Vienna - TV Tropes
- ️Mon Oct 07 2013
"Wiener Blut! Wiener Blut! Eig'ner Saft voller Kraft, voller Glut!
Wiener Blut! Selt'nes Gut, Du erhebst, Du belebst unsern Mut!"
— Johann Strauss/Victor Léon
Vienna is the capital and largest city of Austria, and the only city to be a state in its own right. As opposed to much of the rest of Austria, it is not situated in a mountainous region, though its western outskirts are somewhat hilly. It is divided into 23 districts, two of which are separated from the rest by the river Danube. In fiction, expect to only see the inner districts, where the monument density is somewhat high, and Schloss Schönbrunn. Apart from the regional accent, there are not only one, but several types of additional dialects spoken inside the city. It is also somewhat unique in having many, unrelated names in different languages: Wien, Vienna, Beč, Bécs, Dunaj, to just name a few.
Its origins are lost in time (evidence of settlement goes back to 500BC). What we know is that the Romans founded the fortified outpost Vindobona there at 15BC to defend the frontier, which was at that time running along the river Danube. The area of this outpost can still be discerned in the inner disctricts, where Roman ruins have an annoying habit of turning up and interrupting every other building project. Through the middle ages, the city grew, becoming seat of the Hapsburg dynasty in 1440 and through this, de facto capital of the Holy Roman Empire with their rise to power, and later the capital of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. After the world wars, it remained the capital of the now somewhat diminished Austria.
Being the capital of a huge, multilingual empire meant, of course, that the city has always been quite international, something that current residents (whose names seldom belong to the German language after the second generation) often tend to forget. It also means that compared to the rest of the core Austrian (read: German-speaking) country, Vienna has always seemed a bit mysterious and alien, and not entirely friendly to core Austrian interests. This prejudice remains to this day.
On the positive side, the Hapsburgs always considered themselves friends of the arts, importing musicians, artists and scientists to their seat of power. This has created a strong tradition of arts and sciences in the city. Many classical musicians and famous scientists come from or have at some point called Vienna their home. This tradition continued even after the fall of the empire and gave the world things like the First Viennese School (classical music), the Secession (art/architecture), psychoanalysis, the Viennese Group (philosophy) and the Austrian school of economics. It also gave the world Wiener Schnitzel, Sacher cake, Strudel, Danish pastry (which in Denmark is called Viennese bread, and in Vienna Kolatsche) and Goulash.
(Please note, Wieners are not called such in Vienna. Neither are Vienna Bread (a type of roll or in some places a Danish pastry) or Wienernougat.)
In present times, Vienna is the seat of the Austrian government and also home to several United Nations subsidiaries, the IAEA, OPEC and the OSCE. It also hosts the traditional New Year's concert which is transmitted worldwide.
Viennese people have a tendency to be seen as loveably grouchy or Jerks with hearts of gold. They also are said to have a fascination with the macabre and a somewhat dark outlook on life, which they like to express in Self-Deprecating Humor.
In fiction, Vienna is either depicted as the classical Hapsburg center of arts (period piece) or as a center for spy thrillers (WWII-modern setting). Either way, expect loving shots of every tourist monument in town without any regard to their actual position, horse-drawn carriages instead of taxis (only used for tourist rides in real life) and lots of classical music. In actual Viennese/Austrian productions not intended for export, expect Black Humour. Lots and lots and lots of it. Depending on the type of production, it might then get worse or just degrade into slapstick, but it will likely never be completely without Dramedy. Vienna also has stood in for other cities such as Paris, Moscow or Bratislava.
Famous people from Vienna:
- Sigmund Freud
- Johann Strauss, Franz Liszt, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Ludwig van Beethoven and many other classical musicians either were born here or spent a significant amount of their career years there.
- Fritz Lang
- Lotte Lenya
- Falco
- Wolfgang Pauli, quantum physician (you might have heard of the Pauli principle)
- Konrad Lorenz, biologist
- Erwin Schrödinger (the one with the cat)
- Friedensreich Hundertwasser
- Niki Lauda, Formula 1 driver turned entrepreneur
- Joe Zawinul
- Gustav Klimt
- Karl Markovics
Vienna in Fiction:
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Comic Books
Film
- Amadeus is set in Vienna (obviously), but the movie was filmed in Prague.
- Before Sunrise
- Benny's Video
- Carry On Spying takes place partly in Vienna, with copious references to The Third Man.
- The Day of the Jackal
- The Illusionist (2006)
- Indien
- The Living Daylights, complete with California Doubling for some scenes in Bratislava.
- Mission: Impossible – Rogue Nation: The IMF team infiltrates a performance of the opera Turandot in Vienna. Oh, and... the (unnamed) Austrian chancellor gets assassinated in a car bombing after said performance.
- Muttertag
- The Peacemaker
- The Third Man plays in Vienna after the World War II, when Austria was occupied by the allied forces, each of which had its own sector in Vienna.
Live Action TV
- The ten earlier seasons of Inspector Rex are set in Vienna, but Rex moves to Rome, although there are very few chapters that are in Austria.
- M – Eine Stadt sucht einen Mörder, 2019 remake Mini Series of the 1931 German crime film M. It updates the Weimar Republic Berlin setting to Present Day Vienna.
- Marie-Antoinette (2022) has a short scene of the eponymous character in Vienna showing her angst as she's leaving her beloved court of Austria to become the future queen of a country and court that are much less suited to someone like her.
- Tatort had several episodes set in Vienna.
- Vienna Blood is a British historical crime series set in early-1900s Vienna.
Music
- The operetta Wiener Blut, natch.
- As well as many other operettas. They were all written at the height of the empire, and many are about nobility in said empire.
- Falco made a song and album called "Wiener Blut", referencing the aforementioned operetta, and another song called "Vienna Calling".
- As did Rammstein, although the lyrics do not mention Vienna at all (but it is implied to be about the Fritzl case.
- Billy Joel's Vienna.
- Ultravox also has a song titled Vienna.
- And of course, the Viennese Waltz.
Podcasts
- Season 7 of Revolutions is about the Revolutions of 1848. Given the degree to which those revolutions involved Austria (i.e. a lot), the season focuses heavily on Vienna—its social structure, its politics, its economy, and its urban geography—at the end of the Age of Metternich.
Theatre
- Elisabeth has a good portion of its scenes set in Vienna.
- I Am from Austria takes place entirely in Vienna (except when Josi and Emma go on a helicopter ride to a cabin in the Alps). The climax of the show is the luxurious annual Opera Ball.
- Leopoldstadt portrays multiple generations of two Jewish families living in Vienna from 1899 to 1955.
- Ditto for Mozart!, which has a song ("Hier in Wien!") setting up Vienna as a Decadent Court.
- Schikaneder, which partially revolves around the Viennese (and world premiere) production of The Magic Flute.
Western Animation
- Pinky and the Brain had a Third Mouse episode.
- The Tom and Jerry short "Johann Mouse", in which the two live with Johann Strauss.
- Princess Sissi.