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2 – 24 August

Daily newspapers reported that the Festival was scheduled to take place in Salzburg that summer, although the war was escalating and the Wehrmacht was attacking the Soviet Union.

It was Mozart’s anniversary year; planned were a new production of Die Zauberflöte/The Magic Flute under Karl Böhm, revivals of Figaro (staged by the ­Senior Director of the Vienna State Opera Oscar Fritz Schuh) and Don Giovanni, also Strauss’s Rosenkavalier/The Knight of the Rose and the reprise of Viel Lärm um nichts/Much Ado About Nothing. The Festival served to distract people at a time of escalating catastrophe. The public mainly consisted of soldiers, who were instructed with information about the productions and taken on city tours; also workers from German and Italian ammunition factories. From mid-August on, cultural consultants and artists from the Reich were guests in Salzburg, among them Richard Billinger, Max Mell, Josef Weinheber, Karl Heinrich Waggerl and Karl Springenschmid; on 22 August (!), Gauleiter (head of district administration) Rainer put on a reception in their honour at Schloss Leopoldskron.