Christoph Müller
    as Woyzeck
    Niklas Wetzel
    as Wanderer
    Bruno Akkan
    as Public house company / students
    Luca-Noél Bock
    as Public house company / students
    Aicha Bracht
    as Public house company / students
    Joshua Dahmen
    as Public house company / students
    Fritz Manhenke
    as Public house company / students
    Emmeline Puntsch
    as Public house company / students
    Philip Frischkorn
    Angela Requena Fuentes

    Woyzeck

    by Georg Büchner
    “On and on. On and on.” Life is a roundabout, constantly spinning. A person approaches here, words drift by there, lights, voices. For Woyzeck, life’s spinning only ever passes him by. “I think if we ever got to heaven, we'd have to help with the thunder”, he says. But here on earth, he has to first help the doctor with his medical experiments. Every morning, he goes to the Captain to help him. He has to go to the barracks, while Marie is at home. He loves her and he has a child with her. And he has to help there, too. More than he already does. But no matter what he does – it’s never enough. Neither in the eyes of the others nor in his own.

    There are voices in Woyzeck’s head, and they too go on and on. And they whisper entirely different things for him to do: The roundabout spins faster and faster underneath a great moon, red like a “bloody blade”. There is little peace for Woyzeck. But when he does find peace and quiet, the voices are still there and even the earth beneath the fields whispers to him. And these voices tell Woyzeck about the Drum Major who has designs on Marie.

    Woyzeck tries to escape. From the Captain, the Doctor and those voices. But they catch up with him. And Marie is caught up in Woyzeck’s jealousy. “Every man is a chasm”.

    In 1821, Johann Christian Woyzeck stabbed the widow Woost, who was his lover, to death in Leipzig’s Vorstadt. He had previously been an apprentice in Leipzig and returned to the city after years as a soldier in various armies during the hither and thither of the Napoleonic liberation wars.
    Like many others in Germany, Georg Büchner learned about this case in Leipzig, since its trial took three years and garnered a great deal of attention. As if beneath a burning lens, this case focussed several topics that had only recently become issues of general debate: Questions of criminal responsibility and insanity as well as social concerns about living circumstances and opportunities.

    The court-appointed psychiatric evaluations created during the Woyzeck case are among the sources used in Büchner’s drama, but the author took great literary license. In a series of spotlights, Büchner’s “Woyzeck” lines up stages of an escalation with expressive emphasis – shining a glaring light on social hierarchies and chasms. Büchner’s drama remained a fragment – but perhaps it is precisely its fragmentary structure that makes it correspond with the story’s aspects and circumstances.

    Schauspiel Leipzig’s artistic director Enrico Lübbe will take a new look at the material in Leipzig, following the 2011 Chemnitz drama production and the staging of Alban Berg’s opera version in 2017 in Erfurt, conducted by Joanna Mallwitz. Etienne Pluss, who received the Theatre Prize DER FAUST for his design of “Violetter Schnee” at Berlin’s Staatsoper Unter den Linden in 2019, will create the set. His work has most recently taken him to the Salzburg Festival (“Il Trittico”, directed by Christoph Loy) and, together with director Claus Guth, to the festival in Aix-en-Provence and to Teatro San Carlo in Naples.

    Like Etienne Pluss, costume designer Bianca Deigner is a long-standing collaborator of Enrico Lübbe’s. In Leipzig, they created “Das kalte Herz”, “Winterreise / Winterreise” or “Die Maßnahme / Die Perser” together. Other work took Bianca Deigner to Theater Gera and Theater Freiburg, to Dom-Stufen Festival in Erfurt and to Opéra de Lille in co-operation with Philharmonie de Paris for Stockhausen’s “Freitag aus Licht”.

    Following “Das kalte Herz” and “563”, the Leipzig-based musician Philip Frischkorn will create the music for “Woyzeck” at Schauspiel Leipzig.
    From April 2024
    Der Fall Woyzeck (The Woyzeck Case)
    A co-operation project within the framework of PAY ATTENTION!

    More information
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    Premiere on 27.04.2024
    Große Bühne

    Dates

    Further dates in planning

    Duration

    ca. 1:50, no break

    The staging includes flickering video effects that can have a similar effect to strobe lighting.


    The volume of this production exceeds 95 decibels in places.

    Cast

    Christoph Müller as Woyzeck
    Tilo Krügel as Hauptmann
    Wenzel Banneyer as Andres
    Thomas Braungardt as Andres (alternating)
    Samuel Sandriesser as Tambourmajor
    Paula Winteler as Margreth
    Niklas Wetzel as Wanderer
    Bruno Akkan, Luca-Noél Bock, Aicha Bracht, Joshua Dahmen, Fritz Manhenke, Emmeline Puntsch as Public house company / students

    Statistery

    Carolin Hain, Charlotte Krauspe, Damian Reuter, Fabian Schwitter Greta Wach, Kirsten Wilkner

    Live music - grand piano

    Philip Frischkorn

    Live music - drums

    Angela Requena Fuentes

    Team

    Director: Enrico Lübbe
    Stage Design: Etienne Pluss
    Costume design: Bianca Deigner
    Video: Robi Voigt
    Musical conception: Philip Frischkorn
    Dramaturgy: Torsten Buß
    Light: Jörn Langkabel
    Robert Gotthardt
    Video technique: Fabian Polinski
    Sound: Gregory Weis, Nico Teichmann, Udo Schulze
    Inspection: Ute Neas
    Soufflage: Philine von Engelhardt
    Directing assistent: Lukas Leon Krüger
    Stage design assistance: Carolin Schmelz
    Costume assistance: Maryna Ianina
    Makeup: Kathrin Heine, Donka Donka Holeček, Cordula Kreuter, Julia Markow, Barbara Zepnick
    Props: Sven-Sebastian Hubel
    Stage master: Julius Besen, Tilo Münster
    Equipment internship: Carolina Imhof
    Theatre pedagogy: Amelie Gohla, Rosa Preiß

    Trailer

    Introduction