Oberamergau 2010: The Village and Its Passion Play
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About this ebook
Illustrated in full colour, there is an insight into the traditions and staging of the Play, and a brief synopsis as it unfolds on stage. Practical details include how to see the Play, a Plan of the village, and a guide to the surrounding area.
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Oberamergau 2010 - Raymond Goodburn
2000
WELCOME TO
OBERAMMERGAU
From Otto Huber, Deputy Director and Dramatic Adviser of the Passion Play
I am delighted to have this opportunity of sending you greetings, and extend a warm welcome to the 2010 Passion Play!
I would like to begin with a personal story. In 1950, as a small child, I entered Jerusalem with Jesus during the Passion Play; in 1960 I stood, a teenager, on the Passion stage where I played the part of Isaac in the living tableau in which he ascended Mount Moriah with his father Abraham in order to be sacrificed – a model for Christ’s sacrifice on Golgotha. At that time – as during Passion Plays before and since – numerous guests were staying at my parents’ guest house. One of them – a devout bus conductor – came from Ashby de la Zouch in Leicestershire. He invited me to England where I, a country lad, was to learn a little about the wide world. This is just one of many examples of how this play, that has come down to us over the ages, brings together people from all over the world. Perhaps, in these peaceful moments of fraternity during the play in our small village on the northern edge of the Alps, something can be felt of the spirit which the Prince of Peace wished to bring us all as he rode into Jerusalem on his donkey. At any rate, it is Oberammergau’s calling to tell His story and thereby pass on something of His spirit.
From the outset, it is important for Oberammergau that there is a spirit of hope and of the strength to live. After all, this play of life and death was the result of a promise made at a moment of mortal danger, and the people of Oberammergau fulfilled this promise for the first time in 1634, on a stage which they built in the cemetery, above the fresh graves of those who had died of the plague.
In 2010 the community of Oberammergau is performing for the 41st time this play that it has carried through the ages in a unique example of continuity. When passion plays were banned in Catholic southern Germany in the 18th century when the spirit of rationalism held sway, Oberammergau alone was able to resume. Was this due to its commitment to the vow? To the conviction reflected in the impressive creative joy of the skilled craft workers? Or was it the literary and theological support from the nearby monasteries of Ettal and Rottenbuch that proved decisive?
But the people of Oberammergau were not content to simply repeat the play – they developed it. This is why there have been different versions of the text, culminating in the revised version produced by Father J.A. Daisenberger, used from 1860 to the present day.
The production concentrated, under the title ‘The Great Sacrifice on Golgotha’, on the Saviour’s suffering and death. However, less was made of his message, which brought him into conflict with the whole world. In 2010, on the other hand, we are attempting to place greater emphasis on his call for a radical change of ideas, his commandment to love God and Man.
All of the drama is there: Jesus spoke to a world without peace that was ruled by Rome and marked by social conflicts, based on suppression and exploitation. People longed for freedom from foreign rule, the burden of taxation and slavery, and for a Messiah who would bring peace and justice.
Jesus proclaimed a new image of Man: God is in everyone, the measure of our love of God is the charity we show to those nearest to us. He broke the chain of hate and counter-hate, force and counter-force. It is this Jesus, who constantly advocates belief in his God, the God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob, that we wish to show.
So too with the musical living tableaux inserted into the action. These comparative flashbacks to the faith experiences of the Israelites, also help to bring His faith closer in an emotional way. We have done more work on these for 2010, and on the text as a whole, music, sets and costumes.
We hope to reach you with our play and that for you, too, this story will become a source of hope and of the life force.
Tableau – The loss of paradise
The Parish Church
THE SETTING AND
THE STORY
Nestling among the Bavarian Alps in the Ammergau Valley is the delightful village of Oberammergau, with a population of about 5,300. The Ammergau Valley has been an important communications route for centuries. Indeed, research suggests traces of settlements in the upper Ammer valley dating back to Celtic times. During the Roman period it lay on the military route from Verona to Augsburg and in common with most of the passable routes across the Alps it has been fought over time and again. Eventually the Ammergau region became the centre of a far-reaching area and from the 9th century onwards it was the religious focal point for the entire valley. Subsequently it was in the hands of many different rulers, but most importantly as part of the lands of the Dukes of Bavaria, culminating with the rule of the ‘mad’ King Ludwig II, a close friend of Richard Wagner and builder of the nearby ‘fairy-tale’ castles.
The village stands more than 2,500ft above sea level in a valley almost totally surrounded by mountains. From a southerly and easterly direction it is approached by a road which winds its way up from the autobahn between Munich and Garmisch-Partenkirchen. The other main road takes a northerly direction, following the river Ammer through the ‘twin’ village of Unterammergau, and then to Schongau and north towards Augsburg.
Fresco showing the first Play
Coming from the direction of Garmisch the road passes through the village of Ettal, with its huge Monastery and fine church founded in 1330. Oberammergau was administered from here for many years, and the Monastery and its incumbents have always had a great influence on the Passion Play, as we shall see later. Together with its fellow monastic institutions at Rottenbuch and Steingaden, Ettal