The Classical Music Book

(Tuis.) #1

292 20TH-CENTURY BRITISH OPERA


The main characters in Peter Grimes


Foes Friends


Mrs. Sedley (mezzo soprano)
Town gossip

Peter Grimes
The antihero, he is violent,
solitary, and an outsider.

Ellen Orford (soprano)
A schoolteacher who sees the
good in Grimes and wants to
marry him.
Auntie (contralto)
Landlady of the pub

Swallow (bass)
Lawyer

Bob Boles (tenor)
A fisherman and a Methodist

The Townspeople
(chorus)

Captain Balstrode
(baritone) Retired sea captain

Ned Keene
(baritone) Apothecary

because of their love for one
another—homosexuality being
illegal in Britain until 1967.

Ovations for a masterpiece
The first performance of Britten’s
Peter Grimes took place at the
Sadler’s Wells Theatre on June 7,


  1. The composer and conductor
    Imogen Holst, who was later a
    codirector of the Aldeburgh
    Festival, recalled the thrill of the
    occasion: “No one in the audience
    will ever forget the excitement of
    that evening,” she wrote. When
    the tragedy had reached its quiet
    end and the opera was over, she
    sensed that the audience knew
    they had been listening to a
    masterpiece: “They stood up
    and shouted and shouted.”
    The popularity of the opera lay
    partly in its psychological drama
    and depth of characterizaton. A
    complex, lonely, and tormented


fisherman, Peter Grimes has just
been cleared of the death of an
apprentice but is warned not to
seek a replacement. Faced with the
townspeople’s hostility, Grimes
yearns in vain for love and simple
domesticity with his friend Ellen
Orford, a widowed schoolmistress,

but the relationship is halting.
In the prologue’s duet “The truth ...
the pity ... and the truth,” Ellen
sings in the bright E major chord
while Grimes begins in F minor.
Gradually, Grimes gives way to
Ellen, and the pair are in unison,
but it does not last.
In defiance of local opinion,
Grimes procures a new apprentice,
and his fate is sealed. When Ellen
spots a bruise and accuses him of
mistreating the boy, local people
see Grimes strike her then leave.
Forming a lynch mob, they advance
on Grimes’s clifftop hut to a drum
beat suggesting impending doom
but find nothing amiss as Grimes
is away fishing. His apprentice,
however, has fallen down the cliff
to his death. His jersey is later
found washed ashore, and the mob
advances on the hut once more.
Doomed, Grimes rows out to sea
and sinks his boat. The opera ends

He wished for one to
trouble and control;
he wanted some obedient
boy to stand and bear the
blow of his outrageous hand.
Peter Grimes

US_288-293_Britten.indd 292 26/03/18 1:01 PM

Free download pdf