The Flying Dutchman | Operavision (2024)

The Flying Dutchman | Operavision (1)

Martynas Aleksa

The Flying Dutchman | Operavision (2)

Martynas Aleksa

Klaipėda State Music Theatre

Wagner

This performance is no longer viewable as video-on-demand for rights reasons but other material about the production is still available.

until

The Flying Dutchman | Operavision (3)

A captain is cursed to sail the seas of the world forever, only allowed to make landfall once every seven years. Will he find the love of a faithful woman to break the curse?

In Klaipeda State Music Theatre’s large-scale open-air production, Richard Wagner's opera is performed mere miles from where the first motifs of The Flying Dutchman were born in the stormy Baltic Sea. Among the colossal structures and hoists of a historic shipyard, the setting itself stirs the audience's imagination. Director Dalius Abaris’s bold vision is captured for the cameras in the light of a summer’s evening on the Lithuanian coast and benefits from the latest sound recording technology.

Cast

Dutchman

Almas Švilpa

Senta

Sandra Janušaitė

Daland

Tadas Girininkas

Eric

Andris Ludvigs

Daland’s Steersman

Rafailas Karpis

Mary

Dalia Kužmarskytė

Chorus

Klaipėda State Music Theatre Chorus

Orchestra

Klaipėda State Music Theatre Symphony Orchestra

...

Music

Richard Wagner

Text

Richard Wagner

Music director and conductor

Modestas Pitrenas

Concept and artistic direction

Dalius Abaris

Director

Gediminas Šeduikis

Set designers

Dalius Abaris, Sigita Šimkūnaitė

Lighting

Andrius Stasiulis

Costume and make-up designer

Sandra Straukaitė

...

More

Video

Trailer

TRAILER | THE FLYING DUTCHMAN Wagner – Klaipėda State Music Theatre

Read lessRead more

Extract

Sentas Ballad (‘Johohoe!’)

Standing on the colossal hoist of a historic shipyard, Sandra Janušaitė sings the famous Senta ballad from the Klaipeda State Music Theatre's spectacular production of Wagner's The Flying Dutchman. In the ballad, Senta tells the story of the Dutchman and vows to redeem a man she has never set eyes on.

Read lessRead more

Behind the scenes

Gediminas Šeduikis & Dalius Abaris (Directors)

Gediminas Šeduikis and Dalius Abaris joined forces to work as a directors’ duo for this unprecedented production of Richard Wagner’s The Flying Dutchman at the historic Paul Willy Lindenau Shipyard of Klaipeda. While walking through the shipyard and what is to become the performance stage, they share their insights into the concept of their pioneering work.

Read lessRead more

The story

The legend of the Flying Dutchman

A raging storm has driven the homebound fishing boat aground in a cove. The Steersman tries to keep up his spirits with a song but falls asleep on the watch, together with the exhausted crew and the ship’s captain, Daland. As the storm grows stronger, a strange-looking vessel appears. Its pale-faced captain is the legendary Flying Dutchman who has been condemned to eternal wandering unimpeded by storms or pirates. He can find peace neither at sea, nor on land where he is permitted to go ashore once every seven years and search for true love, which is his only hope for salvation. The Dutchman asks captain Daland for shelter and offers his entire fortune in return for lodging. Tempted with the prospect of wealth, Daland gladly offers the hand of his daughter, Senta. A beam of hope shines in the Dutchman’s soul: is there a chance that he finds his lost homeland in Daland’s family and ultimate redemption through the love of faithful Senta? Meanwhile, sailors greet a tailwind and prepare their ships to set sail.

Waiting for the return of Daland’s ship, the girls are working in the berth and singing. Senta is oblivious of her surroundings, brooding on an old medallion with a picture of a pale-faced sailor. Senta’s friends tease her about the huntsman Erik, her ardent suitor. Senta, heedless of their facetious remarks, sings a ballad, which she came to love as a child. It is about the wandering sailor whose mysterious ship is condemned to stay at sea forever. Every seven years he comes ashore to seek a maiden who would love him enough to declare herself faithful to him for life. Were he to find one, his curse would end – but he never does so. Senta’s friends are moved by the doomed wanderer’s fate, while she is obsessed with the idea that she will be the one to save the Flying Dutchman from doom. Senta’s words surprise Erik, who is overtaken by a strange foreboding. He relates a dream, in which he saw Senta’s father return with a mysterious stranger resembling the one portrayed on the medallion. Senta is now convinced – he is her destiny. Erik leaves in despair. Daland unexpectedly arrives home with the Dutchman and relates Senta about their encounter and his companion’s lucrative proposal in exchange of her in marriage. But Senta barely notices her father, even when he introduces his guest as her betrothed. The Dutchman does not turn his eyes from Senta, hoping that her love and faithfulness will lift his curse. Daland leaves the two alone.

Sailors celebrate their safe return to land. They call out to the Dutchman’s ship, inviting the crew to join them, but the ship remains dark and silent. Daland’s sailors deride the mysterious crew and tease the girls by telling about the ghost ship and its captain. Suddenly, a storm rises and ferocious singing is heard from the ghost ship. Daland’s men try to muffle up their wailing with their merry song but finally retreat in fear.
Hearing about Senta’s betrothal, Erik tries to dissuade Senta from binding her life with the eerie stranger. Senta is unwilling to listen to him, for she has made an oath and is called by a supreme mission. Erik then reminds her of their happy days together and his love for her. The Dutchman, seeing Senta together with Erik, is stricken by a sense of loss, believing that Senta, too, has failed to render him undying faithfulness. He reveals his secret and sets off towards his ship to continue this endless roaming. Erik and Daland’s attempts to restrain Senta are futile: she follows the Dutchman, determined to save him from curse...

Insights

The Flying Dutchman goes ashore and comes full circle

A stormy prelude

Richard Wagner married the German actress Wilhelmine ‘Minna’ Planer in the winter of 1836. Their relationship was tempestuous, with the jealous and possessive composer’s outbursts frequently leaving Minna in tears. The actress also struggled to deal with her husband’s debts and threats from his creditors. Within six months, she left him for another man.

To escape the fiasco, Wagner moved to Riga (then in the Russian Empire), where the 26-year-old became music director of the Court Theatre and engaged Minna’s sister as a singer. Wagner’s wife eventually decided to join him in Riga, but their lifestyle was lavish beyond their means and led to more unpayable debts. The couple planned to run from their creditors but, having suspected such a plan, the authorities confiscated their passports.

Undeterred despite the risk of being shot by border guards, they crossed illegally into Prussia. They then took a wagon to the coast but it overturned en route, crushing Minna and causing her to miscarriage. They finally made it to the port of Pillau (now Baltiysk in Kaliningrad) and set sail for London on board the ship Thetis, which ran into a storm and was forced to berth in a Norwegian fjord. The weather and the shoreline made an impression on Wagner’s imagination, and he asked the sailors about the legend of the Flying Dutchman. After a terrifying 24-day journey for a trip that should have taken eight, Wagner arrived safely in London with his wife by his side and his next opera in his head.

A ghostly ship

The myth of a phantom ship doomed to sail the oceans forever is likely to have originated from the golden age of the Dutch East India Company in the 17th century. The first print reference appeared in John MacDonald’s 1790 travelogue Travels in various parts of Europe, Asia and Africa during a series of thirty years and upward, in which sailors see the Flying Dutchman during a storm. Over the next half-century several stories inspired by the legend appeared in print, including ‘Vanderdecken’s Message Home’ and Samuel Taylor Coleridge’s 'The Rime of the Ancient Mariner'.

Heinrich Heine’s satirical novel Aus den Memoiren des Herrn von Schnabelewopski (‘The Memoirs of Mister von Schnabelewopski’) was the first to introduce the cursed captain setting foot on land every seven years with the chance to be saved through the devotion of a faithful wife. Heine presented this redemptive power of love as a means for ironic humour, but when Wagner wrote his libretto for The Flying Dutchman (Der fliegende Holländer) he took the theme literally and seriously.

A historical event in a historical setting

After 160 years and countless adaptations, The Flying Dutchman finally returned to the shores of the stormy sea in which the idea for the opera first occurred to Wagner. In August 2020, the Klaipėda State Music Theatre staged their production of the opera in Lithuania: the project could not have been more ambitious and has been hailed as one of the country’s most celebrated cultural events of the year.

The performance took place in Klaipėda on the hundred-year-old shiplift of the Paul Willy Lindenau Shipyard, whose huge frame structures and hoists provided a spectacular setting for the opera. Staged in the open air, 1000 socially distanced spectators were able to attend the show, in a rare communal experience in a year of multiple lockdowns.

By setting the scene in a shipyard, the artistic team around Concept and Artistic Director Dalius Abaris faced the challenge of dealing with rain and strong gusts of wind. With the help of leading sound engineers and cutting edge audio technology, they succeeded in making both the orchestra and the singers sound as if it were staged in an acoustic concert hall. But the extreme weather conditions was not the only complicating factor of the production: the sound engineers also had to deal with the performers moving constantly across and even beyond a 50-metre stage. Abaris reflects: ‘This was a big challenge, not just for the sound team but also for the performers. When people are separated by over 40-metres distance, the monitoring systems visibility and relationship with the conductor all have to be watertight.’

Both a critical and an audience success, Klaipėda State Music Theatre’s production was nominated at the Lithuanian Theatre Awards ceremony on 27 March 2021, the most important performing arts awards in Lithuania. Out of five nominations in the categories for best director, best set design and best soloist two Golden Crosses of the Stage went to the creative team of The Flying Dutchman: Dalius Abaris was announced Best Director and Tadas Girininkas Best Soloist.

The Flying Dutchman | Operavision (7)

Copyright

Martynas Aleksa

The Flying Dutchman | Operavision (8)

Copyright

Martynas Aleksa

The Flying Dutchman | Operavision (9)

Copyright

Martynas Aleksa

The Flying Dutchman | Operavision (10)

Copyright

Martynas Aleksa

The Flying Dutchman | Operavision (11)

Copyright

Martynas Aleksa

The Flying Dutchman | Operavision (12)

Copyright

Martynas Aleksa

The Flying Dutchman | Operavision (13)

Copyright

Martynas Aleksa

The Flying Dutchman | Operavision (14)

Copyright

Martynas Aleksa

The Flying Dutchman | Operavision (15)

Copyright

Martynas Aleksa

The Flying Dutchman | Operavision (16)

Copyright

Martynas Aleksa

Gallery

The Flying Dutchman | Operavision (17)

© Martynas Aleksa

The Flying Dutchman | Operavision (18)

© Martynas Aleksa

The Flying Dutchman | Operavision (19)

© Martynas Aleksa

The Flying Dutchman | Operavision (20)

© Martynas Aleksa

The Flying Dutchman | Operavision (21)

© Martynas Aleksa

The Flying Dutchman | Operavision (22)

© Martynas Aleksa

The Flying Dutchman | Operavision (23)

© Martynas Aleksa

The Flying Dutchman | Operavision (24)

© Martynas Aleksa

The Flying Dutchman | Operavision (25)

© Martynas Aleksa

The Flying Dutchman | Operavision (26)

© Martynas Aleksa

Load more

The Flying Dutchman | Operavision (2024)

FAQs

Was there a real Flying Dutchman? ›

According to maritime legend, the Flying Dutchman can never be anchored, and anyone who sees the ship is doomed to sail the seven seas for eternity. Although the Flying Dutchman never existed, the story of the cursed ship became a legendary symbol of calamity for sailors.

When was the Flying Dutchman last seen? ›

There have been many sightings over the years, although the last reported one was by a Nazi submarine in WWII. Some sightings involved the Flying Dutchman sailing quickly through calm waters while the majority of sailors have spotted it during extremely stormy weather with wind and waves crashing all around.

What is the curse of the Flying Dutchman? ›

In this version, the Dutchman (Wayne Tigges) has sold his soul to Satan and is forced to live at sea. He can only return to land every seven years to find a woman who will be with him until death, it is only then that the Dutchman is able to break the curse and find redemption.

What is Flying Dutchman slang for? ›

Definitions of Flying Dutchman. a phantom ship that is said to appear in storms near the Cape of Good Hope. type of: apparition, fantasm, phantasm, phantasma, phantom, shadow. something existing in perception only.

Was Davy Jones real? ›

The character of Davy Jones in the Pirates of the Caribbean movie franchise is a fictional character and not based on a real person. While the franchise drew inspiration from various legends and folklore, the depiction of Davy Jones with a squid or octopus face is purely fictional and not historically accurate.

Was the Black Pearl a real ship? ›

Armed with thirty-two guns and bearing the appearance of a ghost ship, the Black Pearl, albeit entirely fictional, is now the most famous pirate ship of all time.

Where did the myth of the Flying Dutchman come from? ›

Origin. The Flying Dutchman has its roots in the ancient maritime tales of the Netherlands. The story is believed to be based on real events, but over time it has been mixed with supernatural and mystical elements.

Why did the Flying Dutchman disappear? ›

The Flying Dutchman was a sea captain who once found himself struggling to round the Cape of Good Hope during a ferocious storm. He swore that he would succeed even if he had to sail until Judgment Day. The Devil heard his oath, and took him up on it; the Dutchman was condemned to stay at sea forever.

What did the Flying Dutchman look like? ›

The Flying Dutchman is said to appear as a ghostly, glowing ship. It will materialise suddenly and then, just as suddenly, vanish. Some claim the ship, doomed to sail the seas forever, will attempt to make contact with other travellers, and that seeing the Flying Dutchman is a sign of horrible misfortune to come.

What is the myth in Dutchman? ›

The subway car itself, endlessly traveling the same course, is symbolic of "The Course of History." Another layer of the title's symbolism is the myth of the Flying Dutchman, a ghost ship which, much like the subway car Clay rides on, endlessly sails on with a crew that is unable to escape the confines of the vessel.

How did the Flying Dutchman crash? ›

On Nov. 10, 1942, the C-47 nicknamed The Flying Dutchman (S/N 41-18564) hit a strong down-draft over the Owen Stanley Range while carrying U.S. Army troops from Port Moresby to Pongani, New Guinea. It crashed into the side of Mount Obree, killing seven of the 23 onboard and destroying most of the food it carried.

What did Disney do with the Flying Dutchman? ›

After filming for Dead Man's Chest and At World's End was completed, the Flying Dutchman was put on display at Castaway Cay. As of November 2010, the Dutchman was dismantled and no longer on display.

Is the Flying Dutchman a myth? ›

Well, it's true that The Flying Dutchman is certainly a story, but it is only a legend. The Flying Dutchman was a sea captain who once found himself struggling to round the Cape of Good Hope during a ferocious storm.

What race is the Flying Dutchman? ›

The Flying Dutchman (1846–1870) was an English Thoroughbred racehorse and sire. He raced for four seasons between 1848 and 1851, winning all but one of his fifteen races, including The Derby and the St Leger.

What was the first appearance of the Flying Dutchman? ›

"Scaredy Pants" marks the first appearance of The Flying Dutchman.

What type of ship is the Flying Dutchman in real life? ›

The Flying Dutchman's History

Not to be mistaken for the legendary ghost ship The Flying Dutchman that can never make port, doomed to sail the oceans forever within nautical folklore; The Flying Dutchman today is a renamed tall-ship schooner built in 1903 with the original name of “KW33”.

Who was Davy Jones before? ›

Once a human pirate and a good man, Davy Jones was known to be a great sailor, Jones was originally a heroic man like Jack Sparrow before meeting Calypso.

Why did the Flying Dutchman sink? ›

The captain and his crew battled for hours to get out of the storm and at one stage it looked like they would make it. Then they heard a sickening crunch - the ship had hit treacherous rocks and began to sink.

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Van Hayes

Last Updated:

Views: 6192

Rating: 4.6 / 5 (66 voted)

Reviews: 89% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Van Hayes

Birthday: 1994-06-07

Address: 2004 Kling Rapid, New Destiny, MT 64658-2367

Phone: +512425013758

Job: National Farming Director

Hobby: Reading, Polo, Genealogy, amateur radio, Scouting, Stand-up comedy, Cryptography

Introduction: My name is Van Hayes, I am a thankful, friendly, smiling, calm, powerful, fine, enthusiastic person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.