US TARIFFS UPDATE | August 2025 | No impact expected on your Presto orders | Read full details
Minna Wagner: A Life, with Richard Wagner
- Author: Rieger, Eva
Fascinating, detailed, and absorbing. Chris Walton has done a superb job in creating the illusion that this volume was written in English. Detailed footnotes are included as well as a number...
Minna Wagner: A Life, with Richard Wagner
- Author: Rieger, Eva
Purchase product
Fascinating, detailed, and absorbing. Chris Walton has done a superb job in creating the illusion that this volume was written in English. Detailed footnotes are included as well as a number...
About
This biography of Minna Planer, Richard Wagner's wife of 30 years, reveals her as a self-assured woman and artist who was vital to her husband's creative life. When Richard Wagner first met Minna Planer in 1834, he was an unknown conductor, she a popular actress. His hectic pursuit of her affections culminated in marriage in 1836. Minna endured poverty with him, nursed him through chronic illness, followed him across Europe as he fled from creditors and pursued his artistic goals, and sought to provide him with the stable domestic and erotic life that he craved. He played his works to her as he wrote them, up to Tannhäuser and Lohengrin, and set store by her opinions. But when he went on the run as a wanted revolutionary, Minna only reluctantly followed him into Swiss exile. Domestic peace tentatively prevailed, but was ultimately destroyed by Wagner's passion for Mathilde Wesendonck. In 1858, he and Minna separated, she returned home to Germany, and subsequent efforts at reconciliation proved ultimately impossible. They remained married, however, until Minna's death in 1866. Despite having been at Richard's side as he matured into the composer of the Ring and Tristan, Minna has been given short shrift by most Wagner commentators. In Eva Rieger's acclaimed biography, translated into English by Chris Walton, the author reveals Minna as a self-assured woman and artist who played a crucial role in the creative life of her husband.
Contents
- Illustrations Abbreviations Notes on this translation
- Introduction "He could not breathe without her"
- Chapter 1 . "I have become her despot": From Love to Marriage
- Chapter 2 . "Deprived of incipient motherhood": Riga, London, Paris, 1836-1842
- Chapter 3 . "Home for me is you alone": Dresden 1842-1847
- Chapter 4 . "My knucklehead of a husband": Revolution and Its Aftermath, 1848-1850
- Chapter 5 . "This ridiculous, amorous intrigue": The Jessie Laussot Affair, 1850-1851
- Chapter 6 . "That good, foolish man...": Exile in Zurich, 1852-1854
- Chapter 7 . "I'm a poor, stupid woman to have let you go...": Zurich and London, 1854-1856
- Chapter 8 . "Alas, now all our happiness is gone...": The Wesendonck Scandal, 1857-1858
- Chapter 9 . The Bitter End: 1858-1859
- Chapter 10 . "In love and fidelity, your Emma": Emma Herwegh
- Chapter 11 . "...neither wife, housekeeper, nor friend": Dresden, Paris, Biebrich, 1860-1862
- Chapter 12 . "That weak, blind man...": The end of a marriage, 1863-1866
- References
- Index
Awards and reviews
Fascinating, detailed, and absorbing. Chris Walton has done a superb job in creating the illusion that this volume was written in English. Detailed footnotes are included as well as a number of germane photographs. Marvelous to read and completely engrossing
