If you’re familiar with Shakespeare’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream, you’ll already be well acquainted with Britten’s version.

In 1959, Britten had given himself less than a year to compose a new opera in time for the reopening of the Jubilee Hall in Aldeburgh. Because of this, there was no time for a brand new libretto to be prepared, meaning that Britten’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream libretto sticks very closely to the play’s original script.

Britten and his librettist, Peter Pears, reduced Shakespeare’s five acts to three, and over 2000 lines by half (Britten was more than comfortable cutting down the play, ‘the original Shakespeare will survive’).

Surprisingly, even with all this editing, Pears added only one new line to Britten’s libretto, and cut just two characters, Egeus and Philostrate).

As in Shakespeare’s play, the characters are split into 3 groups; the Fairies, the Lovers and the ‘Rustics’ (as Britten liked to call them).

The character groupings are defined by the instruments:

  • ethereal sounds of the harp and harpsichord are notable in the fairy realm
  • romantic music that uses woodwind and strings can be heard in the lovers’ scenes
  • lower brass is prominent for the rustics