History
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Foundation, years of travel and moving into the Budge-Palais
The Hamburg University of Music and Drama emerged from the private drama school of Annemarie Marks-Rocke and Eduard Marks and was founded in 1950 under the name "Staatliche Hochschule für Musik". Its first director was the German composer Philipp Jarnach. In the early years, the college was still housed in different locations in Hamburg and did not have its own building. After a course of study for Protestant church music was established in 1954, the college was able to move to the Budge-Palais on the Outer Alster in 1956.
From 1903, the Budge-Palais was the home of the banker couple Henry (1840-1928) and Emma Budge (1852-1937), who had returned to Germany from America. After Emma Budge's death, the Budge-Palais was sold to the City of Hamburg for 305,000 Reichsmark, far below its value, contrary to her testamentary disposition to bequeath the palace to her Jewish relatives and under circumstances that have not yet been fully clarified. The palace then served as the seat of the Hamburg Reich Governor and NSDAP district leader Karl Kaufmann from 1938 to 1945.
In 1967, the university was renamed the State University of Music and Performing Arts in order to also identify the drama, theater and opera singing courses in the name.
In 1970, a new building was added to the Budge-Palais. The historic Spiegelsaal, which had previously been used for chamber music performances by students, was demolished in 1980, moved to the Museum für Kunst und Gewerbe Hamburg and faithfully rebuilt there in 1987, where it is still used for concerts today. In 1991, the university was renamed again and has been called the University of Music and Drama ever since. In 2003, the building was extended to make room for the library.
Training under theater conditions
With the Forum, the university has a fully functional theater with an orchestra pit and approx. 450 seats, where musical theater and drama productions are performed in addition to concerts. In 2004, Götz Friedrich and Jürgen Flimm's directing courses in musical theater and drama were affiliated with the university. All theater-related courses in directing, opera singing, acting and dramaturgy were combined under the umbrella of the university to form the so-called "Theaterakademie Hamburg".
Internationality and quality
Under the presidency of Prof. Elmar Lampson (2004-2022), the HfMT was one of the founding members of the Network of Universities of Music for Quality Management and Teaching Development. In August 2014, the HfMT was also successfully certified as a "family-friendly university". At the beginning of 2015, the HfMT concluded a partnership agreement with the conservatoires in Beijing and Shanghai as a sign of its solidarity with the Chinese conservatoires. At the heart of this agreement is a joint one-year "International Master's Degree" and a program for visiting students.
In 2017, the HfMT was the first university of the arts to successfully complete the system accreditation process and has since been able to set up and accredit its degree programs independently without having to have the usual program accreditations of individual degree programs carried out by external agencies.
Spatial and content expansions
Between 2015 and 2017, the existing buildings on the Outer Alster were completely renovated and numerous additional rooms were added. In autumn 2021, a second campus opened on Wiesendamm in Barmbek for the Theaterakademie Hamburg and the Institute for Culture and Media Management after many years at locations scattered throughout the city. The most recent structural extensions are the JazzHall and the JazzLabs, which are housed underground in the university's park and between the two Trautwein buildings at the Milchstraße site. These buildings were made possible by the generous support of the Dr. E. A. Langner Foundation and the Free and Hanseatic City of Hamburg.
Since 2023, the HfMT has been funded in a second phase as part of the federal-state initiative "Innovative University" with the project application "The ligeti center - laboratories for innovation and social development through the transfer of ideas". The joint project of the HfMT, the Hamburg University of Applied Sciences (HAW), the Hamburg University of Technology (TUHH) and the University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf (UKE) is one of 29 projects funded by the federal and state governments. The ligeti center is located at Veritaskai in Harburg, so that the HfMT now has three locations. The university is currently working together with the University of Hamburg on the introduction of a "Teacher Training in Theater" course, which is due to start in the winter semester of 2024/25, based on a resolution passed by the city council in 2022.
Previous heads of the university
- Philipp Jarnach (1950 - 1959)
- Wilhelm Maler (1959 - 1969)
- Hajo Hinrichs (1969 - 1978)
- Hermann Rauhe (1978 - 2004)
- Elmar Lampson (2004 - 2022)
- Jan Philipp Sprick (since Oct. 2022)