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Die Walküre at the Royal Opera House: ‘Wagner played to perfection’

Australian Jewish director Barrie Kosky whips up a perfect storm of brilliance in what is arguably the greatest opera ever written

May 8, 2025 17:46
Barrie Kosky's production of Die Walküre, The Royal Opera ©2025 Monika Rittershaus (1).jpg
Bullseye: the singers in this production of Wagner's Die Walküre not only sound wonderful, they can also act
2 min read

There is a strong case that Wagner’s Die Walküre is the greatest opera ever written. It has everything, from the broad sweep of the Ring cycle as a whole (it’s the second of the four) to the intimate passion, family drama (that’s putting it mildly!) and soaring music that expresses both the epochal themes of the Ring cycle and the personal elation – and anguish – of the characters.

But for every production that works, there are half a dozen that don’t. It’s rare to find a director who doesn’t have some half-baked political point to make, a conductor and orchestra who can do justice to the music and, crucially, singers who not only sound wonderful but can act. Thrillingly, this new Royal Opera production by Australian Jewish director Barrie Kosky hits every bullseye. In more than 40 years of seeing Wagner on stage, this new production is one of the very greatest. The sets are minimalist and grey; there are ashes everywhere. Kosky says the Australian bush fires were on his mind (and subsequently, doubtless, those in California). Earth is a character in this production, with the silent goddess Earth Mother, Erda, on stage almost throughout – naked. It sounds like a gimmick but it works.

What an orchestra! It is quite something hearing Wagner played with such elan and sweep

Act one, in which Siegmund (Stanislas de Barbeyrac) and Sieglinde discover their love (and that they are siblings) is ecstatic. Many Siegmunds bark their music, whereas de Barbeyrac has real ardour in his tone. But Welsh-Ukrainian soprano Natalya Romaniw’s Sieglinde is sensational; I’ve never heard the role sung with such pure beauty before. Romaniw was superb in the Royal Opera’s Festen and in Tosca before that. She is fast becoming one of the world’s leading sopranos. And it’s mind-blowing that she was only cast in March, as a replacement for the pregnant Lise Davidsen.

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Opera