The Cologne section comprised the first scene of Act I, the final scene of Act III, and all of Act IV. Wilson collaborated on the libretto with German playwright
Heiner Müller, and also incorporated text from
Racine and
Shakespeare. The primary composer was , with additional material by
Michael Galasso,
Philip Glass, David Byrne,
Franz Schubert, and traditional Japanese
gagaku music. The piece was premiered on January 19, 1984, at the
Schauspiel Köln or
Cologne Opera, Germany. This section is more musical theatre than opera, with spoken dialogue predominating.
Frederick the Great of
Prussia is the central character, and his struggle to cling to political power is paralleled in the private power struggles of a modern family under a domineering "Old Man". The Cologne sections were performed in May 1984 in Berlin, Germany at the
Berliner Theatertreffen, and in February 1985 at
American Repertory Theater in
Cambridge, Massachusetts. In the New York Times, critic John Rockwell described this production: :"One scene can stand for all: Frederick, dressed in his 18th-century uniform, arises from beneath the stage on a statue stallion. He writhes and twists atop his steed, shielding his face with a Japanese mask to echo Schubert's
Erlkönig song, about a child swept away by death, which is first recited by an actress floating in space behind a scrim and then mouthed to a German recording by a grotesque old woman clutching a live little dog. Behind the woman on the scrim, remarkable color film footage of an eagle is projected, the proud bird swooping and soaring." The production divided the critics of
MIT's newspaper,
The Tech. Michiel Bos wrote, "Tension is built up, maintained and relaxed with supreme skill. Timing is crucial and perfect: every move, every pause, every sound, every silence has its just measure." But Eric Ristad saw the piece as being hermetic to the point of opacity, of being "private theater with a vengeance; it is without content, and immune from criticism. [...] The piece just exists, and we react to it individually, in much the same way we might react to a drop of water." ==Rome section==