Skip to main contentSkip to navigation
People arrive at Glastonbury festival
People arrive at Glastonbury festival on Wednesday as heavy rain falls. Photograph: Adam Vaughan/EPA
People arrive at Glastonbury festival on Wednesday as heavy rain falls. Photograph: Adam Vaughan/EPA

Glastonbury 2023: festival officially begins amid torrential downpours

Wet weather forecast to ease by Friday, when there is doubt over whether headliners Arctic Monkeys will perform

The UK’s biggest festival has officially begun with the founder greeting attendees at the gates amid a burst of torrential rain. At this year’s Glastonbury festival, held on Worthy Farm in Pilton, Somerset, the headliners Arctic Monkeys, Elton John and Guns N’ Roses will perform on the Pyramid stage. More than 200,000 people are expected to attend.

“Welcome to Glastonbury,” the co-organiser Emily Eavis said, addressing thousands of queuing festivalgoers.

Speaking to the PA Media news agency, Eavis said it felt good to greet the crowd. “I love welcoming people in – it’s always my favourite moment.”

Michael Eavis, the co-founder of the festival, was seen in a red Land Rover near to where his daughter officially opened the gates.

Glastonbury founder Michael Eavis waves at festivalgoers
Glastonbury founder Michael Eavis waves at festivalgoers. Photograph: Oli Scarff/AFP/Getty Images

The festival has had a wet start, as heavy rainfall and showers began at Worthy Farm on Wednesday morning. A torrential downpour lasted for about 15 minutes from 11.30am before easing to slow, consistent rainfall, but forecasters are expecting wet weather at the site in Somerset to ease as the music begins on Friday.

Edyta Krzesak, 45, a music photographer from Minehead, Somerset, who is attending her eighth Glastonbury in a row, was caught in the heavy downpour in just a T-shirt.

“I would say it’s been the whole week in one day,” Krzesak said. “It’s been a fresh morning, kind of breezy. It was cold when I woke up, then it was extremely hot when I had my breakfast, then it kind of cooled down. Now look at me, I don’t have even my waterproof coat, I left them at my tent thinking I will not need them and I’m soaking wet.”

Tony Sharp and Kathy Sharp
Tony Sharp and Kathy Sharp. Photograph: Tom Leese/PA

Kathy and Tony Sharp, both in their 50s and from Liverpool, decided to attend the festival on a recommendation from their daughter. “Our daughter came last year for the first time, so she came home and was raving, and it’s on Tony’s bucket list,” Kathy Sharp said. “I think [her] experience made us more eager to try and get the tickets.”

There has been speculation regarding whether Arctic Monkeys will be able to headline the Pyramid stage on Friday as scheduled, given that the band cancelled a performance in Dublin on Tuesday due to Alex Turner having acute laryngitis.

Elton John, who will be closing the festival, said he was preparing to bring on several guest stars during his Sunday headline set, which could be his last UK performance.

More on this story

More on this story

  • Showers forecast for UK as festivalgoers arrive at Glastonbury

  • Sunshine, secret sets and Elton’s sendoff: Glastonbury 2023 prepares to open gates

  • Ragga-metal, Y2K R&B and folk legends: 30 acts to see at Glastonbury

  • Arctic Monkeys: Glastonbury 2023 headline set thrown into doubt by Alex Turner’s laryngitis

  • ‘I like to slag off the headliner’: what is it like to do standup at a music festival?

  • Glastonbury festival announces full lineup, adding Queens of the Stone Age, Skepta and more

  • Glastonbury’s blokefest of headliners is sloppy, slapdash … and very off-brand

  • Arctic Monkeys, Guns N’ Roses, Elton John: all-male Glastonbury headliners a ‘pipeline’ problem, says Emily Eavis

Most viewed

Most viewed