Billy Budd

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Britten’s gripping psychological drama returns in this award-winning staging.

 

When a young sailor is unjustly accused of mutiny, it triggers a tragic sequence of events. Good and evil, innocence and corruption come together in this heartbreaking opera, a seafaring epic brought to vivid life in Michael Grandage’s evocative, claustrophobic production.

 

Michael Grandage returns to direct Britten’s opera, not seen at Glyndebourne for a over decade. Nicholas Carter will conduct the London Philharmonic Orchestra.

 

Thomas Mole will play in the title role, Olivier Award-winner Allan Clayton and Sam Carl make their role debuts playing Captain Vere and John Claggart.

 

A revival of the Festival 2010 production. Sung in English.

 

 

Synopsis

 

Act I

Prologue: Captain Vere, an old man, is haunted by a moment in his life when he was tested and found wanting.

 

Years earlier, on board HMS Indomitable, a British man-of-war, during the French wars of 1797, sailors are at work. A boarding party returns from a passing merchant ship, the Rights o’ Man, with three men impressed for naval service. John Claggart, Master-at-Arms, interviews them but only the last, Billy Budd, pleases the officers, despite his stammer. But his impassioned farewell to the Rights o’ Man is misunderstood as a revolutionary declaration, and Claggart, responsible for discipline, is told to watch Billy. He sets his corporal, Squeak, to harass Billy. A Novice returns from a flogging, and Donald and Dansker caution the new recruits that no one escapes punishment. They warn against Claggart while declaring their devotion to Vere.

 

A week later, Vere meets with two officers in his cabin and they discuss the recent naval mutinies at Spithead and the Nore. Vere discounts their fears about Billy’s influence on the men. Another officer arrives to announce that enemy land has been sighted.

 

Below the decks, the same evening, Billy discovers Squeak meddling with his kit-bag and they fight. Claggart arrives and has Squeak arrested. Alone, Claggart voices his determination to destroy Billy. He forces the Novice to try to bribe Billy into leading a mutiny. Billy awakens to hear the Novice’s proposal. Furious at the idea of mutiny, he can only stammer. Dansker tells Billy that Claggart is behind it all, but Billy refuses to believe him.

 

Act II

Some days later, Claggart is telling Vere that there is a dangerous sailor aboard, when a French ship is sighted. The crew are called to action stations and a shot is fired, but the wind fails, the mist returns and the chase is abandoned. Claggart returns to Vere and again accuses Billy of planning a mutiny. Vere orders both men to his cabin.

 

Billy arrives in Vere’s cabin to be confronted by Claggart’s false accusation of inciting mutiny. Unable to speak to defend himself, Billy strikes Claggart, who falls dead. Vere summons his officers to an immediate drumhead court-martial, knowing that the penalty for striking a superior officer is death. Aware of the injustice of the death sentence in this instance, the officers appeal to Vere for guidance; he remains silent, the officers reluctantly resolve that Billy should be hanged at dawn.

 

The next morning, shortly before dawn, Billy awaits his execution.

 

On deck, at four o’clock the same morning, the crew assemble to witness the hanging. Billy’s final words are ‘Starry Vere, God bless you!’ After the hanging the crew turn on the officers in anger. When they are ordered below, their rebellion subsides into sullen obedience.

 

Epilogue:Vere, now an old man, knows he has failed Billy and himself: he could have saved him. He receives Billy’s last words as a kind of benediction, redeeming him at the last.

Program and cast

Creative team

Conductor: Nicholas Carter

Director: Michael Grandage

Designer: Christopher Oram

Lighting Designer: Paule Constable

 

London Philharmonic Orchestra

The Glyndebourne Chorus

 

Cast includes

Captain Vere: Allan Clayton

Billy Budd: Thomas Mole

John Claggart: Sam Carl

Mr Redburn, First Lieutenant: Dingle Yandell

Mr Flint, Sailing Master: William Thomas

Lieutenant Ratcliffe: Daniel Okulitch

Red Whiskers: Alasdair Elliott

Donald: Samuel Dale Johnson

Dansker: Clive Bayley

A Novice: Laurence Kilsby

The Novice’s Friend: Alex Otterburn

Squeak, a ship’s corporal: Daniel Norman 

Bosun: Michael Ronan

Maintop: Ru Charlesworth 

 

Performance timings

Timings are subject to change.

 

2, 8, 11, 17, 24, 28, 30 July

Grounds open: 3.00pm
Opera starts: 5.00pm
Interval (90 mins): 6.25pm
Opera resumes: 7.55pm
Opera ends: 9.15pm

 

28 June
5 July

Grounds open: 2.00pm
Opera starts: 4.00pm
Interval (90 mins): 5.25pm
Opera resumes: 6.55pm
Opera ends: 8.15pm

Glyndebourne

Glyndebourne’s founders, John Christie and wife Audrey Mildmay, opened the first Festival here in 1934. Today our world-renowned auditorium and standards of excellence are testament to John’s original ethos: Not just the best we can do but the best that can be done anywhere.


In the years that followed, Glyndebourne continued to be headed by the Christie family, George Christie following in 1962 and then his son Gus, now Executive Chairman, in 2000.

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