What's On
Britten: Owen Wingrave

Programme
Benjamin Britten Owen Wingrave
Music by Benjamin Britten, with libretto by Myfanwy Piper after Henry James.
Reduced orchestration prepared by David Matthews.
Performed by arrangement with Faber Music, London.
Creatives
Rory Macdonald conductor
Orpha Phelan director
Madeleine Boyd designer
Matt Haskins lighting designer
Benjamin Voce (performance 5 April) assistant conductor
About
Can one act of defiance shatter generations of tradition, or will history always find a way to repeat itself?
Benjamin Britten’s Owen Wingrave grapples with this question in a tale that feels strikingly relevant today.
Commissioned by the BBC and premiered as a television opera in 1971, it was Britten’s second exploration of Henry James’ works, following the success of The Turn of the Screw. Whilst this earlier opera leans into the supernatural, Owen Wingrave draws its tension from the living: a family bound by militaristic pride, a young man determined to break free, and the inescapable weight of ancestral expectations.
Owen Wingrave tells of a young man who defies his family’s rigid military traditions to embrace pacifism, only to face isolation, humiliation, and an untimely, mysterious death.
At the heart of the story lies Paramore, the Wingrave family’s country estate, where tragedy seems written into the walls. Ghosts stalk the halls and mirror Owen’s turmoil as he resists his family’s condemnation.
Britten’s score captures the tension between inner conviction and external pressures with sinister urgency and lyrical beauty. The Ballad Singer in Act II recounts the chilling history of the house, while Owen’s pivotal aria reveals his lonely, yet resolute, faith in peace.
Premiered on television at the insistence of its commissioner, Sir David Attenborough, Owen Wingrave was Britten’s innovative attempt to expand opera’s reach. Its themes – morality, courage, family conflict, and the cost of standing by one’s beliefs – resonate far beyond its historical setting, making it a work that speaks powerfully to our time.
Tickets:
Full Price £30.50, £26
Student/Under 26 £17.50, £15
Promoted by RNCM.
This event will include an interval and will end at approximately 5.30pm and 10pm.
Cast & Creatives
Red Cast
James Connolly Owen Wingrave
William Jowett Spencer Coyle
Kristen Gregory Lechmere
Ellie Forrester Miss Wingrave
Rosa Sparks Mrs Coyle
Charlotte Baker Mrs Julian
Jemima Gray Kate
Oscar Bowen-Hill Sir Philip Wingrave
Gabriel Jones Narrator
Blue Cast
Alex Riddell Owen Wingrave
Johannes Gerges Spencer Coyle
Sam Rose Lechmere
Kirsty McNaughton Miss Wingrave
Esther Shea Mrs Coyle
Hannah Andrusier Mrs Julian
Daisy Mitchell Kate
Samuel Horton Sir Philip Wingrave
Grant Haddow Narrator