Shows with English Surtitles
Please indicate at the box office whether you would like a seat with surtitles when purchasing a ticket. You can also buy your ticket online. For the best view, we recommend the seats in the stalls from row 10 to row 16, especially in the middle. The seats in the middle section of the balcony and all rows in the tier are also recommended.
04 May
Sun 04 May
Agamemnon - 04 May
Ulrich Rasche stages «Agamemnon» - the first part of Aeschylus' famous «Oresteia» - as a visually stunning cycle of revenge. With Rasche, language, music and acting become an overall experience, making the power and topicality of the ancient material all the more vivid.
06 May
Tue 06 May
Blind - 06 May
Successful playwright Lot Vekemans hits the nerve of the times with her new play. With great sensitivity, she tells the story of a father and daughter, played by Manfred Zapatka and Juliane Köhler, who have seemingly irreconcilable attitudes to social and political issues, and asks how these conflicts can be overcome.
09 May
Fri 09 May
Blind - 09 May
Successful playwright Lot Vekemans hits the nerve of the times with her new play. With great sensitivity, she tells the story of a father and daughter, played by Manfred Zapatka and Juliane Köhler, who have seemingly irreconcilable attitudes to social and political issues, and asks how these conflicts can be overcome.
10 May
Sat 10 May
Anne-Marie die Schönheit (Anne-Marie the beauty) - 10 May
With her great monologue «Anne-Marie the Beauty», the internationally most-performed contemporary playwright Yasmina Reza has written an eulogy to the art of acting, at the centre of which an almost-diva speaks out against her insignificance without dot or comma: Robert Dölle in a humorous and touching play-within-a-play.
11 May
Sun 11 May
Die Ärztin (The Doctor) - 11 May
Robert Icke has congenially translated Arthur Schnitzler's play «Professor Bernhardi» into the present day. The doctor Ruth Wolff not only comes into conflict with her colleagues and the maxims of the Catholic Church, but also into a media shitstorm. The «Times» of London celebrated «The Doctor» as an «open-heart operation on our present day, which gets more complicated the deeper you cut».
14 May
Wed 14 May
Die Ärztin (The Doctor) - 14 May
Robert Icke has congenially translated Arthur Schnitzler's play «Professor Bernhardi» into the present day. The doctor Ruth Wolff not only comes into conflict with her colleagues and the maxims of the Catholic Church, but also into a media shitstorm. The «Times» of London celebrated «The Doctor» as an «open-heart operation on our present day, which gets more complicated the deeper you cut».
19 May
Mon 19 May
Ein Sommernachtstraum (A Midsummer Night's Dream) - 19 May
In Stephan Kimmig's production, the boundaries between Shakespeare's fairy world and the harsh reality of the big city become blurred. Fuelled by Puck's magic, a summer night unfolds in which soon no one knows where love ends and obsession begins.
24 May
Sat 24 May
Blind - 24 May
Successful playwright Lot Vekemans hits the nerve of the times with her new play. With great sensitivity, she tells the story of a father and daughter, played by Manfred Zapatka and Juliane Köhler, who have seemingly irreconcilable attitudes to social and political issues, and asks how these conflicts can be overcome.
25 May
Sun 25 May
Moby Dick - 25 May
Ishmael signs on to the «Pequod», an old whaler. However, it soon becomes clear that the aim of the voyage is not just to exploit the world's oceans and their giant marine mammals, but Captain Ahab's personal vendetta. Melville's «Moby Dick» - brought to the stage by Stefan Pucher - is both an adventurous sailor's yarn and a reflection on the fatal art of seduction of a demagogue.
30 May
Fri 30 May
Sternstunden der Menschheit (Highlights of Humankind) - 30 May
In his historical miniatures, Stefan Zweig brings together brilliant achievements in European history that tell of unbreakable vitality as well as human weaknesses. In Thom Luz' poetic and musical production, they become archive material that is explored, sung about, brought to life in brief moments and also set in relation to Stefan Zweig's own biography and his journey into exile in Brazil.