Wolfgang Wagner has died
MELISSA EDDY | March 22, 2010 03:41 AM EST | AP
BERLIN was best known as the director (Festspielleiter) of the Bayreuth Festival, a position he initially assumed alongside his brother Wieland in 1951 until the latter’s death in 1966. From then on, he assumed total control until he retired in 2008, although many of the productions which he commissioned were severely criticized in their day. He had been plagued by family conflicts and criticism for many years. He was the son of Siegfried Wagner, the grandson of Richard Wagner, and the great-grandson of Franz Liszt. He was 90.
Wagner died on Sunday, the festival said in a brief statement on its Web site. It did not give further details.
“Wolfgang Wagner dedicated his whole life to the legacy of his grandfather,” the festival said adding that his long service as the event’s leader means that he “goes into history as the longest-serving director in the world.
Wagner stepped down after the 2008 festival following a lengthy power struggle in which the patriarch long resisted efforts to dislodge him.
He had led the festival dedicated to his grandfather’s works since 1951, first with his brother, Wieland, and then as the sole director with a lifetime contract.
His insistence on serving out that contract led in his later years to clashes with officials who oversee the event held every summer in the Bavarian town of Bayreuth in the small brick theater built by Richard Wagner in the 1870s.
It also triggered a spat within the Wagner family that itself was worthy of opera.
For years, Wolfgang Wagner insisted that only his second wife, Gudrun, could replace him, although German government officials and others overseeing the festival refused to accept her.
By the time Gudrun died in November 2007, Wagner was insisting that only the couple’s daughter, Katharina, could fill his shoes putting him at odds with two other Wagners who also sought the job.
Wolfgang finally agreed to step aside in 2008; Katharina and Wolfgang’s long-estranged daughter from his first marriage, Eva Wagner-Pasquier, teamed up to beat out a rival bid from their cousin. They took charge last year.
Wagner is survived by his three children. There was no immediate word on funeral arrangements.





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