Bachtrack logo
What's on
Reviews
Articles
News
Video
Site
Young artists
Travel

Fidelio | Longborough Festival Opera

This listing is in the past
Longborough Festival OperaMoreton-in-Marsh, South-West, GL56 9QF, United Kingdom
Dates/times in London time zone
Festival: Longborough Festival Opera
Performers
Longborough Festival Opera
Gad KadoshConductor
Orpha PhelanDirector
Madeleine BoydSet Designer, Costume Designer
Longborough Festival Opera Orchestra
Elizabeth AthertonSopranoLeonore
Adrian DwyerTenorFlorestan
Simon ThorpeBaritoneDon Pizarro
John Paul HuckleBassRocco
Lucy HallSopranoMarzelline
Sam FurnessTenorJaquino

After an attempt to expose the crimes of the corrupt prison governor Pizarro, Florestan finds himself unjustly imprisoned and in mortal danger. Amid rumours of his demise only one person, his wife Leonora, suspects the truth. Disguised as ‘Fidelio’, a male prison guard, she embarks on a valiant attempt to rescue her husband from certain death.

A deeply moving story of love and faith, Fidelio is a tale of personal sacrifice, heroism and human aspirations for justice. With its themes around incarceration and illegal detainment, Beethoven’s only opera has resonated with audiences across borders for decades, and still feels eerily relevant today.

For Powder Her Face at the Royal Danish Opera, director Orpha Phelan and designer Madeleine Boyd won Denmark’s prestigious Reumert Award for Best Opera Production 2016. They join forces again for this new production of Fidelio, asking what could drive one to deny freedom from another – and what imprisonment and longing mean to all of us.

Longborough Festival Opera is one of the UK's finest country opera houses, an intimate 500-seat theatre set amidst the glorious rolling hills of the Cotswolds. Take in the picturesque views, bring a picnic and enjoy spectacular opera – the 2017 Festival includes Wagner’s Tristan und Isolde, Beethoven’s Fidelio, Mozart’s The Magic Flute and Gluck’s Orfeo ed Euridice.

Longborough Festival
Beethoven’s “problem child”: staging Fidelio
A sense of theatre: Sir Antonio Pappano
Mobile version