Austria Vienna Opera House. Vienna Opera (Staatsoper)

Updated 01/07/2019

The Vienna State Opera is the largest opera house in Austria, famous far beyond its borders. The opera season lasts 285 days, during which time 60 operas and ballets are shown. Every year the repertoire is supplemented by 4-5 premieres, and opera evenings for children are regularly held.

Do you like opera? You are here for the production. If you love interiors, this is the place for you to take a tour. If you love architecture, this is the place for you, just take a walk around. The opera is located in the center of the Inner City, close to the metro and bus stops. I advise you to at least take a look at the building if you are nearby.


For history buffs, I’ll tell you about the development of opera, and for pragmatic tourists, I’ll help them sort out booking tickets and current state complex.

History of the Vienna State Opera

As a phenomenon, opera appeared in Vienna back in the 17th century, when performances began throughout the city. famous works. At that time, the performers did not have their own building, and they used the services of other theaters in Vienna. In 1861, local architects August Zickard von Zickardsburg and Eduard van der Nulle began building a separate building for the opera. It was finished by 1869, and Mozart’s “Don Giovanni” was staged at the premiere.


The Vienna State Opera operated under the name “Court Opera House” for almost fifty years, until 1918. This meant that the complex officially belonged to the ruling Habsburg dynasty and was located at their court. Modern name The theater received only after the Anschluss in 1938, but people began to call the state opera back in the 1920s.


In 1945, during the bombing of Vienna by US troops, the building was damaged and partially destroyed. The complex was completely restored by 1955, and began on November 5 new season from a production of Beethoven's Fidelio. In the same year, the management of the theater and the authorities of Vienna returned the tradition of annual balls at the opera. IN different years The directors of the theater were the famous Gustav Mahler, Richard Strauss, Karl Boehm.

Vienna Opera today

Since 2010, the opera has been directed by Dominik Meyer. ballet group Manuel Legri is in charge. The season lasts from September to June, during which time there are at least 60 productions. Classic program make up famous operas and ballets by European and Russian authors, there are also productions especially for children.


The productions involve at least famous artists The Vienna State Opera collaborates with Roberto Alagna, Gerald Finley, Simon Keenleyside, Erwin Schrott, Placido Domingo, Ramon Vargas, Valentina Nafornita, Nina Stemme, Anna Netrebko.

How to buy tickets to the Vienna Opera?

Opera tickets can be purchased 2 months before the performance. Moreover, every season, with the appearance of the schedule, you can book tickets without buying them. You will be put on a waiting list and given priority to purchase tickets. The cheapest ticket for the ballet will cost 11 euros, for the opera - 13 euros, the most expensive - 144 and 205 euros, respectively. Tickets will be cheaper for children.

The Vienna Opera offers an unusual option - standing room. These tickets go on sale 80 minutes before the start of the performance. Standing places cost 2-4 euros, this great way get in at a very low price. But there are few such tickets, so I advise you to arrive at least 5-6 hours before the start of the performance. You will have time to get in line and buy a cheap ticket.


If you buy a ticket on the website, here are simple instructions:

  1. Go to the booking page, it is in Russian.
  2. Use the catalog to find the show you need, they are divided by year and month.
  3. Choose a place on the general layout of the hall. The stalls are classically comfortable; in the outermost side boxes and on the far balcony you will not see very well.
  4. Select an adult or child ticket, click “Add to cart”, “Next” and “Next” again.
  5. Enter your username and password if you are already registered. If not, then register and enter all the information, including payment information.
  6. Once payment has been confirmed, you will receive an email with your ticket, which you need to print and take with you to the show.

Check your tickets on the day of the event. If they have a barcode, then feel free to go inside the theater; you don’t need to exchange anything. If there is no barcode, then the printed ticket must be exchanged for a regular one. This can be done at the evening ticket office next to the regular ticket office on Operngasse near the front. You don’t even have to print a ticket, but show the cashier proof of payment.

And even if you forgot your tickets to the Vienna Opera, it’s okay. Give your name to the box office before the performance, they will check your identity and issue a ticket. If you want to pick up earlier, then there is no problem either. Just go not to the box office on the street, but inside the theater, in the foyer. A ticket for a child will also need to be exchanged in the foyer, but on the day of the performance itself.

Tours of the Vienna Opera

If tickets to the Vienna Opera seem too expensive to you, you can simply go inside on a guided tour. A walk around the theater takes 40 minutes, during which time you will see several halls, a tea room, a stage from the backstage side, the main box, and an orchestra pit. Tours are conducted in German, English and Spanish, to order in another language you can write to [email protected].

Would you like to receive a discount on a tour of Vienna and beyond? Read.


The tour starts no earlier than 13:00, standard starting hours are 13:00, 14:00 and 15:00. But not every day there are three tours, so check this page before visiting. The guides gather those who wish to attend at the corner of Opernring and Operngasse streets - this is the southwestern corner of the theater building.


Ticket price to the Vienna State Opera for excursion (prices are subject to change):

  • 7.5 euros for adults.
  • 6 euros for pensioners over 65 years old.
  • 3.5 euros for children, schoolchildren and students under 27 years old.

Information useful for visiting the Vienna Opera

The Vienna State Opera is a fairly large complex with several ticket offices. Let me remind you once again where and what to buy, and when the cash registers are open.

  1. Main ticket offices – ordering and purchasing tickets. Located in three locations in Vienna: Operngasse 2, WähringerStrasse 78, Universitätsring 2. Open Monday to Friday from 8:00 to 18:00, Saturday and Sunday from 9:00 to 12:00.
  2. Ticket kiosk – purchasing tickets. Located on HerbertvonKarajan-Platz street at the northeast corner of the theater. Open from Monday to Friday from 9:00 to one hour before the start of the performance, on Saturday from 9:00 to 17:00, on Sunday - a day off.
  3. Evening ticket offices in the foyer – issuing tickets. Located on the corner of HerbertvonKarajan-Platz and Opernring. Open from Monday to Friday from 9:00 to two hours before the start of the performance, on Saturday from 9:00 to 12:00, on Sunday - a day off. In the evening, the ticket office opens an hour before the bell rings.


The Vienna State Opera is located in the city center, nearby is the Karlsplatz metro station (on the square of the same name there is a famous church), where lines U1, U2 and U4 converge. From the station, just walk along KärntnerStraße to the north one block and you will immediately see the theater building. Right next to the opera there is the Opernring stop for trams 1, 2, 62, 71 and D and bus 59A.

Vienna Opera on the map

Excursion with visit to the Vienna Opera

Do you want to get behind the scenes of the main concert venue Europe and get to know opera cuisine from the inside? Then sign up for the excursion "". You will see the Vienna Opera as it prepares for the evening performance. All details and cost of the excursion are at the link above.

Always yours, Daniil Privonov.

Apply for a Tinkoff ALL Airlines card and take part in the drawing trip around the world. 3000 rubles in miles as a gift to everyone! .

Looking for a hotel or apartment? Thousands of options at RoomGuru. Many hotels are cheaper than on Booking

In a world whose history begins in the mid-nineteenth century. Located in the center of Vienna, it was originally called the Vienna Court Opera and was renamed in 1920 with the emergence of the First Austrian Republic.

The building, built in the neoclassical style between 1861 and 1869 and designed by the architects Eduard Nüll and August Sicard von Sicardsburg, was the first large building on Riegenstrasse. Famous artists worked on interior decoration, among them Moritz von Schwind, who painted frescoes in the box based on the opera “The Magic Flute” by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, and in the foyer based on the works of other composers. The Vienna Opera opened on May 25, 1869 with Mozart's Don Giovanni. The performance was attended by Emperor I and Empress Amalia Eugenia Elizabeth.

The opera building was not initially highly regarded by the public. Firstly, it was located opposite the magnificent Heinrichshof mansion (destroyed during the Second World War) and did not produce the desired monumental effect. Secondly, the level ring road the front of the building was raised by one meter after its construction began, and it looked like a “settled box.”

The Vienna Opera achieved special prosperity under the leadership outstanding composer and conductor Gustav Mahler. Under him, a new generation of world-famous vocalists grew up, such as Anna von Mildenburg and Selma Curze. Having become director of the theater in 1897, he changed the outdated scenery and attracted talent and experience wonderful artists(among them Alfred Roller) to form a new aesthetics of the stage, corresponding to modernist taste. Mahler introduced the practice of dimming stage lighting during performers' performances. All his reforms were preserved by his successors.

During American bombing at the end of World War II, the building was heavily damaged. After much discussion, it was decided to restore it in the original style, and the renovated Vienna Opera was reopened in 1955 with Ludwig van Beethoven's Fidelio.

Today, modern productions are carried out in the theater, but they are never experimental. He is closely associated with the officially listed Philharmonic Orchestra of the Vienna Opera. It is one of the busiest opera houses in the world. Every year 50-60 operas are staged and at least 200 performances are shown. The core repertoire of the Vienna Opera includes some works that are little known to the general public, such as Der Rosenkavalier and Salome by Richard Strauss.

Tickets for performances are expensive. This is due to the large number of lodges. It should be taken into account that there is practically no tilt in the stalls, so you can pay from 160 euros for a seat somewhere in the eighth row, but you will not see much of what is happening on stage. The acoustics are excellent, especially on the upper levels of the building. There are also standing seats (more than 500) located directly behind the stalls, but they are only available on the day of the performance, while tickets for boxes and stalls go on sale thirty days before each performance, and the easiest way to order them is through the website, which owned by the Vienna Opera.

There is no dress code as such, since more than half of the seats are occupied by tourists, a diverse crowd, although you can see that in the boxes people are dressed more elegantly.

It must be said that the air of Vienna is saturated with music famous composers who lived and worked in this city. Mozart and Beethoven, Schubert and Haydn, Brahms and Gluck, as well as the magnificent Johann Strauss and his three sons Johann, Joseph and Eduard wrote their music here. Of course, such a city could not do without its Opera. And the opera house was built in 1869 according to the design of the architect August Siccard von Siccardsburg. Interior decoration and the interiors were designed by Eduard van der Nyll. The opening of the Vienna State Opera (Wiener Staatsoper) took place on May 25 with a production of Mozart's Don Giovanni. And although the theater building was recognized as one of the best in the world in terms of acoustics and decoration, Emperor Franz Joseph did not like it very much. His unflattering review drove Eduard van der Null to suicide and the architect August Siccard von Siccardsburg to a heart attack.



But the building of the Vienna Opera is truly beautiful. Its façade was decorated with sculptures by the amazingly talented Ernst Höhnel. These are pictures from Mozart’s “The Magic Flute”, and the five muses: Grace, Love, Heroics, Comedy and Fantasy, which have been around since ancient Greece represent five directions in art. Unfortunately, the Wiener Staatsoper building was completely destroyed by bombing during World War II. But the residents of Vienna restored their Opera according to the surviving drawings.

Already in May 1955, the Staatsoper opened the new season with Beethoven's magnificent opera Fidelio.

An innumerable number of works by various composers have been staged at the Vienna Opera over the decades of its existence. Many premieres of new operas, which became masterpieces, were presented to the public in this building. The modern Wiener Staatsoper performs most of its repertoire with a full-time orchestra and singers. But opera stars of the first magnitude also tour here often.

Herbert von Karajan, as director of the Vienna Opera, embodied the idea of ​​holding outdoor concerts from May to October. Since then, about 120 performances a year have been staged on the square in front of the Opera, completely free of charge.

How to get to the Vienna Opera

Trams D No. 1 and 2 go to the Vienna Opera

The Vienna Opera is located at Opernring 2.
Trams routes D, No. 1 and No. 2 go to the Vienna Opera. Buses 25, 26, 36, 38 routes, as well as L, 59A and 360.
The nearest metro station is Opernring.

Tickets to the Vienna Opera

If you decide to visit the Vienna Opera, then pay attention to the category of the performance. There are three of them.

Auditorium
  • Category C is an easy show for an inexperienced audience with the cheapest tickets.
  • Category B consists of works from the main repertoire performed by a full-time orchestra.
  • Category A - these are performances with stars of the opera stage.
Ticket price depends on the category of the performance

The cost of tickets increases by an order of magnitude. But if you decide to go to a premiere or special events, then the prices will be absolutely exorbitant.

There are only 1,313 seats in the auditorium of the Vienna Opera. All of them are equipped with small screens on the back of the seat in front, broadcasting the libretto in three languages ​​(German, English and French).

The Opera administration promises to add the Russian language in the 2014-2015 season. Ticket prices for full-time troupes range from 11 € to 192 €.

Seats in boxes can cost from 1,500 to several thousand euros. They start selling them 30 days before the performance.

Visit to the Vienna Opera

Vienna Opera Box Office

On the street Kärntnerstrasse 40 is where the ticket office sells tickets to the Vienna Opera in advance.

On weekdays it starts working at 10.00 am and closes an hour before the start of the performance.

On the 1st Saturday of every month, the ticket office is open all day from 10:00 to 17:00, and on other Saturdays - only 2 hours, from 10:00 to 12:00 am. Please note that on Sundays and holidays advance checkout does not work.

From May to October, concerts are also held outdoors.

Modern technologies allow you to buy tickets via the Internet. This is very convenient for tourists planning to visit Vienna during a certain period.

The Vienna Opera offers guided tours in different languages

But the Staatsoper auditorium also has 102 standing places. Tickets are sold at the Vienna Opera box office one hour before the start of the performance. The average cost of a standing place will be 3−6 €.

But if the program includes a performance by a visiting opera diva or the most famous tenor in the world, then you will have to line up at the box office at 5 o’clock in the morning. Most performances begin at 15:00 in the afternoon, but there are performances at 10:30 in the morning and at 19:00 in the evening.

For tourists, absolutely not opera lovers or those who do not have time to visit it, but want to explore the amazing interiors of the Wiener Staatsoper building, guided tours are offered in English and German.

If you want to go on a Russian-language excursion, check the time in advance. The cost of such a visit to the Opera will be from 2 euros for a child to 5 euros for an adult. The birthplace of waltzes and operettas is famous for its balls. They begin on November 11 and last until the “Fashing” holidays, which coincide in time with Orthodox Maslenitsa.

Vienna Opera Ball

But the main event is the Vienna Opera Ball. This is the most prestigious ball, which is always attended by world celebrities and the President of Austria.

Viennese Ball

Most often, the Vienna Opera Ball takes place at the end of February. A ticket to such a ball can be purchased in advance, and it costs from 210 euros (if you just want to dance) to 15 thousand euros (with box seats). The ball is opened by 180 pairs of debutants. Their first dance is a polonaise.

Getting into the number of debutants is not so difficult. You must submit your application in advance. In this case, you must be from 16 to 23 years old if you are a girl and from 18 to 26 years old if you are a guy, and you must not be married. Then participation in the ball will be free for you, but you will have to pay for dance training.

Dress code at the Vienna Opera

Separately, it is necessary to say about the dress code of this ball. For men, a tailcoat is required (a tuxedo is not allowed) and a white bow tie (black for waiters and service personnel). Women are required to wear full-length evening gowns. For debutantes, only white evening dresses are acceptable.

For tourists

For those tourists who are not big fans of opera and ballet, but would like to explore the Staatsoper building from the inside, excursions are held daily at 14:00. The cost of such an excursion for adults is 4 euros, for students - 2.5 euros, for children - 1.5 euros. Tickets can be purchased 15 minutes before the start.

The Vienna State Opera, along with La Scala in Milan, the Bolshoi Theater in Moscow and the Grand Opera in Paris, is among the most famous, to some extent even legendary, opera houses in the world. Opened initially as a court opera, the theater adhered to strict canons classical Viennese art. He still observes them today, but we would like to tell you not so much about the wonderful repertoire of this institution, but about the interesting facts associated with it.

  1. The longest applause at the Vienna State Opera lasted more than 70 minutes. In 1991, after the end of Othello, the audience gave Placido Domingo such a long round of applause. In gratitude for the thunderous ovation, he bowed to the audience more than a hundred times.
  2. The Vienna State Opera and the Hungarian State Opera House in Budapest are similar, if not like two peas in a pod, then still very noticeably. They were opened 15 years apart and built by different architects, but apparently, the Hungarian architect with the funny surname Ibl imitated his Viennese colleagues.
  3. The Vienna Opera did not avoid embarrassments and oddities. So, one very famous opera diva During the performance, a wig caught fire from behind the spotlight. Her partner, who according to the script was already lying “dead,” jumped up and began to help extinguish the flaming curls. Opera singer, apparently suspecting that her partner had forgotten his role, rushed around the stage, trying to escape from him. In the end, already backstage the flame on the wig was extinguished. But the audience managed to have a lot of fun.
  4. The opera building, which is admired today, became the subject of bitter attacks and caustic ridicule after its opening in 1869. This was largely due to the reduced space for displaying toilets: only three steps separate the entrance to the opera from the busy street along which people pass. tram rails, and the main staircase is only inside the building. The architects August Sicard von Sicardsburg and Eduard van der Null were accused of bad taste. The Kaiser also spoke unflatteringly. Unable to bear such dishonor, Van der Nul hanged himself. Two months later, his colleague died of a heart attack. According to legend, after this Emperor Franz Joseph expressed his opinion on art issues more positively, using the same catchphrase: “It was wonderful and made me very happy...”
  5. During the bombing of Vienna in 1945, the opera house building was completely destroyed, and after the war it was actually rebuilt. In 1955, after a lengthy restoration, the Vienna Opera opened with a performance of Beethoven's opera Fidelio. On the site of the war-damaged Imperial Hall and the Smoking Room, the Marble Hall was created - a buffet, a room for relaxation during intermission, a place where everyone is equal - both holders of tickets for standing places and the lucky ones who booked boxes.
  6. Ballet performances are not particularly valued within the walls of the Vienna Opera. Perhaps the only exception in the repertoire is the popular ballet Swan Lake. Just think, it has been staged at the Vienna Opera since 1964! During the premiere, the audience tirelessly applauded Rudolf Nureyev and Margot Fonteyn. Residents and guests of the Austrian capital were captivated by the talent of two brightest stars ballet art.
  7. By tradition, all parts are performed by soloists without microphones and only in the original language. But on special screens built into the backs of chairs and handrails of standing places, simultaneous translation texts are displayed during the performance.
  8. The Vienna Opera Ball, status and grandiose, traditionally takes place at the Vienna Opera in February. It is considered the apotheosis of the ballroom season and attracts celebrities from all over the world. During the ball, for one night only, the interior of the theater is transformed. From auditorium All chairs are removed, the floor is raised to the level of the stage and covered with special parquet. The huge hall is decorated with compositions of thousands of fresh flowers. According to tradition, the ball is opened by the President of Austria, after which the young debutants dance the polonaise. Ticket price starts from 250 euros, box rental - more than 10 thousand euros. Guests are served not only by waiters, there is even a shoemaker and a tailor. They are called upon to take care (if God forbid this happens) about lost heels, broken ladies' stilettos, torn tailcoats and dresses. The Opera Ball is an event so important that it is broadcast in Austria on live, and in more than 50 countries around the world - on record.
  9. If you pass by the Vienna Opera at least once, you will certainly see, and maybe even enter into conversation with people in red camisoles and white wigs a la Mozart. Mummers "Mozarts" are legal ticket sellers, but what don’t they offer tourists! Be careful: instead of tickets to the Vienna Opera, they can easily sell anything, even tickets to an amateur concert! To be fair, it is worth noting that the probability of buying the “right” ticket from them still exists. You can order tickets to the Vienna Opera without fear for their authenticity and reliability on the website

Vienna State Opera – guardian of traditions classical art, symbol of musical Vienna, the largest opera house in Austria. Court opera performances have been staged in Vienna since the 17th century.

The Vienna State Opera (Wiener Staatsoper) is the keeper of the traditions of classical art, the symbol of musical Vienna, the largest opera house in Austria.

How the Vienna Opera came to be

Performances of the court opera have been staged in Vienna since the 17th century, they were performed on various stages. Construction of a separate building for the opera house began in 1861. August Sickard von Sickardsburg and Edward van der Null worked on the project. The opening took place on May 25, 1869. On that day, the Wiener Staatsoper troupe presented the performance “Don Giovanni” to the public. Since 1897, the director of the theater was famous conductor, composer.

The theater began to be called the Vienna State Opera in 1918. Before the outbreak of World War II, the theater operated successfully; its posters included great names: Mozart, Verdi, Ravel, Richard Strauss, Stravinsky. During the war, the troupe had to change the stage - the building was destroyed. After restoration (1955), the season reopened on the stage of the Staatsoper.

From this stage the voices of world celebrities sounded: Maria Callas, Domingo, Pavarotti, Konecny, Chebotari and Schwarzkopf, Lisa Della Cassa and other singers. The Vienna Opera saw famous conductors: Richard Strauss, Klemperer, Furtwängler, Krieps, De Sabata, von Karajan, Mitropoulos.

Poster

Today the tradition of holding Viennese balls on stage and in the Opera hall has been renewed.

At least 60 productions of opera and ballet are staged per year according to the repertoire plan; concerts take place solo performances. The Vienna Opera has its own orchestra, its own ballet troupe. Dominik Meyer has been appointed director of the theater since 2010. The plans of the new management include the return to the stage of the Wiener Staatsoper of baroque opera and works by Mozart.

In the 2017/18 season, there will be 6 opera premieres: “The Gambler” by Sergei Prokofiev, “Lulu” by Alban Berg, “Ariodante” by George Frideric Handel, “The Death of Danton” by Gottfried von Einem, “Samson and Delilah” by Camille Saint-Saëns Samson and Delilah ( the main roles will be performed by Elina Garanca and Roberto Alagna), “Free Shooter” by Carl Maria von Weber with Adrian Erod and Camilla Nylund.

You will find the repertoire for 2017/2018.

How much does a ticket to the Vienna Opera cost and which seats to choose?

Seated tickets cost €10–€240. Inexpensive seats are located in the upper galleries or in the third row boxes. Future viewers should know that the cheapest "seated" seats will give you the opportunity to listen to the singers, but the view there is so limited that you will see practically nothing.

You can attend Staatsoper performances inexpensively and still see and hear everything if you buy “entrance” tickets. Standing places are really very cheap - only 2–4 €. Such tickets are sold in the Staatsoper building, at the box office on the Operngasse street. The number of entrance seats is limited, sales begin an hour and a half before the start of the performances. It’s better to line up six hours before the sale starts.

Order Staatsoper tickets online

Booking tickets for the theater season next year starts back in March. Those wishing to attend the performances are put on a waiting list. Two months before each submission, those applicants who were previously registered on this list will be the first to receive the right to purchase.

Purchasing tickets on the website:

  1. After logging into the site, select your language (English is defined by default). If this is your first purchase and your data has not yet been entered into the database, register.
  2. To figure out what type of tickets (paper or electronic) you will need, carefully read the procedure outlined below.
  3. You must have an email address, as well as credit (payment) card information - payment will be made from it.

How to choose a ticket on the website:

  1. Select the desired month and year in the table provided, view the dates and names of the shows. Having chosen a performance, inquire about the availability of tickets and the prices announced for them. In the appropriate line, click Purchase tickets (English), Karten kaufen (German). If the program prompts you to install a Java plugin, download the plugin, then you will see a diagram for selecting seats in the hall. Then you have to return to the previous page.
  2. On the diagram you need to select free places (in the drop-down list on the right, top). You select options by price category (prices vary according to the level of performances and performers participating in them), by location in the hall (parterre, balcony, boxes). Below there will be a drop-down list of choices by age (Normalpreiskarte - adult ticket; Kinderkarte Ballett - children's ticket).
  3. After you have specified all the criteria, find free places. If everything in these proposals suits you, click on the indicated place - a check mark will appear next to it. If you click on the small diagram on the right, you can see the seating arrangement in detail.
  4. When all the places have been selected, click Continue (button at the top right). You will see your "basket". Once again – Continue. Login and password fields will appear, and you will need to register. Enter your username, password, remember them (it’s better to write them down). Click “No, I’m new customer”. A registration form will appear.
  5. When all fields with an asterisk are filled in, click Continue. will appear new form, with all user data - click Continue again. Next there will be a form for entering payment information. Fill in the card details, check the “I accept” box, and again – Continue.
  6. If the payment was successful, you will see new page, with a message about this. Next, an analogue of a ticket will be sent to your mailbox (you indicate it during registration), where the date, exact time, and seats will be indicated. If you checked the home@print option when ordering, a letter for printing tickets will not arrive in your inbox immediately, but only two weeks before the performance.
  7. Print out the electronic ticket you receive and take it with you.

How to exchange a printed ticket for a regular one

When you arrive at the theater on the appointed day, near the ticket office entrance tickets you will see another cash register. It is there that the printout is changed to standard paper ticket. You can get to the performance using a standard ticket or a printed equivalent, but in the latter case the analogue must have a barcode. A ticket with a barcode gives you the right to enter the hall without exchange at the ticket office, without an identity card (tickers do not check it).

If the barcode is missing, the “home” ticket must be exchanged. The operation takes place at the box office on the Operngasse street side. Anyone can pick up tickets, but they must present a printed confirmation indicating that the payment has been processed and the tickets have been purchased. When exchanging, you will need to sign, but you will not need a passport.

If during this time you changed bank card, but the payment was made from another credit card, and you did not print out the ticket at home, it is enough to print confirmation from the website that the seats were paid for. You will be given standard tickets using it.

If you forgot your e-ticket

Let's say you arrived at the theater on the day of the performance, but forgot your reservation. Don’t be upset - at the box office you can simply give your name and a ticket will be issued. You can pick up your tickets earlier, without waiting for the day of the performance - then you will have to contact another box office. It works in the lobby and opens an hour before the start of evening performances.

Children's tickets

A ticket purchased for a child will not be issued together with “adults” during exchange to prevent abuse. Young spectators are given temporary tickets. They must(!) be changed at the same evening box office, right before the performance. The child himself must be presented.

How to dress for the Vienna Opera

A little about the theatrical “dress code”. There is no dress code for regular performances. Of course, you can’t show up to the Opera in a lightweight “beach” wardrobe. A sense of proportion should always be with you. Normal, casual, comfortable clothing is quite suitable for visiting the opera house. Women often wear to the Opera elegant dresses(evening dress and decorations are not at all necessary). Choose comfortable clothing so that nothing interferes with your perception of art.

There is a cloakroom in the theater - outerwear is accepted there, and street shoes can be returned. There are small hallways in the theater boxes - you can leave your outerwear there too.

Like any theater, the Staatsoper has a buffet where you can grab snacks and drink champagne.

Spectators need to be punctual - entry stops at the third bell. Remember, latecomers are not allowed to attend Staatsoper performances!

How to get to the Vienna Opera

To get to Vienna State Opera, you need to use the metro: take lines U1, U2, U4 to Karlsplatz station and follow the signs to the theater. You can also get there by bus 59A or tram 1, 2, D, 62, 65 (stop Oper (Opernring)).

How do I save on hotels?

It’s very simple - look not only on booking. I prefer the search engine RoomGuru. He searches for discounts on Booking and 70 other booking sites simultaneously.

Did you like the article? Share with your friends!