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The Rudolf Steiner Archive

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Search results 71 through 80 of 498

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274. Introductions for Traditional Christmas Plays: December 23, 1921 23 Dec 1921, Dornach

Rudolf Steiner
Schröer was able to establish that such Christmas plays were handed down from generation to generation like a sacred treasure, rehearsed each time the Christmas season approached, and then performed at Christmas time. These Christmas plays were in the possession of one particularly favored family. When the grape harvest was over in the fall and the country folk had some free time, the owner of the manuscript of such Christmas plays would gather the local boys he thought suitable and prepare them for performance at Christmas time by rehearsing them.
“Adam and Eve” is the festival that precedes December 25th in the calendar, the actual Christmas. And for the Christmas season, which was later the Christmas season, something like the Christ-Birth Play, which we will allow ourselves to do tomorrow, was usually planned for the Christmas season, followed by this Paradise Play.
274. Introductions for Traditional Christmas Plays: January 8, 1922 08 Jan 1922, Dornach

Rudolf Steiner
The oldest forms are performed in the churches, at Christmas, where the manger has been set up, and where the clergy themselves - initially in Latin - have performed this festival.
So the approach of these festivities was really looked forward to in a festive mood. And when the performances came around at Christmas and on Epiphany, the villagers would gather in the appropriate inns. The benches were placed against the wall and the play was performed in the middle of the hall.
And it was on the basis of this suggestion that we performed the Christmas Play and the Paradeis Play in the past few days, and today we would like to present the Epiphany Play or Herod Play to you, as it was performed in the 1950s by German colonists in the areas around Bratislava.
274. Introductions for Traditional Christmas Plays: December 24, 1922 24 Dec 1922, Dornach

Rudolf Steiner
These Christmas plays probably originated in the 16th century or even earlier among the people when they still lived more in western Germany, as far as the Rhine.
They regarded the performance of such plays as something quite serious. Then, when Advent and later Christmas time had arrived, these plays were performed in an inn. The people, however, actually carried their pious, truly pious minds, their holy mood, I would like to say, into this inn.
By staging these plays, we are trying to give a true picture of what has been revived in many areas as folklore in the 16th century from the 11th century and what has been most faithfully preserved by the poor people who were then in the process of losing their folklore, a folklore that Karl Julius Schröer wanted to preserve by recording it in dictionaries, books of spoken drama, and by passing it on to us in these Christmas plays. Many of these Christmas plays have also been collected by others, but it seems to me that these plays of the Haidbauern are the ones in which what once existed in the late Middle Ages has been preserved most purely.
274. Introductions for Traditional Christmas Plays: January 1, 1923 01 Jan 1923, Dornach

Rudolf Steiner
From this point of view, my dear friends, please accept the three kings play, which we are performing, in addition to the other two Christmas plays, which are drawn from real folk tradition, even though we were of course unable to hold the right rehearsals today.
274. Introductions for Traditional Christmas Plays: December 14, 1923 14 Dec 1923, Dornach

Rudolf Steiner
The most endearing of these festivals, the ones that most touch the soul, were the Christmas plays. These Christmas plays have been preserved for us particularly from the times when the Middle Ages were coming to an end.
These Germans emigrated and settled in the area around Pressburg, north of the Danube, the so-called Oberufer region, and brought these Christmas plays with them as a precious souvenir of their old home further west. Every year, when Christmas approached, the Christmas plays were rehearsed in the village.
And we do it here in such a way that you get a good idea of what it was like at Christmas in these German colonial villages. So — bringing up a piece of Christian German folklore — these Christmas plays should now appear before you in an unadulterated form.
274. Introductions for Traditional Christmas Plays: December 24, 1923 24 Dec 1923, Dornach

Rudolf Steiner
Automated Translation Show German during the Christmas Conference of the General Anthroposophical Society. We will take the liberty of presenting you with some Christmas plays from ancient folklore.
These plays were performed in market towns and villages well into the 19th century, but less so in the cities. But now one must say: the Christmas plays that we present to you here have a certain extraordinary, significant advantage over other such Christmas plays. The other Christmas plays that have been performed in Central Europe have actually been improved from decade to decade.
274. Introductions for Traditional Christmas Plays: December 25, 1923 25 Dec 1923, Dornach

Rudolf Steiner
In these greetings, as they are presented before this Christmas Play, for example, there is something that beautifully established contact between the players and the audience of that time.
These are dried pears and plums that are eaten as such, especially in these areas at Christmas time. The pears were dried, then cut into slices; the plums were dried, and that is what the Kletzen were made of.
We wanted to capture in pictures the mood of what these Christmas plays can still be in the present day. On the occasion of the Christmas Conference 1923/24, both the Paradise Play and the Christmas Play were performed on 24 and 25 December at 4:30 a.m. and 6 a.m. due to the large crowds.
274. Introductions for Traditional Christmas Plays: December 27, 1923 27 Dec 1923, Dornach

Rudolf Steiner
Automated Translation Show German during the Christmas Conference Today we will take the liberty of presenting the third of the folk plays that were performed everywhere around Christmas time in the older folk traditions in the areas of which I have already spoken.
This is the fundamental character of these plays and it is all the more interesting because there is actually a radical difference between the Christmas play, which we also presented the day before yesterday, and this Epiphany play. It has happened in some incomprehensible way that my dear old friend and teacher, Karl Julius Schröer, printed these two plays – the Christmas play and the Epiphany play – mixed up.
And so that this may happen, which must be the desire of many people, we would like to perform these Christmas plays for you.
274. Introductions for Traditional Christmas Plays: December 29, 1923 29 Dec 1923, Dornach

Rudolf Steiner
Automated Translation Show German during the Christmas Conference I have already told you something of the history of these Christmas plays on the occasion of the performance of the Paradise Play, so that today I would just like to speak about how these plays were actually performed in the German-Hungarian colonies where Karl Julius Schröer found them. So I will just briefly repeat that these Christmas plays, plays that had migrated from their Central European homeland to the east as early as the late 15th or early 16th century, were performed in the most diverse areas of Hungary well into the 19th century.
And when the Advent season approached, the Paradeis play was performed, as we did it here a few days ago, at Christmas time the Christ-Birth play and at the time of the Feast of the Epiphany the Herod or Three Kings play, which you will see or have already seen.
274. Introductions for Traditional Christmas Plays: December 31, 1923 31 Dec 1923, Dornach

Rudolf Steiner
In the Christmas play, one sees quite clearly that one is dealing with something that comes directly from the folk mind.
It was in these circles that plays such as this Christmas play, the Christ-Birth-Play, came into being. On the other hand, the play that we will see today was combined with the Christmas play only through an incomprehensible misunderstanding on the part of my old friend and teacher Karl Julius Schröer, I believe, and the two plays are not at all compatible in terms of style.
But again, when you look at the whole complex of this Christmas game, you can see the great value placed on it by the Moravian Brethren community, which had moved from what is now Czechoslovakia to the east - they were, after all, the most excellent most ardent supporters of the Christmas play.

Results 71 through 80 of 498

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