A slaughter feast in seven courses
Adapted from Friedrich Schiller
Seven hours of Schiller, war and peace: Bon appétit!
The story of Wallenstein, one of the most successful mercenary leaders in history, has much to tell us about our current wide and dirty panorama of wars and is highly topical about the structures of power, hubris and loyalty. Amongst all the dealmaking, are there any strategies for peace?
In-house director Jan-Christoph Gockel is creating a sensual spectacle based on Schiller’s monumental Wallenstein trilogy to explore the rise and fall of the power-hungry Wallenstein. On stage, a myth will quite literally be cooked up and devoured. In this epic performance, the audience is invited to share in the meal as we ask together: How do we finish this? How do we get out of this?
Schiller artfully condensed thirty years of conflict into the final three weeks before Wallenstein’s assassination. On the orders of the Emperor, the great commander fights with huge armies that sustain themselves with plunder. But a leader of mercenaries must not become too powerful, nor must he lay claim to political might. Ultimately, the Emperor orders Wallenstein to be killed. Over 350 years later, something very similar happened to Yevgeny Prigozhin, the head of the Wagner group of mercenaries who was nicknamed ‘Putin’s chef’ with his empire of luxury restaurants, troll factories and a powerful private army. In 2023, his march on Moscow failed and a ‘plane crash’ plucked him from the sky.
Today, we find ourselves in a new age of mercenaries. In “Wallenstein’s Lager” (Wallenstein’s Camp) initially it is only the ‘cannon fodder’ who speak: soldiers, accompanying female traders, children and peasants who follow the army. Who are these people today? The production team has spent two years researching among ex-mercenaries, army relatives and NGOs and now give these people a voice within Schiller’s powerfully eloquent depiction of war.
A predominantly female ensemble presents this ‘eternal war’ as a way of life and an act of heightened male self-expression. They take delight in dismantling the myth and knocking Wallenstein off his pedestal.
“Playing Wallenstein is a challenge, and that’s a gross understatement. My first school presentation was about Schiller. Escaping his own insignificance was more important to him than health, money or short-term recognition. That impresses me.”
– Samuel Koch, playing the role of Wallenstein
Refreshments will be available during two short breaks and one longer break.
Menu reservations for the third break can be made with our catering service Conviva. Please reserve in advance at mail@conviva-muenchen.de or by phone at 089/23 33 69 77.
In addition, the foyer bars, the KULISSE theater restaurant, and a food stand in the courtyard will provide catering during all three breaks.
- With Katharina Bach, André Benndorff, Johanna Eiworth, Nadège Meta Kanku, Samuel Koch, Annika Neugart, Annette Paulmann, Michael Pietsch, Leoni Schulz, Eva Bay, Maria Moling (Live-Musik), Sergei Okunev, Pari Garvanos , Daniel Hascher
- Director Jan-Christoph Gockel
- Stage Julia Kurzweg
- Costumes Janina Brinkmann
- Music / Composition Maria Moling (Live-Musik)
- Videodesign Lion Bischof
- Lighting Design Christian Schweig, Stephan Mariani
- Puppetry Michael Pietsch
- Piccolomini Menu Annette Paulmann
- Dramaturgy Viola Hasselberg, Claus Philipp
- Research and dramaturgical collaboration Sergei Okunev
- Music Collaboration Cico Beck
- Surtitling Yvonne Griesel (SPRACHSPIEL)
- Assistant to the Director Jakob Elija Seeberger
- Stage Design Assistant Hans Werner, Paula Schlagbauer
- Costume Design Assistant Katharina Weis
- Costume Design Intern Julia Bahn, Uljana Augustin, Mara Germano
- Dramaturgy Assistant Lukas Möller
- Team Samuel stage Pari Garvanos , Daniel Hascher
- Team Samuel Backstage Dima Wolf, Danilo Kammers, Pit Ohms, Jakob Dehlfing, Christian Karok, Felix Leger
- Stage Management Barbara Stettner, Julia Edelmann
- Prompter Daphne Chatzopoulos, Jutta Ina Masurath
- Direction Intern Josi Hacke, Nina Moorgat, Uliana Zykina
- Stage Design Intern Anne Reithofer, Lisa Wagner
- Artistic Production Management Victoria Fischer
- Artistic Production Management All Abled Arts Maja Polk
- Artistic production management hospitality Josh Menges
- Technical Production Management Jonas Pim Simon
- Stage Manager Weronika Patan
- stage manager Josef Hofmann
- Lighting Wolfgang Wiefarn, Yongwoo Kwon, Sebastien Lachenmaier, Parthasarathi Sampath Kumar, Tankred Friedrich, Tobias Fisch, John-Philipp Schoch
- signal box William Grüger
- Signal box Michi Pohorsky
- Sound Katharina Widmaier-Zorn, Jonathan Wimer, Paolo Mariangeli
- Video Julia Römpp, Maurizio Guolo, Daniel Steigthaler
- Props Dagmar Nachtmann, Heidemarie Sänger, Wolfgang Staudinger, Manuel Kößler
- Make-up Brigitte Frank, Miriam Funck, Sylvia Janka, Elvira Liesenfeld, Caroline Montfort, Thomas Opatz, Sofie Reindl-Grüger, Raimund Richar-Vetter, Nicola Richter-Okegwo, Steffen Roßmanith, Marisa Schleimer, Sylvia Wollmann
- costume Bernd Canavan, Iroha Kaneshiro, Marija Ružić, Teresa Winkelmann
- Costumes Jessica Watermann, Maria Popp, Nico Vanni, Fabiola Maria Schiavulli
- carpentry workshop Sebastian Nebe, Hannes Zippert, Josef Friesl, Franz Wallner, Clemens Künneth, Michael Buhl, Josef Piechatzek
- Schlosserei Fritz Würzhuber, Jürgen Goudenhooft, Andi Bacher
- Tapeziererei Maria Hörger, Tim Hagemeyer, Anja Gebauer, Tobias Herzog
- Scenic Painter Ingrid Weindl, Jasmin Budde, Jeanette Raue, Evi Eschenbach
Press reviews
“One of the most radical and therefore most exciting productions of Wallenstein I have ever seen. Gockel invents images… innovative, refreshing images that translate Wallenstein into our time. An ingenious, debatable interpretation.”
Dates & Tickets
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Sat 15.11. 3 – 10 pmSaturday subscription
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Sat 29.11. 3 – 10 pm
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Sat 20.12. 3 – 10 pm
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Sat 27.12. 3 – 10 pm
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Tue 6.1.26 3 – 10 pm
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Thu 14.5.26 3 – 10 pmThursday subscription
- Schauspielhaus
- Premiere: 4.10.2025
- approx. 7 hours, 2 intermissions
- With English surtitles
- 30-80€, under 30 years each seat category: 30€