24 Walkure 2400X900
Richard Wagner

Die Walküre

Siegmund and Sieglinde find themselves drawn together during a storm. Unbeknown to them their father is Wotan, chief of the gods, who through Siegmund hopes to retrieve a ring of ultimate power.

Following the cancellation of Longborough's 2020 festival, our 2021 production of Die Walküre was a socially-distanced concert production. This 2024 Die Walküre is a new production that will be seen for the first time as part of our 2024 Ring cycle.

All productions in the cycle are created especially for Longborough by Amy Lane, Artistic Director of Copenhagen Opera Festival, and Longborough Music Director and eminent Wagnerian Anthony Negus.


Don't miss Between the Ring, our standalone series of exciting events designed to fit around the three cycles. These include talks with John Deathridge, Dr Genevieve Arkle and Sir David Pountney; masterclasses and performances with Sir John Tomlinson, Rachel Nicholls and Susan Bullock CBE. 

You don’t need a ticket to the Ring to book for these events.

John Tom 2400C

Between the Ring

Find out more about our series of events around each cycle, between performance days.


Coming by train?

Hop aboard the Hedgehog!

In partnership with brilliant local bus service the Hedgehog, we’re now offering a shuttle service from Moreton-in-Marsh station to our theatre.

The service will depart from Moreton-in-Marsh 90 minutes before the performance start time, to arrive at Longborough shortly after the grounds open. It will return to Moreton following the performance end time.

Hedgehog Bus 1200Px

MORETON STATION BUS TRANSFER

Book a return bus transfer for £15.

Harry Sever Cr James Rose

introducing Harry Sever

Acclaimed conductor Harry Sever is our first Ring Cycle Conducting Fellow. Harry has worked alongside Longborough Music Director and eminent Wagnerian Anthony Negus towards our 2024 Ring cycle.

Harry will conduct Die Walküre at Longborough on Friday 12 July 2024. All other performances are conducted by Anthony Negus.

Harry Sever is a gifted musician and a conductor with huge potential. His work with me as the Longborough Ring Conducting Fellow has been invaluable to the whole project

Anthony Negus, Music Director, Longborough Festival Opera

The Longborough Ring 2024

The Ring cycle is now sold out.

Der Ring des Nibelungen (known as the Ring cycle) is a story of gods, giants and heroes, and their struggles for power. Wagner’s cycle is the most epic of tales, a monumental work of art with a score that is searing, desperate and sublime.

Watching a whole Ring cycle takes place across a week. The 2024 Ring will be presented in three cycles:

Cycle I: 16 – 22 June 2024
Das Rheingold 16 June
Die Walküre 18 June
Siegfried 20 June
Götterdämmerung 22 June

Cycle II: 25 June – 30 June 2024
Das Rheingold 25 June
Die Walküre 26 June
Siegfried 28 June
Götterdämmerung 30 June

Cycle III: 4 – 9 July 2024
Das Rheingold 4 July
Die Walküre 5 July
Siegfried 7 July
Götterdämmerung 9 July


Praise for Die Walküre (2024)

Longborough Festival Opera’s Ring cycle goes from strength to strength with this adrenalin-charged production

★ ★ ★ ★ ★ The Stage
Emma Bell Mark Le Brocq Lfo Die Walkure 2024 Cr Matthew Williams Ellis 14
Lfo Die Walkure 2024 Cr Matthew Williams Ellis 19

you’ll emerge back into the rolling Gloucestershire countryside transformed by the experience

★ ★ ★ ★ The Times
Paul Carey Jones Lee Bisset Lfo Die Walkure 2024 Cr Matthew Williams Ellis 9
Lee Bisset Paul Carey Jones Lfo Die Walkure 2024 Cr Matthew Williams Ellis 8

a very fine Walküre that strips back everything to its essentials

★ ★ ★ ★ The Telegraph
Lfo Die Walkure 2024 Cr Matthew Williams Ellis 30
Lee Bisset Paul Carey Jones Lfo Die Walkure 2024 Cr Matthew Williams Ellis 34

A full staging of Wagner’s Ring cycle in a converted barn in rural Gloucestershire once seemed eccentric. You may say it still is

★ ★ ★ ★ The Observer

ACT I

In a violent storm, a stranger takes refuge in the home of Sieglinde and Hunding.

On Hunding’s return it becomes clear that the unarmed stranger is in flight from Hunding’s kinsmen. The law demands that Siegmund be offered hospitality for the night, but Hunding warns that revenge will follow in the morning.

Sieglinde gives Hunding a sleeping draught and tells the stranger of the sword buried in the tree. As they share their stories, mutual feelings grow swiftly into a passionate expression of love.

Sieglinde, drawing on her earliest memories, also realises that he is no stranger. He is her twin brother, and she names him – Siegmund.

In the strength of this new identity, Siegmund draws the sword from the tree, and brother and sister escape as Bride and Bridegroom.

ACT II

Wotan sees in Siegmund an opportunity to regain the ring of power that was lost during the events of Das Rheingold, held now in the clutches of the giant, Fafner. Wotan asks his favourite daughter, the Valkyrie Brünnhilde, to protect Siegmund in his coming fight with Hunding.

Fricka, wife of Wotan and Goddess of Marriage, is outraged by Wotan’s infidelity and the incestuous behaviour of the twins. On Fricka’s demand, Wotan must order Brünnhilde to let Siegmund fall in the battle with Hunding. Wotan shares his history and darkest moments with Brünnhilde and then gives Fricka’s order to the Valkyrie: Siegmund must die in the battle.

As Sieglinde and Siegmund flee from Hunding, Brünnhilde appears and ultimately offers her protection. Siegmund and Hunding fight, and Wotan shatters his son’s sword, causing Siegmund’s death. Brünnhilde carries Sieglinde and the splintered sword away, Wotan vowing revenge for her disobedience.

ACT III

The Valkyries gather on the rocky mountain, before taking the dead heroes up to Wotan and Valhalla.

Brünnhilde brings Sieglinde to them, begging for their support in the face of Wotan’s anger. She reveals that Sieglinde is carrying a child who will be called Siegfried, but they refuse to help her for fear of Wotan’s wrath.

Brünnhilde gives Sieglinde the shattered pieces of the sword, Nothung, which one day Siegfried will forge again. She then sends Sieglinde off to the forest to fend for herself, remaining to receive Wotan’s judgement.

Wotan arrives in a huge storm, and as punishment for her disobedience strips Brünnhilde of her powers, removing her immortality. He places her into a deep sleep, for a mortal man to come and claim her as Wife. On  Brünnhilde’s insistence, Wotan surrounds the rock on which she sleeps with fire: only a fearless hero worthy of her will be able to brave the flames.

Longborough Festival Orchestra