Peter Grimes

Benjamin Britten

13 February - 20 March 2026

Opera

Limited Availability

The sea is raging. So are they.

The death of a young boy at sea threatens to tear apart a close-knit coastal community. Suspicions circle menacingly around fisherman Peter Grimes, legally cleared of guilt, yet still a threatening outsider in the eyes of this isolated community. As the hostility towards him gains momentum, Grimes becomes increasingly volatile and vulnerable. When tragedy strikes again, the truth won’t be the only thing lost at sea.

Britten’s most famous opera is utterly absorbing, exploring themes of paranoia and mob mentality. His evocative music conjures up the beauty and the unrelenting harshness of the sea, and the turbulent passions unleashed by a man at odds with himself and with his community. In Phyllida Lloyd’s award-winning production (one which has swept up five-star reviews), it all adds up to an emotionally devastating, profoundly memorable experience.

“Devastatingly powerful, always atmospheric, often heart-rending”
★★★★★ — The Arts Desk

“Once again a triumph”
★★★★★ — Bachtrack

“The chorus is superb, particularly when hurling spine-shaking cries in our faces… a riveting show”
★★★★ — The Times

Price

From £16*

Venues
  • Lowry, Salford Quays
  • Newcastle Theatre Royal

Running time
Act I: 1 hour
Interval: 20 minutes
Act II: 50 minutes
Interval: 15 minutes
Act III: 40 minutes

Total: approximately 3 hours 5 minutes

Language
Sung in English with English titles

Buy your programme in advance
Digital (£4) or printed (£6 + £2.50 postage)

Age guidance and content warning
15+, contains adult themes including bullying, child abuse and child death

Audio flyer
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Listen to the audio flyer

Save on your booking
£20 new to opera tickets
£10 under 30s tickets now sold out in Leeds
£10 child tickets
Free tickets for 16-20s in Leeds
Group discounts
Multibuy packages

*Prices vary by venue. Booking fees may apply.

Story

Peter Grimes stands in the dock during a coroner’s inquest. Nearly all the townspeople suspect Grimes of ill-treating his young apprentice, William Spode, with the notable exceptions of the widowed schoolmistress, Ellen Orford, and Captain Balstrode. At the conclusion of the inquest the lawyer, Swallow, proclaims that the boy, whose life Grimes had previously saved during a storm, died in accidental circumstances.

Orchestral Interlude
Dawn

Scene 1
Ned Keene, the local apothecary, tells Grimes that he has found him a new apprentice, John, whom Ellen offers to look after. The townspeople are scornful of Ellen’s trust in Grimes.

Orchestral Interlude
Storm

Scene 2
Townspeople are sheltering in The Boar. Grimes arrives to collect his new apprentice. The crowd thinks that he is either drunk or mad, but he seizes the boy and goes out into the storm.

INTERVAL

Orchestral Interlude
Sunday Morning

Scene 1
Ellen sits at her knitting in the company of young John while the townsfolk make their way to church. She considers a possible future happiness with Grimes while listening to the singing of the congregation. Grimes enters, ordering the boy to help him bring in a shoal of fish. He and Ellen quarrel over John’s right to rest and this leads Ellen to draw attention to his rough, uncompromising ways, echoing the views of the town. Grimes is furious at the thought that the Borough has influenced Ellen. He strikes her and drags John away. The church service concludes.

Orchestral Interlude
Passacaglia

Scene 2
Grimes vents his anger at the townsfolk by ranting at his apprentice. The boy falls to his death while helping to pitch fishing nets from the cliff door of Grimes’s hut.

INTERVAL

Orchestral Interlude
Moonlight

Scene 1
The people of the Borough gather to discuss the apprentice’s disappearance and the mood of hatred towards Grimes gains momentum. Despite Grimes’s previous anger, Captain Balstrode and Ellen resolve to offer Grimes what help they can.

Orchestral Interlude

Scene 2
The townspeople are pursuing Grimes. He is discovered by Ellen and Balstrode who, unable to see any future for him, tell him to sail out until he loses sight of land and then sink his boat. The Borough resumes its normal life.

Cast & Creative

John Findon

Peter Grimes

A woman wearing a black top and long hair
Philippa Boyle

Ellen Orford

Simon Bailey

Captain Balstrode

A woman looking directly at the camera
Hilary Summers

Auntie

A portrait of a man smiling
Johannes Moore

Ned Keene

A photograph of Stuart Jackson
Stuart Jackson

Bob Boles

A bearded man wearing a striped shirt, looking into the camera
Blaise Malaba

Hobson

Claire Pascoe

Mrs Sedley

A woman with long curly hair.
Nazan Fikret

First niece

A black and white headshot of a woman with long dark hair resting her head on her hand.
Ava Dodd

Second Niece

A bald man with a beard.
Daniel Norman

Revd Horace Adams

A man with short grey hair wearing a shirt and jacket.
James Creswell

Swallow

Dean Robinson

Dr Crabbe

The Chorus of Opera North singing
Chorus of Opera North
The Opera North Orchestra playing their instruments at a performance
Orchestra of Opera North
Image of conductor Garry Walker
Garry Walker

Conductor

Phyllida Lloyd

Director

A woman with blonde hair and glasses.
Karolina Sofulak

Revival Director

A black and white close-up picture of a man with a beard looking into the distance thoughtfully
Tim Claydon

Revival Director / Movement Director

A bearded man in a tie
Anthony Ward

Set & Costume Designer

A woman wearing a fleece with her hair tied in a pony tail.
Paule Constable

Original Lighting Designer

A black and white portrait of a man with dark hair and a beard and moustache wearing a black hoodie.
Ben Jacobs

Lighting Designer

A close up of a woman
Kate Flatt

Original Movement Director

Peter Grimes
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