100th Salzburg festival kicks off under virus restrictions

While many theatres, opera houses and concert halls across the globe remain closed, one of the world's most prestigious summer music festivals opened in Austria this weekend - with strict anti-coronavirus measures in place.

Organisers of the annual Salzburg Festival had originally planned a glittering array of 200 events for its star-studded 100th edition.    

But they were forced to shelve many of the concerts, operas and theatre performances as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic and drew up a much slimmed-down programme instead.     

The month-long festival kicked off on Saturday with a performance of Richard Strauss's blood-curdling opera "Elektra" in a brand-new staging by Poland's Krzysztof Warlikowski.    

The curtain also rose on a new production of the "Everyman" play, written by one of the festival's original founders Hugo von Hofmannsthal and staged every year here since.     

But a thunderstorm forced that performance indoors - it is traditionally held on Salzburg's Cathedral Square. And local media reports suggested that the audience, all obliged to wear face masks, found it hard to keep safety distances until seated.     

Organisers are imposing strict safety measures on the 110 shows that are still going ahead.    

All 80,000 tickets on sale - down from the usual 230,000 - are personalised to enable contact-tracing in case of an infection.    

Spectators have to wear masks until they are seated, and there are no intermissions or catering.    

Artists unable to keep a distance of at least one metre (three feet) from their colleagues, such as those in an orchestra, have to undergo regular coronavirus tests.    

Also on the programme is the premiere of a new play, Zdenek Adamec, by...

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