Glyndebourne House
Wine being poured, before the opera started
Picnic tables during the 90 min interval
The summer festival grew far beyond its modest origins i.e an amateur entertainment dreamed up by an opera-lover and his muse on their honeymoon. A house had been at Glyndebourne since C15th. The present house’s appearance is mainly from 1870s, when its Victorian owner William Langham Christie extended with bay windows and fancy brickwork to conceal the C17th facade.
But Glyndebourne’s most famous change was made by Langham Christie’s grandson John, who came into legal possession in 1920. The new oval venue has shallow pitched roofs and a prominent central fly tower. The 1200-seat auditorium, fly tower, stage and side stages are at the centre of the building. Foyers and back of house spaces wrap around, giving views out to the gardens and picnickers. The opera house’s Hampshire red brick resonate foyer with the adjacent neo-Elizabethan house.
Galleries and ground floor arcades at the auditorium end of the building served as additional open air foyer spaces. Housed in a double-skinned circular drum with a shallow conical roof, the auditorium took the traditional European opera house form, with a gently raked bank of stalls and 3 horseshoe-shaped balconies. Lined in reclaimed pitch pine, its form was finely tuned to the required acoustics, with balcony fronts specially curved to reflect the stage sounds. The result was an intimate and clear ambience.
Theatrical producer John Christie added a magnificent organ room containing large non-cathedral organs. Christie held regular amateur musical evenings there, soon enhanced with professional musicians. In 1931 John met Canadian soprano Audrey Mildmay, fell in love and married some months later. On their honeymoon, the two opera fans visited Salzburg and Bayreuth festivals, planning how they might create a similar event in England.
The first opera performed at Glyndebourne in May 1934 was Mozart’s Marriage of Figaro. Audience reaction was so positive that they soon outgrew that first, modest theatre. Remodelled, the capacity rose to 850. Today it’s the home of Gus Christie who moved into the house in 2002 and married soprano Danielle de Niese in 2009. The 70 singers and their families mostly stayed in the house, and plus people all around the place who were rehearsing. In 1994 the new auditorium opened for 1,250 people.
The 2025 Glyndebourne summer season ran for 15 weeks, offering 70+ concerts of operas including Parsifal, plus revivals of Handel’s Saul, Rossini’s Barber of Seville, Verdi’s Falstaff and Janácek’s Katya Kabanova. And the Marriage of Figaro, the most-loved and performed opera!
Those planning to picnic first hastened to claim their favourite spot, spreading out blankets. Some brought tables and gourmet hampers. Other people strolled through the grounds pre the music. Then the excited buzz rose as people slowly made their way to the auditorium. The curtain fell after the first act, with time to return to the well placed rugs and food baskets. Plus there were several on-site restaurants offering fine dining. The British climate being unreliable, there were large, covered balconies around the opera house in case of rain, or undercover picnic tables. NB the smart dress code doesn’t change, even in bad weather.
Theatrical producer John Christie added a magnificent organ room containing large non-cathedral organs. Christie held regular amateur musical evenings there, soon enhanced with professional musicians. In 1931 John met Canadian soprano Audrey Mildmay, fell in love and married some months later. On their honeymoon, the two opera fans visited Salzburg and Bayreuth festivals, planning how they might create a similar event in England.
The first opera performed at Glyndebourne in May 1934 was Mozart’s Marriage of Figaro. Audience reaction was so positive that they soon outgrew that first, modest theatre. Remodelled, the capacity rose to 850. Today it’s the home of Gus Christie who moved into the house in 2002 and married soprano Danielle de Niese in 2009. The 70 singers and their families mostly stayed in the house, and plus people all around the place who were rehearsing. In 1994 the new auditorium opened for 1,250 people.
The 2025 Glyndebourne summer season ran for 15 weeks, offering 70+ concerts of operas including Parsifal, plus revivals of Handel’s Saul, Rossini’s Barber of Seville, Verdi’s Falstaff and Janácek’s Katya Kabanova. And the Marriage of Figaro, the most-loved and performed opera!
Those planning to picnic first hastened to claim their favourite spot, spreading out blankets. Some brought tables and gourmet hampers. Other people strolled through the grounds pre the music. Then the excited buzz rose as people slowly made their way to the auditorium. The curtain fell after the first act, with time to return to the well placed rugs and food baskets. Plus there were several on-site restaurants offering fine dining. The British climate being unreliable, there were large, covered balconies around the opera house in case of rain, or undercover picnic tables. NB the smart dress code doesn’t change, even in bad weather.
The 12 acres of Glyndebourne’s gardens have been perfectly cared for by a team. The gardens range vastly in style, from the striking sunken Bourne Garden, filled with exotic plants reflecting the marvels inside the opera house, and wild flower meadows and rolling lawns around the orchard. This area was a calm space to escape from the bold energy of the rest of the garden. The Figaro Garden was enclosed by tall yew hedges with benches that overlooked a pool, next to Henry Moore’s sculpture. The formal Urn Garden had scented flowers and tall yew hedges loaded with fragrance. On summer nights, the air had a heady perfume, while the area around Mildmay Restaurant was also fragrant.
Glyndebourne Opera House
Galleries and ground floor arcades inside the opera house
Performance of The Barber of Seville
Opera Today
Glyndebourne is now a fine and celebrated opera houses, offering performances to c150,000 people across a Summer Festival and an Autumn Tour. Thanks to Opera Today for photos of performances.
23 comments:
Hello Hels, Since Glyndebourne's first performances were in 1934, I looked up the initial casts, and even in those initial works a cast of many of the greatest stars of that era was featured, including the famous Australian baritone John Brownlee. However, since 1925 is a useful division point for generations of singers, most of the singers I am interested in were long retired by the time Glyndebourne started up, although I would bet that many "golden age" singers were in its audiences.
--Jim
Glyndebourne’s story shows how a private dream became one of the world’s most enchanting opera festivals, where music, history, and elegance blend seamlessly in the Sussex countryside
Hi Hels from the blogging past. Looking at the clothes, food, wine and opera performances, I am assuming the day is quite costly.
Parnassus
I had never heard of the early operas performed at Glyndebourne, not the operas themselves and not the performers. In fact it wasn't until the Christie family decided to build and later develop the theatre to be more professional and more grand, I suspect even many Brits didn't know about the performances.
Now I suspect more and more potential patrons are reading more about Glyndebourne house and gardens, and many more about the operas.
roentare
Yes! The Glyndebourne Opera was never a government funded organisation, but was a not-for-profit charity. So it shows that the private family dream was even more dedicated and ambitious than we had all originally thought.
Just as well it turned out so well... otherwise the Christie family would have been losing money hand over fist.
Train Man
welcome home :)
For the summer festival, 4 picnic chairs and a table will be provided for £25. You can bring your own picnic from home or buy at Glyndebourne restaurant.
Opera seats tickets can cost over £100 and are generally expensive, while seats with better views or closer to the stage will be more expensive.
People under 30 and Opera Members pay less for their seats.
How do guests know when to be inside the opera house and when to be in the gardens? Good timing seems essential, if thousands of people are to move around smoothly.
I don't mean to be unkind about your post but oh, how the other 0.01% live.
Joe
A Guide to Festival 2025 said "When it is time to take your seats in the auditorium, you will hear the bells ring. The bells sound 10, 5 and 3 minutes before the performance starts.
All our Festival performances have a 90 minute long dining interval, when you can enjoy dinner in our restaurants or a picnic in the grounds. You can find the interval time on our performance schedule. When it is time for the performance to resume, you will hear the bells ring. The bells sound 10, 5 and 3 minutes before the performance resumes".
https://www.glyndebourne.com/festival/a-guide-to-glyndebourne-festival-2025/
Andrew
I thought that you were correct when I realised I would have to go and buy a silk dress :)
However this post was primarily important to me because of the architecture of the house and of the opera theatre, and the amazing gardens. Promise!!
Looks an amazing place and it's great it was added to the former. I've been to their homepage and found it rather good, Hels.
Margaret
Every time I travelled across Europe and the Middle East, visiting stately homes and gardens was always appealing. More and more people each year (other than during Covid) are now booking at Glyndebourne well ahead, to hear the opera of their choice. The feedback is largely very impressive.
I've never been to an opera, but I think it's time I go and see if I like them. What a spectacular place. I love visiting historic places, and I bet going to the opera for a visit is even more exciting than just a tour. Enjoy the rest of your weekend Hels.
Erika
Great idea. For your first experience, select a traditionally famous and loved opera eg Marriage of Figaro, La Traviata, La Boheme. If you enjoy it, then you can look more broadly.
I don't think I can afford the tickets.
peppylady
*nod* I could go alone, but if I wanted all my grandchildren to share the great experience, I would have to remortgage my house :(
Is that a huge blue bow on the bum of that dress? I'd think that might be uncomfortable to sit on and who on earth makes dresses like that these days?
River
Nah.. it's an umbrella :) Even in beautiful sunny summer days, Brits often take protection in case of unexpected weather outside.
Thank you for sharing this overview of Glyndebourne. It is interesting to read how it grew from a family dream into a world-renowned opera festival.
Handmade
Maintaining a very special stately home was the role of each generation of the fortunate family. It showed off their vast money, their importance in the aristocracy and often their political connections.
But Langham Christie’s grandson wanted much more. He decided to build a traditional opera house, create fab gardens and to share the stunning performances with thousands of outsiders each summer (and autumn). It was never to be a money-making business.
https://viagenspelobrasilerio.blogspot.com/2021/06/paco-imperial-rio-de-janeiro-rj.html?m=1
Bom dia e boa segunda-feira, minha querida amiga. Segue o link.
Bom dia. Obrigado pela excelente aula de história e cultura. Grande abraço carioca. O pedido que me fizeste.
Luiz
many thanks for the links.
And you are correct about this post; it has been a major cultural lesson for most of us.
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