Nikolaus lehnhoff biography for kids

          Lehnhoff began his career working as a stage director at the Deutsche Oper Berlin and as an assistant to Wieland Wagner at the Bayreuth Festival in the s....

          Nikolaus Lehnhoff

          Nikolaus Lehnhoff (20 May 1939 in Hanover – 29 August 2015 in Berlin) was a German opera director.

          Born in Hannover, Germany, Nikolaus worked as an assistant for Deutsche Oper Berlin, at Bayreuth with Wieland Wagner, and for the Met. He made his directing.

        1. Born in Hannover, Germany, Nikolaus worked as an assistant for Deutsche Oper Berlin, at Bayreuth with Wieland Wagner, and for the Met. He made his directing.
        2. The German opera director Nikolaus Lehnhoff, who has died aged 76, worked as an assistant to Wagner's grandson, Wieland, in Bayreuth in the mids.
        3. Lehnhoff began his career working as a stage director at the Deutsche Oper Berlin and as an assistant to Wieland Wagner at the Bayreuth Festival in the s.
        4. Lavishly cultured and innately musical, Lehnhoff occupied a middle ground between traditional and radical approaches to directing opera.
        5. Young Nikolaus studied music in Vienna and Munich.
        6. Life and career

          Born in Hanover to Erika (née Fiediger) and Friedrich Lehnhoff, Lehnhoff studied at the University of Munich and the University of Vienna.[1] Lehnhoff began his career working as a stage director at the Deutsche Oper Berlin and as an assistant to Wieland Wagner at the Bayreuth Festival in the 1960s.

          He then became a stage director for the Metropolitan Opera, beginning with the 1967 revival of Mozart's The Marriage of Figaro. He served as stage director for several more Met productions through 1970, including Ariadne auf Naxos, La bohème, The Flying Dutchman, and Simon Boccanegra.[2]

          In 1972 Lehnhoff directed his first opera; a production of Strauss' Die Frau ohne Schatten at the Paris Opera with Christa Ludwig and Walter Berry.

          He directed that same work for his directorial debut at the San Francisco Opera (SF