for the première of Kurt Heynicke's Der Weg ins Reich during the 1935 Reichsfestpiele,[14] and for further dramatic productions and seasonal celebrations until the siting of a flak tower there precluded planned use for a theatrical training programme in 1942.[1]

Postwar

Walpurgis Night at the Heidelberg Thingstätte, 2007

After the war the American occupying forces held jazz concerts at the arena,[3] and in 1947 used it for an Easter service which they invited Germans to attend. As early as 1946 a sports meeting was held there. In 1945 it was renamed Heiligenberg-Anlage (Heiligenberg facility), but usage gradually returned to the original name of Thingstätte.[13] The site is now the property of the city, has been declared a state protected monument, and like the rest of the mountain, is tended by the Schutzgemeinschaft Heiligenberg.[3]

Plans to resume use of the theatre for performances have been hindered by the lack of electricity and other services. However, since the late 1980s it has been unofficially used for annual celebrations of Walpurgis Night, which feature fire-dancers and jugglers and have attracted as many as 14,000 people.[3][15][16] In 2014 David Borymski published a half-hour documentary on the event called Fackelkinder (torch children).[16]

In 2014 the city introduced Sunday and holiday bus service to the theatre,[17] and there are plans to fell approximately one third of the trees on the mountain beginning in 2016; some of these have obscured the view of the city from the theatre.[18]

Panoramic view from stage end

References

  1. 1 2 3 Rainer Stommer, Die inszenierte Volksgemeinschaft: die "Thing-Bewegung" im Dritten Reich, Marburg: Jonas, 1985, ISBN 9783922561316, p. 211 (German).
  2. See Stommer, pp. 10307 for the considerations of cost and logistics, such as the need for blasting and under-estimation of the work hours required, which led to the delays and modifications.
  3. 1 2 3 4 Maria Stumpf, "Denkmalstag: Dem Himmel am nächsten", Rhein-Neckar-Zeitung, 7 September 2013 (German).
  4. Marc Shell, Islandology: Geography, Rhetoric, Politics, Stanford, California: Stanford University Press, 2014, ISBN 9780804789264, pp. 22021.
  5. William Niven, "The birth of Nazi drama? Thing plays", in Theatre Under the Nazis, ed. John London, Manchester / New York: Manchester University, 2000, ISBN 9780719059124, pp. 5495,p. 56.
  6. See Stommer, pp. 11012 for more on the opening events.
  7. Niven, pp. 5556.
  8. Stommer, p. 107.
  9. Stommer, pp. 10810.
  10. Stommer, p. 108.
  11. Stommer, p. 105.
  12. Herbert Hoffmann, Im Gleichschritt in die Diktatur?: die nationalsozialistische "Machtergreifung" in Heidelberg und Mannheim, 1930 bis 1935, Sonderveröffentlichung des Stadtarchivs Mannheim 9, Frankfurt / New York: Lang, 1985, ISBN 9783820476880, pp. 17576 (German).
  13. 1 2 Meinhold Lurz, "Öffentliches Gedächtnis in den Jahren 1945 und 1946", in Heidelberg 1945, ed. Jürgen C. Hess, Hartmut Lehmann and Volker Sellin with Detlef Junker and Eike Wolgast, Transatlantische historische Studien 5, Stuttgart: Steiner, 1996, ISBN 9783515068802, pp. 23154, pp. 23940 (German).
  14. Stommer, pp. 11215.
  15. "Heidelberg feierte die ruhigste Walpurgisnacht seit langem: Nur rund 2500 Besucher zählte die Polizei gegen Mitternacht auf der Thingstätte, wo sich sonst mehr als 10.000 Feiernde versammeln", Rhein-Neckar-Zeitung, 1 May 2013 (German).
  16. 1 2 Steffen Blatt, "Thingstätte: Der Film über eine Party ohne Strom, Licht und Bühne", Rhein-Neckar-Zeitung, 30 April 2014 (German).
  17. "Mit dem Hangbus noch öfter zur Thingstätte", Rhein-Neckar-Zeitung, 11 May 2015 (German).
  18. Karin Katzenberger-Ruf, "Die Thingstätte bekommt eine Verjüngungskur", Rhein-Neckar-Zeitung, 27 August 2014 (German).

Further reading

Coordinates: 49°25′24″N 8°42′23″E / 49.42333°N 8.70639°E / 49.42333; 8.70639

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