Vienna Press Release – March 2026 75 years of the Vienna Festival: Vienna’s largest cultural festival celebrates an anniversary
Every year in May and June, the Vienna Festival presents five weeks of enormous cultural diversity, firmly establishing itself in Vienna’s city history. The Vienna Festival is where tradition meets contemporary art. International theater productions, music, opera, and performance art are also high on the agenda.
From high culture to subculture
The festival covers a broad spectrum ranging from high culture to subculture. Avant-garde works are just as much a part of the program as crowd-pleasing productions. The venues are spread across the entire city. And the Vienna Festival is not afraid to address social and political issues. In 2024, the “Free Republic of Vienna” marked the beginning of a radical new concept involving citizen participation. Throughout its 75-year history, Vienna Festival productions have regularly sparked controversy. This is a festival that makes an impact on everyone.
Patti Smith at Heldenplatz
The anniversary edition, billed as “Republic of Gods,” runs from May 15 to June 21. The Vienna Festival invites audiences to attend the opening ceremony at Heldenplatz on May 22 free of charge. The lineup for the opening day of the festival includes Patti Smith, the American punk icon, who will be performing with the newly formed festival band, Gods Republic. The program promises a musical extravaganza ranging from gospel and punk to classical and pop.
Schlingensief at the MAK
Starting on May 13, an exhibition at the Museum of Applied Arts (MAK) will be dedicated to Christoph Schlingensief, an icon of the Vienna Festival. The German director, who died in 2010, caused a legendary uproar in front of the Vienna State Opera in 2000 with his performance “Please Love Austria – First Austrian Coalition Week.” Drawing on reality TV formats such as Big Brother, which were new at the time, Schlingensief addressed the migration debates of the day by staging public deportations using artistic devices. The boundaries between fiction and reality became blurred. Similarly, from April 21, the MAK will be exhibiting special posters from the 75-year history of the Vienna Festival under the title “Hype and High Culture.”
A window onto the world
The Festival was founded in 1951 to “bring joy and optimism” after the dark years of war, but also to initiate a “cultural renaissance.” The Vienna Festival has always seen itself as a “window onto the world, which explains the festival’s strong international focus. Over the decades, major film and theater names such as Willem Dafoe, Kate Blanchett, Jude Law, and Isabelle Huppert have appeared in Vienna Festival productions, as have music legends such as Leonard Cohen, Brian Eno, and Austria’s national pop icon Falco, whose global hit “Rock Me Amadeus” was performed live for the first time at the opening of the 1985 festival. To mark its anniversary, the 2026 festival will commemorate icons, scandals, and projects both delicate and megalomaniacal – and seek out the memories that the people of this city associate with the festival.
Anniversary highlights
This certainly applies to the anniversary production “Das beste Stück aller Zeiten” (The Best Play Ever) – directed by Vienna Festival director Milo Rau, which will bring to life bizarre and enchanting moments and personalities from the past 75 years of the Festival. The production of “The Tempest” by the recently deceased theater director Robert Wilson also evokes memories of influential works from past decades. Among the highlights for 2026 is the opera Parsifal, directed by German theater director Susanne Kennedy.
Another eagerly awaited event is the concert performance by the Chineke! Orchestra at the Wiener Konzerthaus – the first professional symphony orchestra in Europe to consist mainly of people of color and representatives of ethnic minorities. The vampire myth is the subject of the stage play “Vampire’s Mountain” by visual artist, scenographer, and director Philippe Quesne. The Frenchman explores the relationship between humans and nature and deals with the constructs of domination and exploitation.
Follow in the footsteps of the Vienna Festival with ivie
From mid-May, ivie, the city guide app developed by the Vienna Tourist Board, will offer a unique opportunity for visitors to immerse themselves in the history of the Vienna Festival. The “75 Years of the Vienna Festival Walk” invites participants to take a stroll through the city, bringing memorable festival locations and productions to life.
Key dates for the 75th anniversary of the Vienna Festival
From April 21, 2026: Exhibition “Hype and High Culture – 75 Years of the Vienna Festival in Posters”, Museum of Applied Arts (MAK)
From May 13, 2026: Exhibition “Christoph Schlingensief - It’s Not My Problem Anymore!”, Museum of Applied Arts (MAK)
From May 13, 2026: City walk “75 Years of the Vienna Festival Walk” in ivie, the city guide app for Vienna
May 15 to June 21, 2026: Vienna Festival
May 22, 2026: Opening ceremony at Heldenplatz with Patti Smith, Gods Republic, and many more – with free admission
Links:
Vienna Festival: festwochen.at
Museum of Applied Arts (MAK) mak.at
ivie, the city guide app for Vienna – download now for free ivie.wien.info
Contact
Helena Steinhart
Media Relations
+43 1 211 14-364
helena.steinhart@vienna.info