
In a version by Anne Lenk and David Heiligers.
Major von Tellheim has retreated to an inn. Dishonourably discharged from the army, wounded and facing allegations of corruption, he sinks, penniless, into a torpor. But his young landlady is also in urgent need of money. She relocates him to an inferior room so she can offer better quarters to the wealthy Minna von Barnhelm and her trusted maid Franziska. Thus Minna unexpectedly finds her long-lost fiancé Tellheim – but a happy ending for the couple remains a distant prospect. Everything has been changed by the war. They begin to grapple with how to base their relationship on equality, which would mean Tellheim having the same financial and honorary status as Minna. She, on the other hand, only measures things in terms of love.
The assignment of gender roles was a relevant issue during Lessing’s time too: What expectations are directed at the "stronger sex" and "male providers"? How and why does a woman have to fight to be allowed to love freely and determine her life independently? Love is shown here as an anarchic and comic state that can undermine even the soberest, most rational person, and mercilessly expose self-doubt and images projected onto us by others. Minna von Barnhelm shows a war-torn world obsessed with money that questions itself and its social panorama. Who fights? Who cleans up? Who is left? Who pays? Those who love, love.
Major von Tellheim has retreated to an inn. Dishonourably discharged from the army, wounded and facing allegations of corruption, he sinks, penniless, into a torpor. But his young landlady is also in urgent need of money. She relocates him to an inferior room so she can offer better quarters to the wealthy Minna von Barnhelm and her trusted maid Franziska. Thus Minna unexpectedly finds her long-lost fiancé Tellheim – but a happy ending for the couple remains a distant prospect. Everything has been changed by the war. They begin to grapple with how to base their relationship on equality, which would mean Tellheim having the same financial and honorary status as Minna. She, on the other hand, only measures things in terms of love.
The assignment of gender roles was a relevant issue during Lessing’s time too: What expectations are directed at the "stronger sex" and "male providers"? How and why does a woman have to fight to be allowed to love freely and determine her life independently? Love is shown here as an anarchic and comic state that can undermine even the soberest, most rational person, and mercilessly expose self-doubt and images projected onto us by others. Minna von Barnhelm shows a war-torn world obsessed with money that questions itself and its social panorama. Who fights? Who cleans up? Who is left? Who pays? Those who love, love.
Director Anne Lenk
Stage Judith Oswald
Costumes Sibylle Wallum
Rap Fatoni
Music Camill Jammal
Lighting Cornelia Gloth
Dramaturgy David Heiligers
Premiere
15 October 2022
Deutsches Theater
Duration: 1 hour 55 minutes, no intermission
15 October 2022
Deutsches Theater
Duration: 1 hour 55 minutes, no intermission
Natali SeeligMinna von Barnhelm

Max SimonischekMajor von Tellheim

Seyneb SalehFranziska

Jeremy MockridgePaul Werner:

Lorena HandschinLandlady

Bernd MossJust

Maya Albrecht
Franziska Becker
Christina Eickhoff
Antonia Reichel
Anna von Seld
Romy Vandlik
Albert Walther
Minna von Barnhelm
Major von Tellheim
Franziska
Paul Werner:
Landlady
Just
Maya Albrecht, Franziska Becker, Christina Eickhoff, Antonia Reichel, Anna von Seld, Romy Vandlik, Albert Walther
With English surtitles
9. June 2023 20.00 - 21.55
Tickets
Tickets & prices
Price | Regular |
---|---|
Preisgruppe 1 | 48,00 EUR |
Preisgruppe 2 | 39,00 EUR |
Preisgruppe 3 | 30,00 EUR |
Preisgruppe 4 | 21,00 EUR |
Preisgruppe 5 | 12,00 EUR |
Preisgruppe 6 | 5,00 EUR |
Tickets for pupils and students: DT/Kammerspiele 9 €; Box/Saal 8 or 6 €