The Munich Opera Festival’s opening night of *Die Walküre* last night was hailed as the hottest, longest and perhaps finest premiere in the festival’s history, according to Bavarian State Minister for Science and the Arts Markus Blume. Speaking to the *Tagesspiegel* on 26 June 2026, Blume described the production as “the most electrifying *Walkürenritt* ever staged in the English Garden,” marking a high-water mark for this year’s festival, which runs until 23 July .
The new staging, directed by Dmitri Tcherkasski and conducted by Oksana Lyniv, drew capacity crowds to the Nationaltheater, where temperatures soared above 30 °C. Festival organisers confirmed that the performance lasted 22 minutes longer than scheduled, with standing ovations for the principals, including soprano Elena Stikhina in the role of Brünnhilde. “The audience didn’t want to let go,” said a spokeswoman for the Bavarian State Opera. “We had to hold the curtain calls until the crowd stopped applauding.”
The production’s success comes amid broader cultural offerings in Munich this summer. The *Die Presse* culture guide for 27 June–23 July highlights the festival’s central role in a packed calendar that also includes open-air cinema in Schlosspark Nymphenburg and the continuing *Afterwork* summer series at Cobenzl Weitsicht in Döbling, which drew 2,500 guests on Thursday evening .
Minister Blume, who attended the premiere, linked the production’s triumph to Bavaria’s broader cultural ambitions. “This is what soft power looks like,” he told the *Tagesspiegel*. “We are showing the world that Munich can deliver world-class opera even when the thermometer is world-class too.” The festival’s organisers have already announced that the production will be streamed live to cinemas across Germany on 12 July.
Elsewhere in Europe, extreme weather disrupted major events: a historic heat warning in the Netherlands forced the cancellation of a large-scale festival, while in Estonia, the traditional student song and dance festival Gaudeamus opened in Tartu with 13,000 performers . Yet in Munich, the mercury and the music both reached new heights.
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