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The town vowed that if God were to spare them
from the effects of the bubonic plague ravaging the region, they
would perform a play every ten years depicting the life and death of
Jesus. The death rate among adults rose from one in October 1632 to
twenty in the month of March 1633. The adult death rate slowly
subsided to one in the month of July 1633. The villagers believed
they were spared after they kept their part of the vow when the play
was first performed in 1634. The most recent performance was in 2000
and the next will be in May to September 2010.
The play, now performed repeatedly over the
course of five months, during the last year of each decade, involves
over 2,000 performers, musicians, and stage technicians, all of whom
are residents of the village. The play comprises spoken dramatic
text, musical and choral accompaniment and tableaux vivants.
The tableaux vivants are scenes from the Old Testament
depicted for the audience by motionless actors accompanied by verbal
description. These scenes are the basis for the typology, the
relationship between the Old and New Testaments, of the play. They
include a scene of King Ahasuerus rejecting Vashti in favor of
Esther, the brothers selling Joseph into slavery in Egypt, and Moses
raising up the bronze serpent in the wilderness. Each scene precedes
that section of the play that is considered to be prefigured by the
scene. The three tableaux mentioned are presented to the
audience as prefiguring Christianity superseding Judaism, Judas
selling information on the location of Jesus, and the crucifixion.
It can be said that the evolution of the
Passion Play was about the same as that of the Easter Play,
originating in the ritual of the Latin Church, which prescribes,
among other things, that the Gospel on
Good Friday should be sung in parts divided among various
persons.
The Oberammergau play has a running time of
approximately seven hours. A meal is served during the intermission
of the play. Audiences come from all over the world, often on
package tours, the first instituted in 1870. Admission fees were
first charged in 1790. Since 1930, the number of visitors has ranged
from 420,000 to 530,000. Most tickets are sold as part of a package
with one or two nights' accommodation.*
This once-a-decade Passion Play performances
in Bavaria, Germany will be the centerpiece of seven different
itineraries, ranging from 10-day trips through Switzerland, Austria,
and Bavaria (from $2,999 ppdo, land only) to 12-day routes in Italy
and Bavaria (from $3,899 ppdo, land only).
Contact us for a
price quote or to book this unique opportunity!
*information from Wikipedia |