Martin Nürenbach or ''Nurembach'' (unknown – 1780) was a German
acrobat, stage actor,
dancer
Dance is a performing art form consisting of sequences of movement, either improvised or purposefully selected. This movement has aesthetic and often symbolic value. Dance can be categorized and described by its choreography, by its repertoire ...
and
equilibrist active in Sweden, Norway and Finland. He was a pioneer in Norwegian theater history by founding the first public theater in Oslo in the year 1771.
Life
Early career
The early life of Martin Nürenbach is sketchy. He was from Germany, but his year of birth is unknown. He likely came to Sweden in the travelling theater company of the German theater director
Carl Seuerling, who arrived to Sweden in 1759, and are estimated to have been a child or a teenager at that time. Carl Seuerling married the Swedish actress
Margareta Lindahl
Margaret(h)a Seuerling née ''Lindahl'' (1747–1820) was a Swedish actress and Theatre director in a travelling theatre company, perhaps the most known travelling actress of her time in Scandinavia, active in both Sweden and Finland. She was on ...
, and took over the travelling Swedish theater company of his father-in-law
Peter Lindahl, thereby staying in Sweden.
Nürenbach later stated (1769) that he was the "stepson" of Carl Seuerling, but this statement is unclear and is familial relation to Seuerling is unconfirmed. If the identification of stepson is to be taken literary, he could have been the son of Carl Seuerling's first wife Maria Heidensköld in her previous marriage, but this is unconfirmed.
A woman by the name of Jacobina Nürembach is listed as a maid of the Seuerling theater company, and may have been a relative.
Martin Nürenbach is listed as a member of the
Stenborg Company
The Stenborg Company (Swedish: Stenborgsföretag) was a Swedish Theatre Company, active in Sweden and Finland in the 18th century. It was also called Stenborgska skådebanorna ('Stenborg Stages'), Svenska komeditruppen ('Swedish Comedy Troupe') and ...
in a passport to
Uppsala
Uppsala (, or all ending in , ; archaically spelled ''Upsala'') is the county seat of Uppsala County and the List of urban areas in Sweden by population, fourth-largest city in Sweden, after Stockholm, Gothenburg, and Malmö. It had 177,074 inha ...
in 1767, and as a member of the Seuerling troupe in 1767–68.
As a member of the theatre company, he performed rope- and wire-dancing and acrobatics, and identified himself as an
equilibrist. He also participated in plays as an actor, though he had only moderate success in this field. As a member of the Stenborg and Seuerling theatre companies, he toured both Sweden and Finland, which was at that time a Swedish Province.
Nürenbach was active as a dance instructor and advertised extensively and offered dance lessons in the cities he passed on his tours, which was evidently an important side income. He was at one point active as the "city dancing master" in
Gothenburg.
At some point, he married his colleague, the dancer Anna Katarina Rancke.
Norway
In July 1770, Martin Nürenbach made his debut as a dance teacher and performer in
Oslo
Oslo ( , , or ; sma, Oslove) is the capital and most populous city of Norway. It constitutes both a county and a municipality. The municipality of Oslo had a population of in 2022, while the city's greater urban area had a population of ...
in Norway. From October 1771, he performed in companionship with the professional dancer and musician
Christina Doreothea Stuart.
In the end of 1770, he had formed a small theatre company of
Norwegian stage actors. In December 1771, Nürenbach was given royal permission upon application to perform theatre performances in Oslo, thus founding the first permanent theatre in a city where previously only travelling theatre companies or private amateur societies similar to ''
Det Dramatiske Selskab
Det Dramatiske Selskab is the name for several Norwegian amateur theatre drama troupes. These troupes were the first permanent theatre troupes in the cities of Norway. The period between 1780–1830 is described by many as ''the age of the dramati ...
'' had performed. Between December 1771 and February 1772, the theatre staged a number of theatrical pieces, pantomimes, dancing, and acrobatics by Norwegian artists, performing in
Danish. According to advertisements, comedies by
Holberg were performed mixed with dance performances. Not much is known of the activity of the Nürembach theatre. Martin Nürenbach himself was evidently an appreciated and popular dancer, but not considered as good in the capacity of an actor, and it seems as if the dance performances were more appreciated than the theater plays, which is why dance performances were mixed with the plays. Aside from Nürenbach himself, nothing is known about the members of his cast, other than that they were said to have been Norwegians performing in the Danish language. Nürenbach's wife Anna Katarina Rancke is not mentioned at all during their stay in Norway (though it is known that she was present) and it is unknown if she performed.
In February 1772, the theater of Martin Nürenbach was closed and he and his wife departed Norway for Sweden. Not long after, the Norwegian theater ban of 1738 was reintroduced in Norway, but he is noted to have closed his theater and left prior to this, of unknown causes. The theater of Martin Nürenbach was the first permanent theater in the history of Norway and was as such a pioneer institution for which Nürenbach is remembered, though it was not to last.
In 1780, it was succeeded by the private amateur theatre ''
Det Dramatiske Selskap'', but no new public professional theater was founded in Oslo until the
Christiania Offentlige Theater was founded by
Johan Peter Strömberg in 1827.
Late career
In September 1773, Martin Nürenbach, again a member of the Stenborg Company, is known to have performed as an acrobat in the ''
Humlegårdsteatern'' in
Stockholm, where he made such a success that the theater company had to expand the seats of their stage building in order to give room for the large number of spectators. It was as a dancer he was famed, and performed as such after every play, but he is noted to have performed as an actor in the role of
Harlequin
Harlequin (; it, Arlecchino ; lmo, Arlechin, Bergamasque pronunciation ) is the best-known of the '' zanni'' or comic servant characters from the Italian ''commedia dell'arte'', associated with the city of Bergamo. The role is traditionall ...
on the 8 October.
"Nürenbach with spouse" departed as members of the Stenborg theater company to Finland, where he bought the permit to stage theater in Finland from
Petter Stenborg in companionship with the actor Beckman. From 1774 to 1780, Nürenbach-Beckman would have been the only travelling theater company active in Finland, but not much information is known of their activity. In 1781, Nürenbach's colleague Beckman returned to Stockholm where he sued Nürenbach for having broken their contract by abandoning him and taken all their actors with him: however, the court protocol simply stated that Nürenbach was "No longer present in the Kingdom."
Martin Nürenbach died in
Tavastia in Finland in late 1780.
[Johan Flodmark: Stenborgska skådebanorna: bidrag till Stockholms teaterhistoria, Norstedt, Stockholm, 1893]
References
* Johan Flodmark: Stenborgska skådebanorna: bidrag till Stockholms teaterhistoria, Norstedt, Stockholm, 1893
* Anne Margrete Fiskvik,
Where highbrow taste met itinerant dance in eighteenth century Scandinavia: The dance entrepreneur Martin Nürenbach '
Notes
{{DEFAULTSORT:Nurenbach, Martin
18th-century births
1780 deaths
Finnish male stage actors
Norwegian male stage actors
Norwegian theatre directors
Finnish theatre directors
18th-century German male actors
German male stage actors
18th-century Norwegian male actors
18th-century Finnish people
Acrobats
Swedish male dancers
Finnish male dancers
Swedish entertainers
18th-century Swedish male actors
18th-century dancers
Gustavian era people
18th-century theatre managers
18th-century circus performers
German emigrants to Finland