Answer:
A special theater was built at Bayreuth for the presentation of wagner's music dramas.
Step-by-step explanation:
The dream of composer Richard Wagner (1813-1883) was to erect a theater to represent his works was made possible by King Ludwig II of Bavaria, admirer and sponsor of the musician, who funded the construction of the theater and Wahnfried, the village that was the first and only home Wagner could call his own. In Wahnfried, whose translation would be "Peace of Illusion," he found rest for his long pilgrimage and his mad delusions. There he has his own theater and inaugurates it, against all odds, in 1876, with the world premiere of his tetralogy Der Ring des Nibelungen, before Emperor William II.
The enormous artistic success and worldwide resonance achieved, however, coincided with an almost catastrophic financial result, which is why tetralogy was not staged again in Bayreuth until 1896. Six years later, the doors of the theater opened for the representation of Wagner's last work, Parsifal. In the author's testamentary legacy, the exclusivity of this opera was entrusted to the Bayreuth theater for a period of 30 years. This created a cultural fad, the pilgrimage to Bayreuth to listen to Parsifal, which was not represented elsewhere. Parsifal was composed and made official as the last sacred codex of the new revelation. For this reason, Wagner wanted to ensure that it was represented only in his Festspielhaus but, against his will, conventional property laws made it public domain from 1914.