Speranza
I have
been expanding on the wiki for "Savoy opera", as per below (I have combined
both pieces with what the entry has as 'curtain raiser' and 'afterpiece'). An interest of mine is to
provide, if possible, cross-referenced allusions to 'continental' opera, as
it were, in terms of plot, style, or other. I notice, for example, that
one Savoy opera is by Italian composer Leoni -- a flop, alas. I have been
concentrating on "Savoy operas" _other_ than by Gilbert-and-Sullivan: some
lovely colloborations by Sullivan but not with Gilbert, and vice versa:
lovely collaborations by Gilbert but not with Sullivan -- and their 'heirs'
themselves in the categories of composers and librettists.
An expansion on the wiki entry for "Savoy opera":
--
The 'pre-Savoy' years: 1877-1880.
* "THESPIS" -- Sullivan. Libretto:
Gilbert. Score lost, but recreated.
* "TRIAL BY JURY" -- Sullivan.
Libretto: Gilbert. Tenor aria: very nice.
1877 * "SORCERER". Sullivan.
Libretto: Gilbert. Tenor aria: Love feeds on
many kinds
* "Dora's
Dream". Alfred CELLIER. Libretto: Arthur Cecil. Setting: A
drawing room in
a villa in Putney. Fred Fancourt, a stockbroker, courts his
cousin, Dora.
He seeks a comfy, capable, dumpy little wife. Dora, on the other
hand, has
begun reading great literature and declares that she will only
marry a
poet. They play charades, and Fred takes the opportunity to show that
poets
are impossible to live with, while Dora shows how insufferable
stockbrokers
can be to their wives. Both dreams shattered, and the couple agrees
to
part. Eventually, however, they make up and (presumably) get married and
live happily ever after. Roles and cast
included: Fred Fancourt, of the
Stock Exchange, played by librettist
Arthur Cecil and later by Richard
Temple -- and a voice outside, supposed to be
Dora's father, a servant's
voice outside (identified as that of Jennie
Sullivan in a programme
reproduced in Leslie Baily.
* "HMS PINAFORE, or the lass that loved a
sailor: a nautical opera".
SULLIVAN. Libretto: Gilbert.
* "Spectre
Knight, The". ALFRED CELLIER. Libretto: James Albery. Synopsis.
Scene - A
Haunted Glen. "Time: The educated will perceive; the uneducated
will not
require to know." The eccentric Grand Duke, with his daughter Viola
and the
remains of his court, has been banished and live in a lonely glen
where they
try to keep up the semblance of their former grandeur. Viola has
known no
other life and never seen another human being except those of
their party.
She is thus greatly delighted when the Duke's nephew Otho arrives
in the
glen disguised as a friar. Otho falls in love with his cousin at
first
sight, and having learned from her of the legend of the spectre knight
who
is supposed to haunt the glen, he appears in the disguise of the ghost.
He
wins Viola's heart and finally introduces himself to her as Otho who
has
just overthrown the usurper of her father's throne. He promises that they
can all go home again. The Duke consents to Otho's union with Viola, and
all ends happily. Musical numbers include: Recit. - Chamberlain --
"Potatoes
a pound and onions a rope..." Duke and Chamberlain -- "What
letters have
you brought from the Palace?", Duke and Chamberlain -- "Your
Grace, I am an
eligible Count...", Chamberlain and Duke -- "You may talk,
you may talk,
you may scold..." Otho -- "Said Cupid to me, come hither to
see..." Otho,
Viola and 1st. Lady -- "Pardon me, madam, I've a word to say
to this young
lady..." Duett - Viola and Otho -- "The little goldfinch in
her nest is but
a homely bird at best..." Replica of Duet -- "You should
not be long
alone..." Chamberlain and Duke -- "Fill up, and let us drink to
one another..."
Viola, 1st. Lady, Chamberlain and Duke -- "Too-whit,
too-whoo, too-whoo,
too-whit..." Entrance and Song of the Spectre - Otho
-- "I only mix with
ghosts well known..."
Lady, Chamberlain, Duke, Otho
& Pages -- "I am here... close at hand... at
your will..." Finale --
"He has come to our undoing..."Roles and cast.
The Grand Duke (banished at
the age of 40) (bass) – The roles included:
included: Frederic Clifton, The
Lord Chamberlain (banished at the age of 35)
(baritone) – Ghost ("The
Spectre Knight" - an Imposter, buried A.D. 1294).
* "Beauties on the
Beach" -- George Grossmith
* 'Silver Wedding, A" -- George
Grossmith
* 'Five Hamlets" -- George Grossmith
* "Cups and
Saucers" -- George Grossmith. SYNOPSIS: The recently widowed
Mrs. Emily
Nankeen Worcester and General Edwin Deelah intend to marry each
other,
feigning love, but each is secretly interested in the other's
purportedly
valuable collection of "rare" china, which they plan to sell upon
marriage.
Mrs. Nankeen Worcester is in her Morning Room anticipating a visit
from
General Deelah. She recounts how she came to own the single but highly
valuable item in her china collection ("A Friend Most Dear"), the sole
remaining saucer from Julius Caesar's favorite tea service, appraised at
ten
thousand pounds. General Deelah arrives, and, after some shy
conversation and
gentle flirting, the conversation turns to their china
collections. Mrs.
Worcester notes that she has but one small saucer and
inquires of the
General's china collection. Deelah boasts that he has a
very large collection of
china, but states in an aside, "--in China." He
quickly changes the subject
by asking, "Would it surprise you to learn that
I am related to the
Chinese?" He then sings of an extravagantly wealthy
Chinese merchant named Foo Choo
Chan who wished nothing more than to be
English ("Foo Choo Chan Was a
Merchant of Japan"). The relationship turned
out to be Foo Choo Chan's marriage
to the "sister of [Deelah's] brother's
second aunt, by an uncle on
[Deelah's] grandmother's side." Deelah
professes his love for Mrs. Worcester,
whereupon she pretends to have
fainted until she spots him snooping around for
her famed Julius Caesar
saucer. She then "recovers" and announces that
since she is Deelah's true
love, she can now reveal her most prized possession
to him. To Deelah's
horror, he finds that it is a counterfeit—of his own
make, which he admits
to Mrs. Worcester. To her horror, he also admits that
his own collection of
china is his own make as well. She orders Deelah to
leave, and Deelah sings
farewell, attempting to make her regret her decision
("The Farewell Song").
Deelah then admits that he never had any real
interest in china, but that
society had forced him "with the alternative of being
thought vulgar, to
pretend an affection for its inartistic, ugly beauties
at which [his] true
soul actually revolts!" Deelah further explains, A set
of vagabonds who
infest England have bought up every bit of Oriental ware,
are doctoring it
up, making it look dirty, cracking it, and then palming it
off on would be
fashionable folks as real oriental ware. One little town in
Japan had been
completely cleaned out of every cup and saucer, and the
poor Japanese were
compelled to drink their tea out of ink bottles and
blacking pots. I could
not bear to see this. So I started a firm for the
manufacture of English
china to supply to wants of the natives, and I flatter myself
I am doing
very well. General Deelah once again proposes to Mrs.
Worcester, who
agrees, and they decide to "give up old china and live in Japan, and
make
cups and saucers as fast as we can" ("We'll Give Up Old China and Live
in
Japan").Song List: My Little Saucer, Foo Choo Chan, The "Farewell
Song",
We'll Give Up Old China
* "After All!". ALFRED CELLIER. Libretto: Frank
Desprez. SYNOPSS: Selworthy
returns from many years in the Americas to seek
his youthful sweetheart
Perdita, and calls upon his old pal Pennyfather
only to discover that Perdita
is now Mrs. Pennyfather. He is heartbroken,
but on learning from his
friend what a henpecking, overbearing and
overweight woman his sweetheart has
now become, realises that he has had a
lucky escape and that he really can
forgive Pennyfather After All! Song
list: True, True Love! – Selworthy, The
Solicitor's Song: Up A Little Early
– Pennyfather, It's Missus – Maria,
Strictly Proper – Pennyfather and
Selworthy. Roles and original cast included:
Selworthy, created by Richard
Temple. Offstage voice – J. Hervey. The
offstage voice was originally
played by Jennie Sullivan, Arthur Sullivan's
cousin under the name J.
Hervey. The role is not mentioned after the first few
weeks or months of
the run. Jessie Bond in her autobiography mentions her
spoonerism "The
missus is having such a cow with the rabman", which comes
from this piece.
Jones Hewson played Selworthy in revivals.
* "PIRATES OF PENZANCE, or
the slave of duty. SULLIVAN. Libretto: Gilbert.
* "In the Sulks". Alfred
CELLIER. Libretto: Frank Desprez. SYNOPSIS: After
an argument, Mr. Liverby
is sulking and refusing to speak to his wife.
Mrs. Liverby decides to make
him jealous and writes a love letter to herself,
allegedly from a young
man. Mr. Liverby finds a love letter, but when he
learns it was a joke he
forgives her. However, the letter turns out not to be
the one Mrs. Liverby
had written, but another one written by a young man
who has been hanging
around the house for days trying to get an opportunity
to speak to her. She
is terrified, but her husband refuses to listen,
thinking that this is
another joke to try to make him lose his temper again, and
he is determined
to stay in a good humour. The young man eventually turns
out to be Mr.
Liverby's nephew who had been let go by Liverby's firm, and
who has merely
been trying to persuade Mrs. Liverby to put in a good word for
him. Mr.
Liverby agrees to reinstate his nephew, and all ends
happily.Musical
numbers. When George Temple left at the end of the run of Pirates, W.
H.
Seymour took over the role of Mr. Liverby.
* "Uncle Samuel". George
Grossmith. Libretto: Arthur Law. SYNOPSIS: Jack is
Samuel Crow's nephew,
whom he threw out of his house many years ago, and
who (unbeknown to his
uncle) has been brought up by the latter's friend Mr.
Daw. Daw has just
died, and has asked Crow to look after his frumpish
daughter Marjorie. Crow
lives with his niece Jenny, Jack's cousin with whom he
is in love, but from
whom he has concealed his true identity. Jack turns up
incognito at his
uncle's house on the Thames to hatch a plot to gain Crow's
consent to the
marriage. When Marjorie arrives, Jenny mistakes her for a
flame of Jack's.
Eventually Crow in a rage at Jenny's determination to marry
this unknown
man, decides to leave all his money, not to her but to his
nephew Jack whom
he thinks he has not seen for many years. He is mortified on
learning who
this young man really is. Musical numbers: Crow -- "What is
the good of a
name.", Duet - Jack and Crow -- "Is she dark or fair?" Jenny,
Margery, and
Jack -- "I'm caught, I'm caught, what an awkward
situation..." Finale - "At
last we've arrived at a happy conclusion..."The original
cast included Mr.
Samuel Crow, an old bachelor. Frank Thornton, John Bird
(alias Jack
Sparrow), role created by librettist, Arthur Law.
-- The Savoy Years.
1881 --
* 1881. * "PATIENCE, or Bunthorne's Bride" -- SULLIVAN. Libretto:
GILBERT.
Strictly, the first Savoy opera. The opera with which the Savoy
Theatre
opened.
* "Mock Turtles". Eaton Faning. Libretto: Frank
Desprez. SYNOPSIS: Mr. and
Mrs. Wranglebury quarrel like two tigers
whenever they are together. Things
come to a head when Mrs. Wranglebury's
mother comes unexpectedly to stay
with them. Mr. Wranglebury borrowed money
from his mother-in-law many years
ago to start his business, and he is
fearful that she may ask for it back.
They pretend to be very amiable and
discover that they really prefer being
amiable to each other and want to
live happily together. When the servant
Jane nearly spoils everything by
telling the mother-in-law of the quarrels,
she is branded a liar and sacked
on the spot. Musical numbers: "Oh! I hate
you, I despise you...", "I mean
to go about, my dears...", "I love you
so...", "We mean to see the
Abbey..."The original cast included Mr.
Wranglebury (tenor), created by
Courtice Pounds -- his first principal role with the
company -- (cfr. link
to him in S. M's post -- this thread). Arthur Law and
Eric Lewis each
replaced Pounds for part of the run.
* "IOLANTHE, or the peer and the
peri: a faery opera." SULLIVAN. Libretto:
Gilbert.
* 1883. *
"Private Wire, A". PERCY REEVE. Libretto: Frank Desprez.
SYNOPSIS: Philip
FitzStubbs loves Rose Frumpington who lives in the house on the
opposite
side of the street. Philip's father has forbidden the match and made
his son
promise not to see or write to Rose, but Philip has had a
telephone
installed so that they can talk. FitzStubbs senior hopes to marry Rose's
mother. Mrs. Frumpington, a spiritualist, is worried that her late husband
may disapprove of her marrying FitzStubbs. Visiting her daughter's house,
she is alone in a room and hears a voice evidently talking to her. It is
Philip, trying to talk to Rose by telephone, but Mrs. Frumpington assumes
it
to be the voice of her dead husband. She replies to the voice. Philip,
assuming that he is speaking to Rose, becomes increasingly agitated at the
strange answers he is getting down the wire, and eventually rushes across
the
street. All is explained, and finding that there is no spiritual
objection,
Mrs. Frumpington accepts Fitzstubbs's proposal, and the parents
consent to
the marriage of their children. The Roles and original cast
included:
Napoleon FitzStubbs – Eric Lewis, Philip FitzStubbs – Charles
Rowan.
* "Princess Ida, or Castle Adamant: a respectful operatic
perversion of
Tennyson." SULLIVAN. Libretto: Gilbert.
*"Mikado, or
the Town of Titipu". SULLIVAN. Libretto: Gilbert.
* 1886. * "The Carp".
Alfred CELLIER. Libretto: Frank Desprez & Arnold
Felix. Tenor role:
AMANDUS, created by Charles Hildesley. SYNOPSIS: In a
charming rural 17th
century setting, near a stream and rustic bridge, Piscator
arrives, looking
forward to a quiet day's fishing. He is interrupted by
Amandus, who wants
to commit suicide by drowning himself in the river. Piscator,
upset, tells
Amandus that he has, throughout his life, tried to catch a
particular carp
at this place. If Amandus throws himself in, he will chase
away the carp
and spoil a lifetime of work. Amandus, in turn, tells Piscator
of his
hopeless love affair. He promises to wait until after 6 PM, when
Piscator
must return home, before drowning himself. Amanda arrives, and she
wants to
commit suicide in the river, also over a hopeless love affair.
Piscator
tells her she must wait, and then goes up the bank, where he has seen
the
carp nibble at his line. Amanda tells Amandus about her plan to throw
herself into the river, but Amandus notes that he has already claimed the
pool for that purpose. Amandus's love is Clorinda, Amanda's dearest friend.
Amanda then gives Amandus information that casts Clorinda in a bad light.
She
also shows Amandus that Clorinda has given a very unflattering profile
of
Amandus in a letter that Clorinda wrote to Amanda. As the two continue
to
converse, Amanda finds out that her love, Corydon, is Amandus's best
friend.
Amandus reveals, however, that Corydon had paid off a gambling debt
to
Amandus by giving him Amanda's ring. He also relates some rather
unflattering
things that Corydon had told him about Amanda. Soon, the two
are no longer
enamoured of their former loves and are now in love with each
other. By the
time Piscator returns, neither of them wishes to commit
suicide any more.
Musical numbers: The Fisherman, at the Break of Day, I
Loved Her! Why does
azure deck the sky? It's really very hard, My heart is
doubly broken! –
Mem'ries, Finale – Mem'ries. (At the end of July 1886,
Amandus was taken over
by Charles Wilbraham).
* "Ruddygore, or the
Witch's curse. SULLIVAN. Libretto: Gilbert.
* 1888. * "Yeomen of the
Guard, the -- or the merry man and his maid."
SULLIVAN. Libretto:
Gilbert.
* "Mrs. Jarramie's Genie". ALFRED and François Cellier.
Libretto: Frank
Desprez. SYNOPSIS: The scene is the morning room of Mr.
Jarramie's house,
Harley Street, London. The Era printed this summary of
the plot in its review
of the first performance: Mr and Mrs Barrington
Jarramie are fashionable
parvenus who are elevating themselves in society
by the lever of politics.
Daphne, their daughter, is secretly engaged to
one Ernest Pepperton, an
enthusiastic young Radical, who has incurred Mr
Jarramie's dislike by his
unorthodox politics. Mrs Jarramie is anxious
about a very particular dinner which
she is going to give that day. She
has, by patience and diplomacy, secured
a duchess as her guest, and Elie
(Mrs Jarramie) condones her butler,
Smithers's, pilfering of his choice
imperial Tokay in order to keep him in good
humour on the great occasion. A
parcel arrives containing a present from
Daphne's sailor cousin, an ancient
lamp which he has sent as a bit of
bric-a-brac. Daphne thoughtlessly runs
out to get Smithers to clean the article,
and that worthy soon appears and
remonstrates with his mistress on the
subject, winding up by giving
"notice." It seems, however, that the real cause
of the resignation is that
Smithers has heard that Mr Jarramie is
"blackballed" for the Cerulean Club,
for which he had been put up. Mrs Jarramie loses
her temper, and mentions
the Tokay, and the butler spitefully leaves on
the instant, taking his
fiancée, the cook, with him. Mrs Jarramie is in
despair but rubbing the
lamp angrily, the room darkens, a vast cloud of smoke
fills the air and
Ben-Zoh-Leen, the Slave of Aladdin's Lamp, mysteriously
appears. After
mutual explanations, Mrs Jarramie engages him as cook and
butler combined,
for by his magic power he can change in a moment from one
character to the
other. In the twinkling of an eye he appears in the complete
dress of a
chef and goes about his business. Mr Jarramie comes down, and
opens his
letters. His Liverpool agents have sent him a combination safe, but
have
not forwarded the key word by which alone it can be opened. Finding the
lamp in an escritoire, he dusts it, and the Genie appears from the kitchen.
Mr Jarramie promptly engages him as an electioneering canvasser, and the
Slave has to make a change to the orthodox frock-coat and high hat of a
politician. Mrs Jarramie's jealousy, which has accidentally been aroused by
her
husband's late hours, is set aflame by the perusal of a telegram to him
which she opens. She mistakes the wording "Did you get safe in last night!"
and the female name which serves as a key-word to the safe, for a
communication from a lady; and when she finds that Mr Jarramie has taken
her chef
away to use him as a canvasser, she orders Ben-Zoh-Leen to take
her husband to
– Timbuctoo. He does so; and then Pepperton explains to Mrs
Jarramie the
facts of her error. Horror! Mr Jarramie must be brought back.
But Mrs
Jarramie has carelessly put the lamp in the combination safe, and
turned the
handle. Ben-Zoh-Leen cannot conscientiously obey any one not
"holding" the
lamp, and Mr Jarramie is in an uncomfortable position, as the
Genie amicably
placed him in the midst of a tribe of natives of
cannibalistic propensities.
After a certain amount of agony Pepperton finds
the letter containing the
key-word, the lamp is recovered, and Mr Jarramie
restored to the bosom of
his family, Pepperton pardoned, and the Genie is
given his freedom, and set
up in an oil and lamp business, his last service
being as a bald-headed and
highly respectable butler, to serve up the
dinner and announce "The
Duchess!" on which happy termination the curtain
drops. The roles and original
cast included Mr. Harington Jarramie –
Wallace Brownlow, Ernest Pepperton –
J. Wilbraham, Smithers, the butler –
Charles Gilbert, Bill, workman – Henry
le Breton, Jim, workman – A.
Medcalf, Ben-Zoh-Leen, the Slave of the Lamp –
John Wilkinson. Brownlow was
replaced by J. M. Gordon. Shortly after
opening, Le Breton was replaced by
Jesse Smith. In August 1889, Wilkinson was
replaced by A. Medcalf and
Bowden Haswell replaced Medcalf as Jim.
*"Gondoliers, the -- or the
republic of Barataria." SULLIVAN. Libretto:
GILBERT.
* 1891. *
"Nautch Girl or, The Rajah of Chutneypore" . EDWARD SOLOMON.
Libretto:
George Dance & Frank Desprez. Tenor role: Indru, the son of the
rajah
of Chutneypore--tenorCourtice Pounds. Tenor aria:When All the World Was
Bright, Love.
* "Captain Billy". François Cellier. Libretto: Harry
Greenbank. Tenor role:
Christopher Jolly (created by C. R. Rose). Synopsis:
Captain Billy has
been absent from Porthaven, his native village, for many
years. His relatives
do not know that he has been pursuing a very
successful career as a pirate.
A young foundling, Christopher Jolly (TENOR
-- role created by C. R.
Rose), visits the village to examine the parish
register in an attempt to find
his birth certificate. Billy returns to the
village on the same day and is
recognised by his brother Samuel Chunk.
Billy is reunited with his wife, who
is surprised to discover that she is
not a widow after all, and
Christopher Jolly discovers that he is Billy's
nephew, whom the old scoundrel had
"lost" in the Sahara Desert many years
before. Musical numbers: Song -
Christopher Jolly -- "Oh! it isn't very
nice when you fail...", Duet - Christopher
and Polly -- "When flowers
blossom in the spring...", Quartett and Dance -
Widow Jackson, Polly,
Christopher and Chunk -- "With beating heart I wait
to see...", Song -
Captain Billy, with Samuel Chunk -- "A pirate bold am
I...", Song - Widow
Jackson -- "I thought my dashing buccaneer..., Quartett
-- Polly, Widow
Jackson, Christopher and Captain Billy - "It's unpleasant,
mia cara...,
Finale - "By fate released at last...".
* 1892. * "Vicar of Bray, The".
Libretto by Sydney Grundy -- Music by:
Edward Solomon. Tenor role: Reverend
Henry Sandford, a curate –played in the
first Savoy production by Courtice
Pounds
* "Haddon Hall". SULLIVAN. Wiki has photo of Pounds as John
Manners.
Libretto: S. Grundy.
* 1893. * "Jane Annie, or the Good
Conduct Prize". ERNEST FORD. Libretto:
J. M. Barrie & Arthur Conan
Doyle. Tenor role: Tom, a press student,
created by Charles
Kenningham
* "Utopia Limited, or the flowers of progress. SULLIVAN.
Libretto: Gilbert.
* "Mirette". Music by André Messager. Libretto by:
Harry Greenbank &
Fred E. Weatherly (revised by Adrian Ross). Tenor
role: Picorin, a gypsy, in
love with Mirette (tenor) – Courtice
Pounds
* "Mr. Jericho". ERNEST FORD. Libretto: Harry Greenbank. The roles
and
cast included: Michael de Vere, Earl of Margate – George de Pledge and
later
W.H. Leon, Horace Alexander de Vere, Viscount Ramsgate (An Omnibus
Driver) –
Bates Maddison and later Sidwell Jones, Mr. Jericho (A Jam
Manufacturer) –
J. Bowden Haswell. The Musical numbers include: When Sunny
Summer Ripens
Corn – Horace, My Heart Goes Pit-a-Pat – Winifred and Horace,
My Smelling
Salts Get – Winifred, Lady Bushey and Horace, Jericho's Jams –
Mr. Jericho,
There Came to Maiden Innocence – Lady Bushey and Mr. Jericho,
Who, Alas!
Would Be A Peer? – Quintet, and Soon There Shall Ring. SYNOPSIS:
The Earl of
Margate has squandered his money, and so he lives in a cottage
and must do
his own gardening, while his son is reduced to working as an
omnibus
driver. After he crashes his bus one day, he and his father
commiserate over
their troubles. Horace believes that he will never be able
to win the love of
Winifred, Lady Bushey's daughter, one of his regular
passengers. Winifred
arrives at the cottage and reveals to Horace that she
loves him too. Lady
Bushey appears and, seeing the humble cottage, is
appalled that Winifred loves
"a commoner." She drags Winifred away, and
Horace is heartbroken. A
world-famous jam manufacturer, Mr. Jericho, shows
up looking for a lady friend.
Horace tells him that his father is very fond
of Jericho's Jams. Jericho
offers to pay Horace's father handsomely for
this customer testimonial, to use
it in advertising the jams. Jericho's
lady friend turns out to be Lady
Bushey. Now it is Winifred's turn to be
appalled. Jericho encourages Lady
Bushey to look favourably upon the
romance of Horace and Winifred, but Lady
Bushey repeats that her daughter
must marry a peer. When they meet, Jericho
recognizes the Earl and is
delighted to offer him a generous allowance in
return for his statement
about his love for the jam. Jericho also suggests that
Horace become a
partner in the jam firm, giving Horace the financial means
to marry
Winifred, and all ends happily as Jericho and Lady Bushey come to
a very
satisfactory arrangement.
* 1894. * "Chieftain, The". SULLIVAN. Libretto:
F. C. Burnand. Tenor
roles: Pedro Gomez (consulting lawyer, astrologer, and
keeper of the archives of
the Ladrones) (tenor) – Scott Russell, Count
Vasquez de Gonzago (A Spanish
Noble) (tenor) – Courtice Pounds.
*
"Grand Duke, The -- or the statuary duel". SULLIVAN. Libretto:
GILBERT.
* "Quite an Adventure". EDWARD SOLOMON. Libretto: Frank Desprez.
SYNOPSIS:
A young married lady, Mrs. Wallaby, living at Croydon, and always
in great
fear of burglars, is left alone meditating upon a little adventure
she has
had at Victoria Station. She had been to an entertainment, and from
excitement or fatigue had felt faint, when a benevolent young gentleman, a
stranger, came to her assistance. Arriving safely at Croydon, however, she
is
rather startled at receiving a visitor, no other than the gentleman who
had so
kindly rendered assistance. The stranger, after an apology for
troubling
her so late, ultimately explains that he cannot get into his
rooms, and is
locked out, the fact being that in his desire to hasten her
recovery he had
put his latch key down the lady's back. With many apologies
the gentlemen
requests Mrs. Wallaby to shake herself a little in order to
discover if she
is carrying the latch key about her, and with some
confusion the lady
consents, and after much comic gesticulation the key
eventually falls on the
floor. Meanwhile, poor Mr. Fraser, the benevolent
owner of the key, hears the
shriek and roar of the last train to London,
and the rain is coming down in
torrents. What is to be done? Mrs. Wallaby
has not the heart to turn him
out, and so, anticipating her husband's
speedy return, she supplies the
stranger with brandy and water, cigars, her
husband's slippers and dressing
gown, and leaves him. Mr. Fraser
accordingly makes himself comfortable, takes
off his wet coat, and wetter
boots, mixes a stiff glass of brandy and water,
and waxes enthusiastic
respecting the charming young wife. He, however,
first hangs up his
dripping clothes in the hall, but is speedily startled at
hearing
footsteps, and presumes this must be the burglar whose appearance
Mrs.
Wallaby so much dreaded. It is no burglar, but her own husband, who,
discovering a man in the house is terribly alarmed. Both the men are
desperately afraid of each other, and the situation serves for the
introduction of
an amusing duet. In the height of their excitement a
policeman enters. He
has been waiting for an interview with the cook, and
wonders that the siren
of the kitchen is so long in coming to meet him.
Curious to ascertain the
cause of the delay, he comes cautiously into the
house through the French
windows opening on the garden, and immediately
pounces upon the two men. Mr.
Fraser, the owner of the latch key, at once
gives the husband in charge; but
Mrs. Wallaby enters, and explains, and all
ends happily, the stranger
being invited to spend the remainder of the
night with them. The Savoy cast
was: Mr. Wallaby – Robert Rous, Mr. Fraser
– Henri Delplanque, Police Officer
– Albert E. Rees, and Mrs. Wallaby – Re
Stephanie.
* "Cox & Box". SULLIVAN. Libretto: F. C. Burnand. Roles:
James John Cox, A
Journeyman Hatter (baritone), John James BOX, A
Journeyman Printer
(tenor), and Sergeant Bouncer, Late of the Dampshire
Yeomanry, with military
reminiscences (bass-baritone). Box's Musical
numbers: Lullaby, "Hush-a-bye,
Bacon" (Box), Trio, "Who are You, Sir?"
(Box, Cox, Bouncer), Serenade, "The
Buttercup" (Box, Cox), Romance, "Not
Long Ago" (Box, with Cox), Gambling Duet,
"Sixes!" (Box, Cox), Finale, "My
Hand upon It" (Box, Cox, Bouncer).
* 1896. * "Weather or No". Bertram
LUARD-SELBY. Libretto: Adrian Ross and
William Beach. SYNOPSIS: The story
concerns two figures who come in and out
of a toy weather house according
to whether it is wet or dry, and so they
cannot meet. Nevertheless, the
couple fall in love and eventually wrench
themselves away from their
supports so that they may be together. The original
cast was: She. Emmie
Owen for the first week, then Beatrice Perry. He.
Scott Russell.
*
1897. * "His Majesty, or the court of Vingolia" -- Alexander Mackenzie.
Libretto by F. C. Burnand, R. C. Lehmann, & Adrian Ross. Tenor roles:
Count
Cosmo (Prime Minister and First Lord of the Admiralty) (tenor) –
Scott
Russell, Prince Max (of Baluria) (tenor) – Charles
Kenningham.
* "Grand Duchess of Gerolstein, The". Jacques Offenbach.
Libretto: Charles
H. Brookfield & Adrian Ross.
* "Old
Sarah". François Cellier. LIBRETTO: Harry Greenbank. SYNOPSIS: In
Dullport,
a dreary seaside town, out of season, Old Sarah sells sweets from a
stall.
She has only sold 2 ounces of acid drops and a pennyworth of mint
rock in 7
weeks. Simon smuggles rum as the only way to make an "honest"
living.
Because nobody has any money, they all hate Archibald Jones, the income
tax
collector, except his sweetheart Margery (Simon's daughter). Claude
Newcastle, the Chancellor of the Exchequer, arrives. By snooping around, he
discovers a lot of things about people's incomes. However, when he snoops
on
Sarah she locks him in a bathing machine and threatens to drown him in
the
sea. He is, however, rescued by Archibald, forgives everybody, and all
ends happily. The original cast was: The Rt. Hon. Claude Newcastle,
Chancellor
of the Exchequer. Jones Hewson, Archibald Jones, income tax
collector.
Charles Childerstone, Simon, a smuggler. Charles Herbert
Workman, Margery, his
daughter. Jessie Rose, and Old Sarah. Louie Henri
(Scott Russell took over
from Childerstone for some of the performances).
* 1898. * "Beauty Stone, The". SULLIVAN. Libretto: A. W. Pinero
& J.
Comyns Carr. Tenor role: Philip, Lord of Mirlemont, created by
George
Devoll. Tenor aria: "I Love Thee".
* 1899. * "Lucky Star,
The". "Ivan Caryll". Libretto: Charles H.
Brookfield, Adrian Ross, &
Aubrey Hopwood.
Tenor role: Tapioca, created by Evett. Tenor aria: "Dreaming
in the dark,
your vision comes upon my lonely slumber"
* "Rose of
Persia, The". Arthur Sullivan. Libretto: Basil Hood. Tenor
role: Yussuf, a
professional story-teller -- created by Robert Evett. Tenor
aria: "Our tale
is told".
* 1900. * "Pretty Polly". François Cellier. Libretto: Basil
Hood. SYNOPSIS:
A good-hearted young man, Charlie Brown, has been abroad for
some time. He
wants to propose to pretty Polly Grey, but he is shy. He
brings a talking
parrot to her apartment to say the words "Pretty Polly! I
wonder if she
ever thinks of me!", which he hopes will "break the ice" for
him, but he hides
the parrot until he can determine whether or not she
likes parrots. The
lady sees the parrot and overhears his planning. She
mischievously plays
hard-to-get, claiming to hate parrots, but she happily
accepts a bouquet of
flowers from Brown (although the flowers had actually
been sent by a rival,
Percy Green). Brown hopes to sneak out without
letting her know that he has
brought the parrot, but Polly gives him a
large dose of quinine to drink (as
he had tried to excuse himself on
account of tropical fever) and begs him
to tell of his travels. Just then
the bird squawks out "Pretty Polly!" and
Brown tries to cover again, saying
that he has learnt the skill of
ventriloquism in India. As Brown tries to
put the parrot's cage outside the window
surreptitiously, Polly "notices"
the parrot. Brown, thinking quickly, ties
Percy Green's card to the cage
and says that the parrot must have come from
Mr Green. Polly exclaims that
poor Freen must have sent it to her "to
break the ice for him! What a
clever idea!" Gathering his courage, Brown makes
the following speech:
Before I leave you for South Africa I must tell you
as an honourable man
that I have misled you. That is my parrot. Mr Percy
Green’s card was tied
to it by - by mistake. The voice you heard was not my
voice, but my
parrot's. The bird can talk, and I wanted it to say something
which I was
too shy to say myself. I meant it to break the ice for me. The
clever idea
was mine, not Mr Percy Green’s. Farewell! Polly then asks what
else he
taught the bird to say. Brown replies, "I wonder if she ever thinks
of
me!". Polly admits that the answer is "Yes". As Brown happily moves to
kiss
his pretty tormenter, she stops him: "One moment!" she covers up the
parrot. "Parrots talk, you know!" They kiss. The first Savoy Theatre cast
included Charlie Brown – Henry Lytton (who also played the Sultan in The
Rose
of Persia), From December 1900, the cast included: Charlie Brown –
Robert
Evett (who also played the Duke of Dunstable in Patience),
*
"Outpost, The". HAMILTON CLARKE. Libretto: Albert O'Donnell Bartholeyns.
The roles and original cast included: Walter – H. Carlyle Pritchard, Henry
– Charles Childerstone, Karl – W. H. Leon, Colonel – Edwin Bryan, Captain
– Powis Pinder/ J. Lewis Campion, Corporal – Iago Lewis [Lewys]. (Campion
played from 30 July to 11 August, while Pinder was substituting as the
Pirate King in Pirates. The touring cast included Fred G. Edgar, W. G.
Lennox,
E. A. White, R. A. Swinhoe, Fred Drawater, Bernard Fisher, Edward
L. Bishop
and, at times, Frank Robey. SYNOPSIS. Körner's original libretto
depicts a
young French soldier sent to guard the German border. He hates
military
life, deserts his post, crosses into Germany, marries a German
girl and lives
happily as a farmer. Four years later, war breaks out, and
the French army
crosses the border. The young man is recognised, arrested,
and charged
with desertion, a capital offence. He decides to claim that he
has been at his
post the whole time, but the French do not believe this
story and put him
before a court martial. He is saved by the intervention
of the French
general who gives him the benefit of the doubt and an
honourable discharge from
the army, and he returns to living happily as a
farmer. It is not known how
much, if at all, Bartholeyns altered the
original plot. The dramatis
personae of both versions are essentially the
same, with the addition of a
corporal in the English version. The names of
the heroine (Kate/Käthchen) and
her father (Walter/Walther) are merely
Anglicised.
* 1901. * "Emerald Isle, The -- or, The Caves of
Carrig-Cleena". SULLIVAN
and Edward German. Libretto: Basil Hood. Tenor
role: Terence O'Brian (a
Young Rebel) created by – Robert Evett.
*
"Ib and Little Christina". FRANCO LEONI. Libretto: Basil Hood. Tenor
role:
Ib, created by R. Evett.
* 'Willow Pattern, The". CECIL COOK. Libretto:
Basil Hood. Roles and cast:
Ah Mee, a maiden. Agnes Fraser, Hi Ho, her
lover. Powis Pinder, So Hi, her
father. Reginald Crompton, So Lo, his
friend. Robert Rous, Wee Ping, a rich
lady. Rosina Brandram, Ping Pong.
Walter Passmore, Tee Thing, his
grandmother. Jessie Pounds, Fee Fi, a poor
girl. Blanche Gaston Murray, and Fo Fum,
her lover. W. H. Leon.
EDWARDIAN OPERAS
* 1902. * "Merrie England". Edward German.
Libretto: Basil Hood. Tenor
role: Sir Walter Raleigh, created by Robert
Evett. Tenor aria: "Dan Cupid Hath
a Garden"
* 1903. * "Princess of
Kensington, A". Edward German. Libretto: Basil
Hood. Tenor role: Brook
Green, a Junior Clerk --created by Robert Evett. Tenor
aria: "A blue sky
and a blue sea" (the aria was replaced during the
original run, with the
song "Where haven lies").
* 1908. "Welsh Sunset, A": one-act opera.
Michael FARADAY. Libretto:
Frederick Fenn Philip. TENOR ROLE: Griffith
David, a young Welshman -- played by
Strafford Moss. Tenor arias: "Heart of
my soul" and "Hush't lies the land".
SYNOPSIS: Jenny and Griffith are in
love. Griffith has a great tenor voice
and has been singing an audition for
Covent Garden opera. It is evening,
Jenny and her mother are waiting
outside Mrs. Jones's Cottage on a Welsh
hillside for the boys to come home
from Bala. They are joined by the other
village girls. Griffith has been
successful, and when he arrives he tells
Jenny of the wonderful rich and
famous life that awaits her in London. Jenny
asks her lover to sing to her
before he goes home. She says, "I feel tonight
as though tomorrow wouldn't
come for years and years." Griffith sings to
her, saying that it is she in
his heart that makes him sing. When the song is
over, she appears to be
asleep, and he takes her hand, but it is lifeless.
He exclaims, "What's the
good of fame and money now? It was for her, and
now I can give her
nothing!"
* 1909. "Mountaineers, The". Reginald Somerville. Libretto:
Guy Eden. Tenor
role: Conrad, a rich man from the city -- created by A.
Laurence Legge.
Tenor arias: "Was it the sigh of a passing soul?" "Is the
love dead?"
* "Fallen Fairies; or, the Wicked World". Edward German.
Libretto: W. S.
Gilbert. The tenor roles are:
The Fairy Ethais (tenor)
– Claude Flemming[15]Sir Ethais, a Hunnish Knight
(tenor) – Claude
Flemming
* 1910. * "Two Merry Monarchs". Tenor: Roland Cunningham, with
soprano.
ORLANDO MORGAN. Libretto: Arthur Anderson, George Levy, &
Hartley
Carrick. Tenor role: Prince Charmis, Governor of Police -- created
by Roland
Cunningham (then C. Hayden Coffin). TENOR ARIA: "Love of my
life". Synopsis
Act I - A laburnum-hung Courtyard outside the Royal Palace
of Esperanto. A
tocsin-bell summons the populace, who rush out to hear the
king's herald,
Helvanoise, announce a new law: Kissing is now forbidden for
one year under
penalty of banishment. Those who wish to continue to kiss
must purchase a
kissing license from Rolandyl, the Post-Master General.
Princess Iris has
known about the law for the past three days because she
is engaged to the
Post-Master General. Princess Cynthia, King Paul's
adopted daughter, is in
love with Prince Charmis, the Governor of Police.
They agree to keep their
engagement a secret and do not get a kissing
license. The public is incensed
about the new law, and led by Caroline,
they protest the edict on the steps
of the palace. King Paul justifies his
decision to enact the law, and when
the crowd does not accept his argument,
he weeps them into submission.
King Paul tells his life story to Rolandyl.
Nine hundred years ago, King Paul
was an alchemist who discovered the
Elixir of Life, and when he drank it,
he became immortal. His bonehead
assistant stole some of the Elixir and
drank it as well. Twenty years ago,
King Paul betrothed the adopted daughter of
the late King to the King of
Utopia, who comes to Esperanto today to claim
his affianced bride. King
Paul has brought up Princess Cynthia on slow
poisons so that she may take a
heavy dose of poison without feeling the
effects. King Paul plans to get
her to kiss the King of Utopia, and he will
barter crown and country for an
antidote, then King Paul will rule throughout
the world.
Meanwhile,
Helvanoise is furious to learn that Iris has been flirting with
Rolandyl.
King Paul tells Cynthia about her betrothal, and when she begins
to cry, he
gives her an "extra special sweet" to make her feel better.
King Utops of
Utopia arrives, accompanied by Mandamus and the King's
Bodyguard. Princess
Cynthia is presented to him, and when he tries to kiss her hand,
Charmis
interrupts him and informs him that he must get a license before
kissing
anybody. Act II - The Reception Room inside the Royal Palace of
Esperanto.
Evening. Charmis has called in the constables to act as flunkeys in
case of
any disturbance this evening. He swears he will protect Cynthia from
King
Utops at any cost. Six ladies-in-waiting are late for the ball, so
Mandamus
will not admit them. They press Helvanoise to choose a girl from the
six of
them, but he declines to make a selection. The ballroom guests
appear with
Iris, who tells the ladies where they might get a kissing license,
even
though the men show no interest in purchasing one. Iris decides that
when
Cynthia and Charmis announce their engagement, she will announce her
engagement to the Post-Master General. King Utops works his charm on
Cynthia,
and when he moves to kiss her, Charmis interrupts them again.
Utops
produces his license - a license to sell wines and consume liquor on
the
premises! Utops complains to Paul that Rolandyl sold him the wrong
license, and
that he doesn't like Charmis hanging around Cynthia. King Paul
orders Rolandyl
to set up his office in the reception room and sell
licenses to the public.
Utops finally kisses Cynthia, but when Utops fails
to respond to the
poison, he admits that he was Paul's assistant when he
discovered the Elixir of
Life. The world isn't big enough for two immortal
kings, so they decide to
fight a duel, in which they drink from two glasses.
One is filled with
water, the other is filled with a liquid which makes the
drinker mortal. So
that there is no cheating, Charmis and Mandamus are
summoned to supervise the
duel. King Paul tells Charmis about the Elixir
and explains that he still
has a phial in his cabinet. Charmis is to get
the phial and bring to him at
once. Unbeknownst to them, Charmis mixed the
drinks while the kings were
blindfolded, and when they drink, they are both
in the cart. Charmis returns
with Cynthia and everyone, saying that they
drank the Elixir and will live
forever as King and Queen of Esperanto.
Mandamus is appointed King of
Utopia, Utops becomes his Lord Chief Justice,
and Paul becomes Charmis' Governor
of Police. Helvanoise is named the new
Post-Master General, and when
Rolandyl tries to speak to Iris, she reminds
him that she will marry the
Post-Master General, who is now Helvanoise. The
kissing law is repealed, and the
happy couples leave Rolandyl, Utops and
Paul disconsolate.
Thursday, October 4, 2012
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