Max Burckhard: Difference between revisions

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{{Short description|Theatre director}}
{{Short description|Theatre director (1854–1912)}}
{{Unreferenced|date=December 2009}}
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{{Expand German|date=January 2025}}
{{Expand German|date=January 2025}}
[[File:Max Burckhard am Totenbett.png|thumb|Max Burckhard on his deathbed]]
[[File:Max Burckhard am Totenbett.png|thumb|Max Burckhard on his deathbed]]


'''Max Burckhard''' (14 July 1854, [[Korneuburg]], [[Lower Austria]] - 16 March 1912, Vienna) was director of the [[Burgtheater]], Vienna, from 1890 to 1898.
'''Max Eugen Burckhard''' (14 July 1854, [[Korneuburg]], [[Lower Austria]] - 16 March 1912, Vienna) was director of the [[Burgtheater]], Vienna, from 1890 to 1898.


== Vita ==
== Vita ==
Max Burckhard, a lawyer, was the artistic director of the Burgtheater when it opened as the “Neue Haus am Ring” on 12 May 1890. He remained director until 1898. He introduced Sunday matinees at a reduced cost to widen the theatre's potential audience. He later remarked that the less wealthy audiences were the most "critically acute". As director, he remodeled the auditorium in the spring and summer of 1897, and introduced contemporary drama by [[Henrik Ibsen]], [[Gerhart Hauptmann]], [[Arthur Schnitzler]], [[Hugo von Hofmannsthal]] to the Viennese audience as well as Austrian classics of [[Ludwig Anzengruber]] and [[Ferdinand Raimund]]. He hired such famous actors as [[Adele Sandrock]], [[Otto Treßler]], [[Hedwig Bleibtreu]], and [[Josef Kainz]] but was pressured to resign after having "aroused the displeasure of the [[Christian Social Party (Austria)|Christian Social Party]]".{{clarify|date=August 2016}}
Max Burckhard, a lawyer, was the artistic director of the Burgtheater when it opened as the “Neue Haus am Ring” on 12 May 1890. He remained director until 1898. He introduced Sunday matinees at a reduced cost to widen the theatre's potential audience. He later remarked that the less wealthy audiences were the most "critically acute". As director, he remodeled the auditorium in the spring and summer of 1897, and introduced contemporary drama by [[Henrik Ibsen]], [[Gerhart Hauptmann]], [[Arthur Schnitzler]], [[Hugo von Hofmannsthal]] to the Viennese audience as well as Austrian classics of [[Ludwig Anzengruber]] and [[Ferdinand Raimund]]. He hired such famous actors as [[Adele Sandrock]], [[Otto Treßler]], [[Hedwig Bleibtreu]], and [[Josef Kainz]] but was pressured to resign after having "aroused the displeasure of the [[Christian Social Party (Austria)|Christian Social Party]]".{{clarify|date=August 2016}}
==Death==
Burckhard died in Vienna on 16 March 1912, at the age of 57.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://anno.onb.ac.at/cgi-content/anno?apm=0&aid=nfp&datum=19120318&seite=11 |title=Statt jeder besonderen Anzeige † (...) Dr. Max Eugen Burckhard |trans-title=Instead of any special announcement, † (…) Dr. Max Eugen Burckhard |language=de |website=anno.onb.ac.at |publisher=Neue Freie Presse |page=11 |date=17 March 1912 |access-date=26 June 2025}}</ref>


==References==
==References==

Latest revision as of 04:45, 26 June 2025

Template:Short description Template:One source Template:Expand German

File:Max Burckhard am Totenbett.png
Max Burckhard on his deathbed

Max Eugen Burckhard (14 July 1854, Korneuburg, Lower Austria - 16 March 1912, Vienna) was director of the Burgtheater, Vienna, from 1890 to 1898.

Vita

Max Burckhard, a lawyer, was the artistic director of the Burgtheater when it opened as the “Neue Haus am Ring” on 12 May 1890. He remained director until 1898. He introduced Sunday matinees at a reduced cost to widen the theatre's potential audience. He later remarked that the less wealthy audiences were the most "critically acute". As director, he remodeled the auditorium in the spring and summer of 1897, and introduced contemporary drama by Henrik Ibsen, Gerhart Hauptmann, Arthur Schnitzler, Hugo von Hofmannsthal to the Viennese audience as well as Austrian classics of Ludwig Anzengruber and Ferdinand Raimund. He hired such famous actors as Adele Sandrock, Otto Treßler, Hedwig Bleibtreu, and Josef Kainz but was pressured to resign after having "aroused the displeasure of the Christian Social Party".Template:Clarify

Death

Burckhard died in Vienna on 16 March 1912, at the age of 57.[1]

References

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External links

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