Welcome to the Guardian's Glyndebourne season. Following our partnership last year in which we live-streamed Die Meistersinger and The Turn of the Screw live, we are again teaming up with the world-famous opera house to stream, completely free, six operas over the next 11 weeks.

We kick off on Sunday 10 June with Janacek's The Cunning Little Vixen streamed live from Glyndebourne. The curtain rises at 6.30pm, the interval is from 7.20pm to 7.50pm, the opera finishes at 8.50pm (all times BST). You can also watch the opera again on demand: it will be available until 22 June.

On 22 June you can watch Peter Hall's 2005 production of Rossini's comic opera Cenerentola from 6pm. The entire work will be available to view again until 22 July.

On 22 July we will be streaming Jonathan Kent's acclaimed 2009 production of the Fairy Queen by Purcell, which will be available to view again until 17 August.

The season finishes with, live from Glyndebourne, their eagerly anticipated new production of the Marriage of Figaro, streamed live from the opera house on Friday 17 August, and, two days later, we will also present Ravel's L'Heure Espagnole and l'enfant et les sortilèges as a double bill, live. These last three operas will be available to view again on-demand for a further week.

Picture galleries, behind-the-scenes videos, trailers, synopses, cast lists, musical guides, interviews, a quiz and our digested opera tweeting game (watch this space) and lots more about each production will be available ahead of each opera's screening, plus our critics will be live online before, during and after each opera to discuss it with you.

You can watch the live content on computers and laptops but not mobile devices as the live-stream is viewed through a Flash player. However the on-demand content can be accessed on any mobile or tablet device.

Bookmark theguardian.com/glyndebourne for all the latest information.