06-08-2010, 13:12
Building on the prologue that is Das Rheingold, this is four hours of love, death, honour, betrayal, & incest !!
The God Wotan has a number of illegitimate children; Brunnhilde the Valkyrie, Siegmund a warrior, & Sieglinde his estranged twin sister.
Siegmund is fleeing a band of warriors seeking revenge for the slaughter of some of their number. During a storm he seeks refuge in a house in the forest. Sieglinde lives there with her abusive husband Hunding. Sieglinde offers him hospitality, but when Hunding returns, he's not so sympathetic.
Hunding demands to know why Siegmund is seeking refuge. When Siegmund explains the situation it transpires that the slaughtered men belong to Hunding's tribe. Hunding tells Siegmund that he can stay overnight, but must be prepared to fight to the death in the morning.
Sieglinde has fallen for the hero, and has an inkling that Siegmund is her long-lost brother. She explains this to Siegmund, and they express their love for each other. Siegmund is unarmed, so Sieglinde describes a tree where a stranger thrust a sword many years ago. No-one has been able to remove the sword, but when Siegmund tries, the sword is pulled out of the tree. The two of them flee.
Wotan's wife Fricka is the Goddess of wedlock, and when she hears of Siegmund's part in breaking up Hunding & Sieglinde's marriage, she demands that Siegmund should be killed.
Wotan reveals that Siegmund is his son, and that he has been raised as a mortal hero since Wotan wants the golden ring (From Das Rheingold) back from the giant who now possesses it. Wotan is bound by Godly contracts so that he's not in a position to retrieve it himself, and Siegmund is to be his agent in returning the ring.
There's a furious argument, and Fricka's will prevails. Wotan speaks with his daughter Brunnhilde, and at first asks her to protect Siegmund in the forthcoming fight with Hunding. He then relents, and forbids Brunnhilde to intervene to protect Siegmund.
She finds Siegmund and informs him that he will die in battle, and that she will take him to live in eternal bliss in Valhalla. When he discovers that Sieglinde won't be able to accompany him, he declares his love for her in no uncertain terms, and tells Brunnhilde that he will not be vanquished. She realises that to allow him to die would be a blow against pure love, so she decides to help him, against her father's wishes.
The two enemies engage in battle, and Wotan appears, and kills both of them. Brunnhilde escapes with Sieglinde, and returns to the Valkyries. Brunnhilde knows that Sieglinde is pregnant by Siegmund, and that this child will one day be a hero himself, so she arranges for Sieglinde's flight to the forest in the east.
Wotan is furious at Brunnhilde's defiance, and chases her down. As a punishment, he will put her into a sleep which will only be broken when a man wakes her. This man will be her husband, and she will live a mundane, mortal life. Brunnhilde pleads that if this is to be the case, Wotan must surround her with a ring of fire, so that only a hero will be able to reach her. Wotan agrees, and the deed is done.
Magnificent stuff...