The Program as Advertisement: Art and Propaganda in Concert and Theater Programs, Exhibition Catalogues, and Brochures in Germany 1913-1961

Exiles Return: Brecht and Weill's Threepenny Opera in Post-war Germany

Performances of Wagner's operas in Post-war Germany were often conducted by figures such as Otto Klemperer and Vienna-born Erich Leinsdorf who spent the war years in exile away from Germany. Together with the renewed activity of such exiled conductors in Germany was the return to the stage of works by exiled authors and composers, which have been banned during the war.

The collection features programs and newspaper reviews of renewed performances of Bertolt Brecht and Kurt Weill's Threepenny Opera in West Germany after the war. The opera was banned in August 1933 and returned to the German stage in the 1950s. The newspaper review from July 1956 included in the Campbell collection additionally discusses a screening of G. W. Pabst 1931 film version of the Threepenny Opera featuring Lotte Lenya and emphasizes the relevance of the work's scathing critique not only to the time in which it was written but also to present day.

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