Difference between revisions of "Stadttheater [Lübeck] (Q9118)"
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(Created claim: Wikidata instance (P13): Q24354) | (Added qualifier: Source (P63): CARTHALIA (Q495), #quickstatements; #temporary_batch_1757591661939) | ||
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| Property / Carthalia ID: 2001 / rank | |||
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| Property / Preservation state: extant building / rank | |||
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| Property / Preservation state: Used as theatre today / rank | |||
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| Property / Note | |||
| + | Built 1907-1908 by Martin Dülfer for the city of Lübeck, on the former site of the Casino-Theater (built 1858, demolished 1907). Opened 1 Oct 1908 with Wagner's ouverture to Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg, Goethe's Geschwister, and Schiller's fragment Demetrius. 1925 conversion of the Marmorsaal hall to the chamber theatre Kammerspiele (325 seats). 1938-1939 interior alterations and modernization. 1951-1952 extension by a storage tract. 1965-1966 installation of a studio stage in a former cafeteria hall (90 seats). 1992 closed due to safety concerns. 1993-1996 major restoration by Chlumsky, Peters, and Hildebrand. Re-opened April 1996. Main theatre (Großes Haus): 920 seats. Used for opera and drama performances by the resident companies. (English) | ||
| Property / Note: Built 1907-1908 by Martin Dülfer for the city of Lübeck, on the former site of the Casino-Theater (built 1858, demolished 1907). Opened 1 Oct 1908 with Wagner's ouverture to Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg, Goethe's Geschwister, and Schiller's fragment Demetrius. 1925 conversion of the Marmorsaal hall to the chamber theatre Kammerspiele (325 seats). 1938-1939 interior alterations and modernization. 1951-1952 extension by a storage tract. 1965-1966 installation of a studio stage in a former cafeteria hall (90 seats). 1992 closed due to safety concerns. 1993-1996 major restoration by Chlumsky, Peters, and Hildebrand. Re-opened April 1996. Main theatre (Großes Haus): 920 seats. Used for opera and drama performances by the resident companies. (English) / rank | |||
| + | Normal rank | ||
| Property / Note: Built 1907-1908 by Martin Dülfer for the city of Lübeck, on the former site of the Casino-Theater (built 1858, demolished 1907). Opened 1 Oct 1908 with Wagner's ouverture to Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg, Goethe's Geschwister, and Schiller's fragment Demetrius. 1925 conversion of the Marmorsaal hall to the chamber theatre Kammerspiele (325 seats). 1938-1939 interior alterations and modernization. 1951-1952 extension by a storage tract. 1965-1966 installation of a studio stage in a former cafeteria hall (90 seats). 1992 closed due to safety concerns. 1993-1996 major restoration by Chlumsky, Peters, and Hildebrand. Re-opened April 1996. Main theatre (Großes Haus): 920 seats. Used for opera and drama performances by the resident companies. (English) / qualifier | |||
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Latest revision as of 12:46, 11 September 2025
Theatre building in Lübeck, Germany, opened in 1907
- Stadttheater
| Language | Label | Description | Also known as |
|---|---|---|---|
| English | Stadttheater [Lübeck] | Theatre building in Lübeck, Germany, opened in 1907 |
|
Statements
53°52'10.920"N, 10°41'11.040"E
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Built 1907-1908 by Martin Dülfer for the city of Lübeck, on the former site of the Casino-Theater (built 1858, demolished 1907). Opened 1 Oct 1908 with Wagner's ouverture to Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg, Goethe's Geschwister, and Schiller's fragment Demetrius. 1925 conversion of the Marmorsaal hall to the chamber theatre Kammerspiele (325 seats). 1938-1939 interior alterations and modernization. 1951-1952 extension by a storage tract. 1965-1966 installation of a studio stage in a former cafeteria hall (90 seats). 1992 closed due to safety concerns. 1993-1996 major restoration by Chlumsky, Peters, and Hildebrand. Re-opened April 1996. Main theatre (Großes Haus): 920 seats. Used for opera and drama performances by the resident companies. (English)
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1 October 1908Gregorian
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1907
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1938
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1990s
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106
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