Katharina Wagner ties her future at the Bayreuth Festival to the demand for reforms.

“In my view, a change in certain structures is actually unavoidable.

It also depends to a large extent on whether and how I can imagine more years as festival director," said the festival director and great-granddaughter of composer Richard Wagner in an interview with the German Press Agency.

"Certain things simply have to be professionalized," emphasized Wagner.

When asked what these are from her point of view, she did not want to say.

“First of all, this should be discussed within the GmbH and not yet publicly.” In her view, “above all, structures in the GmbH” need to change.

Wagner's contract runs until 2025.

"I knew how to defend myself"

The Bayreuth Festival begins on July 25, this time with a new production of "Tristan und Isolde".

However, the start of the festival was overshadowed by accusations of sexism.

In the "Nordbayerisches Kurier" women reported that they were touched on the Green Hill or had to listen to sexual innuendos.

Festival boss Wagner confirmed that she herself was affected.

She experienced "sexual innuendos and sometimes assaults in a certain way", "but I knew how to defend myself."

Bayreuth's structures are complicated: the Federal Republic of Germany, the Free State of Bavaria and the friends' association of Bayreuth each hold 29 percent of the festival's shareholders.

The city of Bayreuth is the fourth and smallest shareholder with 13 percent.

Festival Director Wagner and Managing Director Ulrich Jagels are the managing directors of the Festspiel-GmbH.

The Richard Wagner Foundation, which owns the festival hall and elects the festival director, also plays an important role.

The Board of Trustees is the most important body.

The federal government and the Free State of Bavaria each have five votes, the Wagner family four, the city of Bayreuth three, the patrons of the "Friends of Bayreuth", the district of Upper Franconia and the Bavarian State Foundation two votes each and the Upper Franconia Foundation one.

The then Minister of State for Culture, Monika Grütters (CDU), had already called for reforms for the festival at the end of 2020: "It is important to me that there are reasonable and effective structures in Bayreuth." A working group was set up to deal with the structures, especially those of the foundation target.

"I already said at the time that Professor Grütters was right in her assessment that something had to change," Wagner told the dpa.