Die seit langem und mit Spannung erwartete Studie von Jonathan Carr zur Familie Wagner, »The Wagner Clan«, ist nun soeben erschienen – zunächst in englischer Sprache, die deutsche Übersetzung wird ab Mai 2008 erhältlich sein); eine Rezension dieses wichtigen Buches folgt in Kürze.
In der Verlagsankündigung heißt es:
Through two world wars, Nazi dictatorship and foreign occupation, the Wagner clan – Germany’s most famous family – has played host to many of the greatest and ghastliest figures in the arts and politics. Its members have clung to the helm of the prestigious Bayreuth Festival and have regularly battled one another like warriors in the music dramas they stage. Their story – with its jealousy, greed, passion and intrigue – is as riveting as any opera.
Drawing on extensive research and interviews with the Wagners, Jonathan Carr – author of a highly praised biography of Mahler – has produced the first thorough and balanced history of this extraordinary clan and its circle. Beyond the human drama, though, this gripping portrait shows how the family’s history and that of Germany has intertwined, from well before the strenuous birth of Bismarck’s Reich in 1871, through defeat, destruction and post-1945 economic rebirth, right up to the present day.
The author takes a fresh look at controversial matters such as Richard Wagner’s antisemitism and the family’s role during the so-called ‚Third Reich‘. He also underlines the decisive roles played in Bayreuth over decades by two British-born members of the clan, Houston Stewart Chamberlain and Winifred Wagner (née Williams), both of them fervent admirers of Adolf Hitler. Inspiring and appalling by turns, the Wagner saga amounts to a matchless mirror of Germany’s rise, fall and resurrection over nearly two centuries.