Faust I
Mo | Tu | We | Th | Fr | Sa | Su |
Faust I
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (1749 - 1832)
A tragedy
New production
‘You are aware of only one impulse; Oh, never come to know the other!‘
Since the 16th century, the story of Doctor Faust – the scholar who sells his soul to the Devil – has stood at the heart of the European literary tradition. In early modern interpretations, it served as a theological and moral warning: a cautionary tale of human overreach. Faust’s pact with the Devil marks a deliberate rejection of God and the heavenly order, which ‘had turned away from him’, as the earliest chapbook puts it. From that moment, his path leads inexorably to hell and damnation.
At the close of the 18th century, Johann Wolfgang von Goethe transformed the story of Faust beyond recognition. His project spanned some sixty years, beginning around 1772 and continuing intermittently until 1831. The complete text was published just months after his death in 1832.
With his two plays, Goethe elevated the Faust legend to the heights of world literature, placing it alongside Homer, Shakespeare and Dante – as a vast work of extraordinary scope and semantic richness, ultimately resisting any single interpretation. He opened a space for reflection that extends deep into the 19th century and even resonates in the modern era. Faust, once the damned heretic of the early modern period, becomes in Goethe’s hands a desperate seeker whose rallying cry is ‘Ah, but I will!’ Driven by restless impulses that know no bounds, Faust emerges as the prototype of a modern human being.
From this starting point unfolds a vast European vision, ever ready to be refigured and reimagined for the present. Goethe’s Faust is like an open city, with many paths leading into it. On one level, the play tells the outward story of a single man – the scholar Faust – who, overcome by revulsion and emptiness, rejects his former life and strives for a fresh start. The famous ‘Zueignung’ (Dedication) captures precisely this moment: a man looks back and rekindles an inner stirring – ‘Again you show yourselves, you wavering forms, / Revealed, as you once were, to clouded vision. / Shall I attempt to hold you fast once more?’
Faust’s famous declaration – ‘two souls, alas, are housed within my breast’ – turns the spotlight inward. The drama shifts from the external to the internal, unfolding as a sweeping panorama of the soul. No longer mere figures on a stage, the characters embody the warring factions within a divided consciousness – personifications of inner drives moving through the landscape of the psyche. Here, the theatre depicts a state of mind rather than a physical place. The characters stand as expressions of the self’s constituent parts, in constant tension with one another. Mephistopheles is no external presence, but a shadow of Faust’s own darker, repressed side – the destructive force that tempts and drives him. With him, Faust sets out on a transformative journey through the world, one that leads him into the depths of his own consciousness – through pleasure and responsibility, creation and destruction. The young Faust is the part of him where life still throbs – restless for experience, for touch, for the immediacy of being – something the older Faust has lost in his monstrous thirst for knowledge. Gretchen is his feminine counterpart, the part of him that embodies morality, vulnerability, innocence and love. She holds up a mirror to his own emptiness and inadequacy, his lack of empathy and devotion. In her gaze he sees what he has cast out of himself – and which now confronts him, unbearably close. And so, he destroys her.
Goethe himself admitted to a ‘Nordic barbarity’ that lies beyond classical notions of humanism. The forces at play in Faust are knotted together in ways that can never be undone, dragging themselves through the barren landscape of modernity – while ‘burning with desire and hunger for the unattainable’, to borrow Goethe’s own phrase from Faust II.
Program and cast
Cast
Steven Scharf: Faust
Valery Tscheplanowa: Mephistopheles
Anna Drexler: Margarete
Johannes Nussbaum: Young Faust
and other actresses and actors of the Residenztheater
Creative Team
Ulrich Rasche: Director / Sets
Annika Lu: Costumes
Alfred Brooks: Composer / Conductor
Yvonne Gebauer, Constanze Kargl: Dramaturgy
Perner-Insel, Hallein
Perner-Insel, Hallein
“White Gold” (salt) was extracted for four thousand years near Hallein and this is what gave the region and the capital of the province its name. In 1989 the salt works were closed down. Various influential people involved in cultural life took the initiative to have the brine hall on the island in the middle of the River Salzach transformed into a theatre which is now used regularly by the Salzburg Festival. The conversion work in 1992 needed only an 80-day building period; six years later, new, more elaborate seating arrangements were installed as well as an interval area.
The hall is especially suitable for experimental theatre and concerts of contemporary music whereby the performance and audience areas can be adapted to the scenic concept of the production in question. In 1999 the marathon performances entitled Schlachten!, Luc Perceval’s interpretation of Shakespeare’s history plays, on the Perner Island achieved cult status.
How to get there
Adress & contact
Perner-Insel, Hallein
Pernerinsel, 5400 Hallein
The foyers are opened to Festival visitors one hour before the beginning of each performance.
Tel.: +43 662 8045 0
info@salzburgerfestspiele.at
Public transport
Bus stop Heidebrücke
Lines 41, 160, 170
FREE BUS SHUTTLE SERVICE
Departure in front of Reichenhaller Strasse 4
(Buses depart to Perner-Insel, Hallein, 1h before the performance begins and return directly after the performance.)
Parking
Parking place Perner-Insel
Perner-Insel, 5400 Hallein
Opening hours: daily 0-24 h
You can purchase a parking ticket for 2€ in the courtyard. By purchasing your parking ticket there, you save yourself the way to the ticket machine and can immediately drive out the parking lot following the end of the performance.

EN
DE
IT
FR
ES
RU
JP
RO
Seating plan