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[[Image:Sullivan-GS.jpg|right|thumb|[[Arthur Sullivan]]]]
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'''Gilbert and Sullivan''' refers to the [[Victorian era]] partnership of [[librettist]] [[W. S. Gilbert]] (1836–1911) and [[composer]] [[Arthur Sullivan]] (1842–1900). Together, they wrote fourteen [[comic opera]]s between 1871 and 1896, of which ''[[H.M.S. Pinafore]]'', ''[[The Pirates of Penzance]]'', and ''[[The Mikado]]'' are among the best known.<ref>Peter G. Davis, [http://nymag.com/nymetro/arts/music/classical/reviews/5596/ Smooth Sailing.] Retrieved November 6, 2007.</ref>
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[[Image:Gilbert-GS.JPG|right|thumb|225px|[[W.S. Gilbert]]]]
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[[Image:Sullivan-GS.jpg|right|thumb|225px|[[Arthur Sullivan]]]]
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'''Gilbert and Sullivan''' refers to the [[Victorian era]] partnership of [[librettist]] [[W. S. Gilbert]] (1836–1911) and [[composer]] [[Arthur Sullivan]] (1842–1900). Together, they wrote fourteen [[comic opera]]s between 1871 and 1896, of which ''[[H.M.S. Pinafore]],'' ''[[The Pirates of Penzance]],'' and ''[[The Mikado]]'' are among the best known.<ref>Peter G. Davis, [http://nymag.com/nymetro/arts/music/classical/reviews/5596/ Classical Music Review: Smooth Sailing] ''New York Magazine'', January 21, 2002. Retrieved September 21, 2018.</ref>
  
Gilbert, who wrote the words, created fanciful topsy-turvy worlds for these operas, where each absurdity is taken to its logical conclusion—[[fairy|fairies]] rub elbows with British lords, flirting is a capital offence, gondoliers ascend to the monarchy, and pirates turn out to be noblemen who have gone wrong.<ref name=Leigh>Mike Leigh, [http://books.guardian.co.uk/review/story/0,,1938719,00.html True anarchists.] Retrieved November 6, 2007.</ref> Sullivan, seven years younger than Gilbert, composed the music, contributing memorable melodies that could convey both humor and pathos.<ref>Gian Andrea Mazzucato, ''The Musical Standard'' (1899).</ref>
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Gilbert, who wrote the words, created fanciful topsy-turvy worlds for these operas, where each absurdity is taken to its logical conclusion—[[fairy|fairies]] rub elbows with British lords, flirting is a capital offense, gondoliers ascend to the monarchy, and pirates turn out to be noblemen who have gone wrong.<ref name=Leigh>Mike Leigh, [http://books.guardian.co.uk/review/story/0,,1938719,00.html True anarchists.] ''The Guardian'', November 4, 2006. Retrieved September 21, 2018.</ref> Sullivan, seven years younger than Gilbert, composed the music, contributing memorable melodies that could convey both humor and pathos.
  
Producer [[Richard D'Oyly Carte]] brought Gilbert and Sullivan together and nurtured their collaboration.<ref name=Carpet>Andrew Crowther, [http://math.boisestate.edu/gas/html/quarrel.html The Carpet Quarrel Explained.] Retrieved November 6, 2007.</ref> He built the [[Savoy Theatre]] in 1881 to present their joint works&mdash;which came to be known as the [[Savoy opera|Savoy Operas]]&mdash;and he founded the [[D'Oyly Carte Opera Company]], which performed and promoted their works for over a century.
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Producer [[Richard D'Oyly Carte]] brought Gilbert and Sullivan together and nurtured their collaboration.<ref name=Carpet>Andrew Crowther, [https://www.gsarchive.net/articles/html/quarrel.html The Carpet Quarrel Explained.] The Gilbert and Sullivan Archive. Retrieved September 21, 2018.</ref> He built the [[Savoy Theatre]] in 1881, to present their joint works&mdash;which came to be known as the [[Savoy opera|Savoy Operas]]&mdash;and he founded the [[D'Oyly Carte Opera Company]], which performed and promoted their works for over a century.
 
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The Gilbert and Sullivan operas have enjoyed broad and enduring international success and are still performed frequently throughout the English-speaking world.<ref>Bradley (2005).</ref> The collaboration introduced innovations in content and form that directly influenced the development of [[musical theater]] through the twentieth century.<ref name=PeterDowns>Peter Downs, Actors Cast Away Cares, ''Hartford Courant,'' October 18, 2006.</ref> The operas have also influenced political discourse, literature, film and television and have been widely parodied and imitated by humorists.  
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The Gilbert and Sullivan operas have enjoyed broad and enduring international success and are still performed frequently throughout the English-speaking world.<ref name=Bradley2005> Ian Bradley, ''Oh Joy! Oh Rapture! The Enduring Phenomenon of Gilbert and Sullivan'' (Oxford University Press, 2005, ISBN 978-0195167009).</ref> The collaboration introduced innovations in content and form that directly influenced the development of [[musical theater]] through the twentieth century.<ref name=PeterDowns>Peter Downs, Actors Cast Away Cares, ''Hartford Courant,'' October 18, 2006.</ref> The operas have also influenced political discourse, literature, film, and television and have been widely parodied and imitated by humorists.  
  
 
==Early history==
 
==Early history==
 
===Gilbert before Sullivan===
 
===Gilbert before Sullivan===
Gilbert was born in London, on November 18, 1836. His father, [[William Gilbert (author)|William]], was a naval surgeon who later wrote novels and short stories, some of which included illustrations by his son.<ref name=CrowtherLife>Andrew Crowther, [http://diamond.boisestate.edu/gas/html/gilbert_l.html ''The Life of W.S. Gilbert,''] The Gilbert and Sullivan Archive at Boise State University. Retrieved May 21, 2007.</ref> Gilbert was kidnapped by pirates at the age of two, but after the ransom was paid and Gilbert returned to his family, he settled into a rather unremarkable childhood.<ref name=answers>Answers.com, [http://www.answers.com/topic/gilbert-and-sullivan?cat=entertainment Gilbert and Sullivan.] Retrieved June 27, 2008.</ref> In 1861, the younger Gilbert began to write illustrated stories, poems and articles of his own to supplement his income. Many of these would later be mined as a source of ideas for his plays and operas, particularly his series of illustrated poems, called the ''[[Bab Ballads]]''.<ref>Stedman, p. 26–29, 123–24.</ref>   
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[[W.S. Gilbert]] was born in London, on November 18, 1836. His father, [[William Gilbert (author)|William]], was a naval surgeon who later wrote novels and short stories, some of which included illustrations by his son.<ref name=CrowtherLife>Andrew Crowther, [https://www.gsarchive.net/gilbert/life/long_bio.html The Life of W.S. Gilbert] ''The Gilbert and Sullivan Archive''. Retrieved September 21, 2018.</ref> In 1861, the younger Gilbert began to write illustrated stories, poems and articles of his own to supplement his income. Many of these would later be mined as a source of ideas for his plays and operas, particularly his series of illustrated poems, called the ''[[Bab Ballads]]''.<ref name=Stedman>Jane W. Stedman, ''W.S. Gilbert: A Classic Victorian and his Theatre'' (Oxford University Press, 1996, ISBN 978-0198161745).</ref>   
[[Image:Gentle Alice Brown.jpg|thumb|210px|left|One of Gilbert's illustrations for his ''[[Bab Ballads|Bab Ballad]]'' "Gentle Alice Brown"]]
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[[Image:Gentle Alice Brown.jpg|thumb|250px|right|One of Gilbert's illustrations for his ''[[Bab Ballads|Bab Ballad]]'' "Gentle Alice Brown."]]
 
In the ''Bab Ballads'' and his early plays, Gilbert developed a unique "topsy-turvy" style, where the humor was derived by setting up a ridiculous premise and working out its logical consequences, however absurd. [[Mike Leigh]] describes the "Gilbertian" style as follows:
 
In the ''Bab Ballads'' and his early plays, Gilbert developed a unique "topsy-turvy" style, where the humor was derived by setting up a ridiculous premise and working out its logical consequences, however absurd. [[Mike Leigh]] describes the "Gilbertian" style as follows:
<blockquote>With great fluidity and freedom, [Gilbert] continually challenges our natural expectations. First, within the framework of the story, he makes bizarre things happen, and turns the world on its head. Thus the Learned Judge marries the Plaintiff, the soldiers metamorphose into aesthetes, and so on, and nearly every opera is resolved by a deft moving of the goalposts… His genius is to fuse opposites with an imperceptible sleight of hand, to blend the surreal with the real, and the caricature with the natural. In other words, to tell a perfectly outrageous story in a completely deadpan way.<ref name=Leigh/></blockquote>
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<blockquote>With great fluidity and freedom, [Gilbert] continually challenges our natural expectations. First, within the framework of the story, he makes bizarre things happen, and turns the world on its head. Thus the Learned Judge marries the Plaintiff, the soldiers metamorphose into aesthetes, and so on, and nearly every opera is resolved by a deft moving of the goalposts… His genius is to fuse opposites with an imperceptible sleight of hand, to blend the surreal with the real, and the caricature with the natural. In other words, to tell a perfectly outrageous story in a completely deadpan way.<ref name=Leigh/></blockquote>
 
[[Image:Ages Ago.png|''[[Ages Ago]],'' during the rehearsals for which [[Frederic Clay]] introduced Gilbert to Sullivan.|thumb|300px]]
 
[[Image:Ages Ago.png|''[[Ages Ago]],'' during the rehearsals for which [[Frederic Clay]] introduced Gilbert to Sullivan.|thumb|300px]]
Gilbert developed his innovative theories on the art of stage direction, following theatrical reformer [[Thomas William Robertson|Tom Robertson]].<ref name=CrowtherLife /> At the time Gilbert began writing, theater in Britain was in disrepute.<ref>Jessie Bond, [http://diamond.boisestate.edu/gas/books/bond/introduction.htm The Reminiscences of Jessie Bond: Introduction,] The Gilbert and Sullivan Archive at Boise State University. Retrieved May 21, 2007.</ref>  Gilbert helped to reform and elevate the respectability of the theater, especially beginning with his six short family-friendly comic operas, or "[[German Reed Entertainments|entertainments]]," for [[Thomas German Reed]].<ref>Stedman, p. 62–68.</ref>
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Gilbert developed his innovative theories on the art of stage direction, following theatrical reformer [[Thomas William Robertson|Tom Robertson]].<ref name=CrowtherLife /> At the time Gilbert began writing, theater in Britain was in disrepute.<ref>[https://gsarchive.net/books/bond/intro.html The Reminiscences of Jessie Bond: Introduction,] ''The Gilbert and Sullivan Archive''. Retrieved September 21, 2018.</ref>  Gilbert helped to reform and elevate the respectability of the theater, especially beginning with his six short family-friendly comic operas, or "[[German Reed Entertainments|entertainments]]," for [[Thomas German Reed]].<ref name=Stedman/>
  
 
===Sullivan before Gilbert===
 
===Sullivan before Gilbert===
Sullivan was born in London on May 13, 1842. His father was a military bandmaster, and by the time Arthur had reached the age of 8, he was proficient with all the instruments in the [[band]]. In school, he began to compose [[anthem]]s and songs. In 1856, he received the first [[Mendelssohn Prize]] and studied at the [[Royal Academy of Music]] and at [[Leipzig]], where he also took up [[conducting]]. His graduation piece, completed in 1861, was a suite of [[The Tempest (Sullivan)|incidental music]] to [[William Shakespeare|Shakespeare's]] ''[[The Tempest]]''. Revised and expanded, it was performed at [[the Crystal Palace]] in 1862, and was an immediate sensation. He began building a reputation as England's most promising young composer, composing a symphony, a concerto, and several overtures, among them the ''[[Overture di Ballo]],'' in 1870.<ref>Arthur H. Lawrence, [http://diamond.boisestate.edu/gas/other_sullivan/lawrence/lawrence_1.html Interview,] ''The Strand Magazine.'' Retrieved June 27, 2008.</ref>
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Sullivan was born in London on May 13, 1842. His father was a military bandmaster, and by the time Arthur had reached the age of 8, he was proficient with all the instruments in the [[band]]. In school, he began to compose [[anthem]]s and songs. In 1856, he received the first [[Mendelssohn Prize]] and studied at the [[Royal Academy of Music]] and at [[Leipzig]], where he also took up [[conducting]]. His graduation piece, completed in 1861, was a suite of [[The Tempest (Sullivan)|incidental music]] to [[William Shakespeare|Shakespeare's]] ''[[The Tempest]]''. Revised and expanded, it was performed at [[the Crystal Palace]] in 1862, and was an immediate sensation. He began building a reputation as England's most promising young composer, composing a symphony, a concerto, and several overtures, among them the ''[[Overture di Ballo]],'' in 1870.
  
His early major works for the voice included ''[[The Masque at Kenilworth]]'' (1864); an [[oratorio]], ''[[The Prodigal Son (Sullivan)|The Prodigal Son]]'' (1869); and a dramatic [[cantata]], ''On Shore and Sea'' (1871). He composed a ballet, ''[[L'Île Enchantée]]'' (1864), and incidental music for a number of Shakespeare plays. Other early pieces that were praised were his ''[[Symphony in E, Irish|Symphony in E]],'' ''[[Cello Concerto (Sullivan)|Concerto for Cello and Orchestra]],'' and ''[[Overture in C (In Memoriam)]]'' (all three of which premiered in 1866).<ref>Marc Shepherd, [http://www.cris.com/~oakapple/gasdisc/sullorch.htm Discography of Sir Arthur Sullivan: Orchestral and Band Music,] The Gilbert and Sullivan Discography. Retrieved June 10, 2007.</ref>  These commissions, however, were not sufficient to keep Sullivan afloat. He worked as a church organist and composed numerous [[hymn]]s, popular songs, and [[parlor ballads]].<ref name=Turnbull>Stephen Turnbull, [http://diamond.boisestate.edu/gas/html/sullivan2a.html Biography of W. S. Gilbert,] Gilbert and Sullivan Archive. Retrieved November 22, 2006.</ref>
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His early major works for the voice included ''[[The Masque at Kenilworth]]'' (1864); an [[oratorio]], ''[[The Prodigal Son (Sullivan)|The Prodigal Son]]'' (1869); and a dramatic [[cantata]], ''On Shore and Sea'' (1871). He composed a ballet, ''[[L'Île Enchantée]]'' (1864), and incidental music for a number of Shakespeare plays. Other early pieces that were praised were his ''[[Symphony in E, Irish|Symphony in E]],'' ''[[Cello Concerto (Sullivan)|Concerto for Cello and Orchestra]],'' and ''[[Overture in C (In Memoriam)]]'' (all three of which premiered in 1866). These commissions, however, were not sufficient to keep Sullivan afloat. He worked as a church organist and taught to earn his living, as as well composing hymns and songs.<ref name=Turnbull>Stephen Turnbull, [https://www.gsarchive.net/sullivan/html/sull_biog.html Biography of W. S. Gilbert,] ''Gilbert and Sullivan Archive.'' Retrieved September 21, 2018.</ref>
  
Sullivan's first foray into comic opera was ''[[Cox and Box]]'' (1866), written with librettist [[Francis Cowley Burnand|F. C. Burnand]] for an informal gathering of friends. Public performance followed, with W.S. Gilbert (then writing dramatic criticism for ''Fun'') saying that Sullivan's score "is, in many places, of too high a class for the grotesquely absurd plot to which it is wedded."<ref>Roger Harris (ed.), ''Cox and Box'' (Chorleywood, Herts., UK: R. Clyde, 1999).</ref> Sullivan and Burnand followed their success with a second comic opera, ''[[The Contrabandista]]'' (1867).
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Sullivan's first foray into comic opera was ''[[Cox and Box]]'' (1866), written with librettist [[Francis Cowley Burnand|F.C. Burnand]] for an informal gathering of friends. Public performance followed, with W.S. Gilbert (then writing dramatic criticism for ''Fun'') saying that Sullivan's score "is, in many places, of too high a class for the grotesquely absurd plot to which it is wedded."<ref>Gayden Wren, ''A Most Ingenious Paradox: The Art of Gilbert and Sullivan'' (Oxford University Press, 2006, ISBN 978-0195301724).</ref> Sullivan and Burnand followed their success with a second comic opera, ''[[The Contrabandista]]'' (1867).
  
==Work==
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==Joint work==
 
===First collaborations===
 
===First collaborations===
====''Thespis====
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Gilbert and Sullivan's first collaboration gave little indication of the success that was to come their way. The two were first paired in 1871, when the manager of the [[Gaiety Theatre in the Aldwych]], John Hollingshead, commissioned the two up and comers for the production of a musical burlesque show. Titled ''Thespis,'' the show was rushed, actors were under rehearsed and over worked. In fact, the first performance ran an hour long, lines were forgotten, and booing could be heard when it finally ended.<ref name=telegraph>Rupert Christiansen, [https://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/theatre/3671639/Thespis-When-Gilbert-met-Sullivan.html Thespis: When Gilbert met Sullivan.] ''The Telegraph'', March 6, 2008. Retrieved September 21, 2018.</ref>
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And yet, the musical showed elements common in future Gilbert and Sullivan plays, particularly the ridiculous premise (in this case, the classic Greek and Roman deities go on vacation, leaving a troupe of actors in charge of [[Mount Olympus]]). Despite the fact that the show starred two big names of the time, [[J.L. Toole]] and [[Nellie Farren]], it opened to mixed reviews; however, it did manage a modest ten-week run.<ref name=telegraph/>
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Gilbert and Sullivan would not be paired together for another three years, until they were commissioned to write ''Trial by Jury.''
  
====''Trial by Jury''====
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In 1874, Gilbert wrote a short libretto on commission from producer–composer [[Carl Rosa]], whose wife would have played the leading role, but her death in [[childbirth]] canceled the project and left the libretto an orphan. Not long afterwards, [[Richard D'Oyly Carte]] was managing the [[Royalty Theatre]], and he needed a short opera to be played as an after piece to [[Jacques Offenbach|Offenbach]]'s ''[[La Périchole]]''. Gilbert already had available the libretto he had written for Rosa, and Carte suggested that Sullivan write the score. The composer was delighted with it, and ''[[Trial by Jury]]'' was composed in a matter of weeks.
In 1874, Gilbert wrote a short libretto on commission from producer–composer [[Carl Rosa]], whose wife would have played the leading role, but her death in childbirth cancelled the project and left the libretto an orphan. Not long afterwards, [[Richard D'Oyly Carte]] was managing the [[Royalty Theatre]], and he needed a short opera to be played as an afterpiece to [[Jacques Offenbach|Offenbach]]'s ''[[La Périchole]]''. Gilbert already had available the libretto he had written for Rosa, and Carte suggested that Sullivan write the score. The composer was delighted with it, and ''[[Trial by Jury]]'' was composed in a matter of weeks.<ref>Barker, John W. [http://www.madisonsavoyards.org/Public/reference/gsbio.html "Gilbert and Sullivan"], Madison Savoyards, Ltd., Retrieved on [[2007-05-21]], quotes Sullivan's recollection of Gilbert reading the libretto of ''Trial by Jury'' to him: "As soon as he had come to the last word he closed up the manuscript violently, apparently unconscious of the fact that he had achieved his purpose so far as I was concerned, in as much as I was screaming with laughter the whole time."</ref> 
 
[[Image:Trial by Jury - Chaos in the Courtroom.png|thumb|left|340px|D. H. Friston's engraving of the original production of ''[[Trial by Jury]]'']]
 
The piece is one of Gilbert's humorous spoofs of the law and the legal profession, based on his brief experience as a [[barrister]]. It concerns a [[breach of promise]] of marriage suit. The defendant argues that damages should be slight, since "he is such a very bad lot," while the plaintiff argues that she loves the defendant fervently and seeks "substantial damages." After much argument, the judge resolves the case by marrying the lovely plaintiff himself. With Sullivan's brother, [[Fred Sullivan|Fred]], as the Learned Judge, the opera was a runaway hit, outlasting the run of ''La Périchole''. Provincial tours and productions at other theatres quickly followed.<ref>Walbrook, H. M. (1922), [http://diamond.boisestate.edu/gas/books/walbrook/chap3.html ''Gilbert and Sullivan Opera, a History and Comment'' (Chapter 3).] The Gilbert and Sullivan Archive at Boise State University,  Retrieved on [[2007-05-21]].</ref>
 
  
Fred Sullivan was the prototype for the "[[patter song|patter]]" (comic) [[baritone]] roles in the later operas. [[F. C. Burnand]] wrote that he "was one of the most naturally ''comic little men'' I ever came across. He, too, was a first-rate practical musician... As he was the most absurd person, so was he the very kindliest..."<ref>Ayer p. 408</ref>  Fred's creation would serve as a model for the rest of the collaborators' works, and each of them has a crucial ''comic little man'' role, as Burnand had put it.  The "patter" baritone (or "principal comedian", as these roles later were called) would often assume the leading role in Gilbert and Sullivan's comic operas, and was usually allotted the speedy [[patter song]]s.
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The piece is one of Gilbert's humorous spoofs of the law and the legal profession, based on his brief experience as a [[barrister]]. It concerns a [[breach of promise]] of marriage suit. The defendant argues that damages should be slight, since "he is such a very bad lot," while the plaintiff argues that she loves the defendant fervently and seeks "substantial damages." After much argument, the judge resolves the case by marrying the lovely plaintiff himself. With Sullivan's brother, [[Fred Sullivan|Fred]], as the Learned Judge, the opera was a runaway hit, outlasting the run of ''La Périchole''. Provincial tours and productions at other theaters quickly followed.<ref>H.M. Walbrook, [https://www.gsarchive.net/books/walbrook/chap3.html Gilbert and Sullivan Opera, a History and Comment (Chapter 3),] ''The Gilbert and Sullivan Archive''. Retrieved September 21, 2018.</ref>
  
After the success of ''Trial by Jury'', Gilbert and Sullivan were suddenly in demand to write more operas together. Over the next two years, Richard D'Oyly Carte was one of several theatrical managers who negotiated with the team but were unable to come to terms. Carte also proposed a revival of ''Thespis'' for the 1875 Christmas season, which Gilbert and Sullivan would have revised, but he was unable to obtain financing for the project.
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After the success of ''Trial by Jury,'' Gilbert and Sullivan were suddenly in demand to write more operas together. Over the next two years, Richard D'Oyly Carte was one of several theatrical managers who negotiated with the team but were unable to come to terms. Carte also proposed a revival of ''Thespis'' for the 1875 Christmas season, which Gilbert and Sullivan would have revised, but he was unable to obtain financing for the project.
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===''Sorcerer'' to ''Pirates''===
 
===''Sorcerer'' to ''Pirates''===
====''Sorcerer====
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====''Sorcerer''====
Carte's real ambition was to develop an English form of light opera that would displace the bawdy [[burlesque (genre)|burlesques]] and badly translated French [[operetta]]s then dominating the London stage. He assembled a syndicate and formed the Comedy Opera Company, with Gilbert and Sullivan commissioned to write a comic opera that would serve as the centrepiece for an evening's entertainment.
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Carte's real ambition was to develop an English form of light opera that would displace the bawdy [[burlesque (genre)|burlesques]] and badly translated French [[operetta]]s then dominating the London stage. He assembled a syndicate and formed the Comedy Opera Company, with Gilbert and Sullivan commissioned to write a comic opera that would serve as the centerpiece for an evening's entertainment.
  
[[Image:Sorc-Pin-Trial.jpg|thumb|360px|An early poster showing scenes from ''The Sorcerer'', ''Pinafore'', and ''Trial by Jury'']]
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[[Image:Sorc-Pin-Trial.jpg|thumb|250px|An early poster showing scenes from ''The Sorcerer,'' ''Pinafore,'' and ''Trial by Jury.'']]
Gilbert found a subject in one of his own short stories, "The Elixir of Love," which concerned the complications arising when a love potion is distributed to all the residents of a small village. The leading character was a [[Cockney]] businessman who happened to be a sorcerer, a purveyor of blessings (not much called for) and curses (very popular). Gilbert and Sullivan were tireless taskmasters, seeing to it that ''[[The Sorcerer]]'' opened as a fully polished production, in marked contrast to the under-rehearsed ''Thespis''.<ref>[http://math.boisestate.edu/gas/sorcerer/html/index.html ''The Sorcerer''] at The Gilbert and Sullivan ArchiveRetrieved on [[2007-05-21]].</ref>  While ''The Sorcerer'' won critical acclaim, it did not duplicate the success of ''Trial by Jury''. Nevertheless, Carte and his syndicate were sufficiently encouraged to commission another full-length opera from the team.
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Gilbert found inspiration in one of his own short stories, "The Elixir of Love," which concerned the complications arising when a love potion is distributed to all the residents of a small village. The leading character was a [[Cockney]] businessman who happened to be a sorcerer, a purveyor of blessings (not much called for) and curses (very popular). Gilbert and Sullivan were tireless taskmasters, seeing to it that ''[[The Sorcerer]]'' opened as a fully polished production, in marked contrast to the under-rehearsed ''Thespis.''<ref>[https://www.gsarchive.net/sorcerer/html/index.html The Sorcerer] ''Gilbert and Sullivan Archive''. Retrieved September 21, 2018.</ref>  While ''The Sorcerer'' won critical acclaim, it did not duplicate the success of ''Trial by Jury''. Nevertheless, Carte and his syndicate were sufficiently encouraged to commission another full-length opera from the team.
  
 
====''H.M.S. Pinafore''====
 
====''H.M.S. Pinafore''====
Gilbert and Sullivan scored their first international hit with ''[[H.M.S. Pinafore]]'' (1878), satirising the rise of unqualified people to positions of authority and poking good-natured fun at the Royal Navy and the English obsession with social status (building on a theme introduced in ''The Sorcerer'', love between members of different social classes). As with many of the Gilbert and Sullivan operas, a surprise twist changes everything dramatically near the end of the story.
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Gilbert and Sullivan scored their first international hit with ''[[H.M.S. Pinafore]]'' (1878), satirizing the rise of unqualified people to positions of authority and poking good-natured fun at the Royal Navy and the English obsession with social status (building on a theme introduced in ''The Sorcerer,'' love between members of different social classes). As with many of the Gilbert and Sullivan operas, a surprise twist changes everything dramatically near the end of the story.
  
Gilbert oversaw the designs of sets and costumes, and he directed the performers on stage.<ref>Gilbert was strongly influenced by the innovations in 'stagecraft', now called stage direction, by the playwrights [[James Planche]] and especially [[Thomas William Robertson|Tom Robertson]].  See Gilbert, W. S., [http://diamond.boisestate.edu/gas/html/stage_play.html ''A Stage Play'']; and Bond, Jessie, [http://diamond.boisestate.edu/gas/books/bond/introduction.htm Introduction], etc.</ref> He sought realism in acting, shunned self-conscious interaction with the audience, and insisted on a standard of characterisation where the characters were never aware of their own absurdity.<ref name=Cox>Cox-Ife, William. ''W. S. Gilbert: Stage Director''. Dobson, 1978 ISBN 0-234-77206-9.</ref>  Gilbert insisted that his actors know their words perfectly and obey his stage directions, which was something new to many actors of the day.<ref name=Cox/> Sullivan personally oversaw the musical preparation. The result was a new crispness and polish in the English musical theatre.<ref>"That Gilbert was a good director is not in doubt. He was able to extract from his actors natural, clear performances, which served the Gilbertian requirements of outrageousness delivered straight."[http://books.guardian.co.uk/review/story/0,,1938719,00.html [[Mike Leigh]] interview]</ref><ref>Baily, p. 335</ref>  As [[Jessie Bond]] wrote later:
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Gilbert oversaw the designs of sets and costumes, and he directed the performers on stage. Sullivan personally oversaw the musical preparation. The result was a new crispness and polish in the English musical theater.<ref>Leslie Baily, ''The Gilbert and Sullivan Book'' (London: Spring Books, 1966).</ref>  
{{cquote|Our stage discipline was strict and unbending. Gilbert's word was law; he thoroughly worked out in his own mind every bit of action, by-play and grouping, and allowed no deviation from his plan. He... made drawings and took measurements with the minutest care....  He had unlimited fertility of invention in comic business and would allow no gag, no clowning, no departure from his own definite conception.  Sullivan's musical conception was equally clear-cut and decided. Every part must be made subservient to the whole, and his sarcasms overwhelmed the transgressor with scorn. "And now, might I trouble you to try over my music," he would say to a singer too anxious to display his or her top notes.  But there was nothing to hurt or offend us in this unswerving discipline, we took their good-humoured raillery as our due when we failed in our rendering or overstepped the bounds; and the patience and enthusiasm of that artistic pair so infected all of us that we worked willingly for hours and hours at rehearsals, trying with all our might to realize the conceptions of those two brilliant minds.<ref>[http://math.boisestate.edu/gas/books/bond/chapter04.htm ''The Reminiscences of Jessie Bond'', Chapter 4 (1930)]</ref>}}
 
  
''H.M.S. Pinafore'' ran in London for 571 performances,<ref>Bradley (1996), p. 115</ref> the second longest run of any musical theatre piece in history up to that time (after the [[operetta]] ''[[Les cloches de Corneville]]'').<ref>[http://www.dgillan.screaming.net/stage/th-longr.html List of longest running London shows up to 1920]</ref>  Hundreds of unauthorized, or "pirated", productions of ''Pinafore'' appeared in America.<ref>Rosen, Zvi S. [http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=963540 The Twilight of the Opera Pirates: A Prehistory of the Right of Public Performance for Musical Compositions.] ''Cardozo Arts & Entertainment Law Journal'', Vol. 24, 2007.  Retrieved on [[2007-05-21]].  See also Prestige, Colin.  "D'Oyly Carte and the Pirates", a paper presented at the International Conference of G&S held at the [[University of Kansas]], May 1970</ref>  During the run of ''Pinafore'', Richard D'Oyly Carte split up with his former investors. The disgruntled former partners, who had each invested in the production with no return, staged a public fracas, sending a group of thugs to seize the scenery during a performance. Stagehands successfully managed to ward off their backstage attackers.<ref>[http://www.dgillan.screaming.net/stage/th-opcom.html Article about the fracas during ''Pinafore'' at the Opera Comique]</ref> This event cleared the way for Carte, Gilbert and Sullivan to form the D'Oyly Carte Opera Company, which then produced all of their succeeding operas.
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''H.M.S. Pinafore'' ran in London for 571 performances.<ref>Ian Bradley, ''The Complete Annotated Gilbert and Sullivan'' (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1996, ISBN 978-0198165033).</ref>  Hundreds of unauthorized, or "pirated," productions of ''Pinafore'' appeared in America, where the show was exceptionally popular.<ref name=telegraph/>  
  
The libretto of ''H.M.S. Pinafore'' relied on [[stock character]] types, many of which were familiar from European opera (and some of which grew out of Gilbert's earlier association with the German Reeds): the heroic protagonist ([[tenor]]) and his love-interest ([[soprano]]); the older woman with a secret or a sharp tongue ([[contralto]]); the baffled lyric [[baritone]]&mdash;the girl's father; and a classic villain ([[bass-baritone]]). Gilbert and Sullivan added the element of the comic [[patter song|patter-singing character]]. With the success of ''H.M.S. Pinafore'', the D'Oyly Carte repertory and production system was cemented, and each opera would make use of these stock character types. Before ''The Sorcerer'', Gilbert had constructed his plays around the established stars of whatever theatre he happened to be writing for, as had been the case with ''Thespis'' and ''Trial by Jury''. Building on the team he had assembled for ''The Sorcerer'', Gilbert no longer hired stars; he created them. He and Sullivan selected the performers, writing their operas for ensemble casts rather than individual stars.
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The libretto of ''H.M.S. Pinafore'' relied on [[stock character]] types, many of which were familiar from European opera (and some of which grew out of Gilbert's earlier association with the German Reeds): The heroic protagonist ([[tenor]]) and his love-interest ([[soprano]]); the older woman with a secret or a sharp tongue ([[contralto]]); the baffled lyric [[baritone]]&mdash;the girl's father; and a classic villain ([[bass-baritone]]). Gilbert and Sullivan added the element of the comic [[patter song|patter-singing character]]. With the success of ''H.M.S. Pinafore,'' the D'Oyly Carte repertory and production system was cemented, and each opera would make use of these stock character types. Before ''The Sorcerer,'' Gilbert had constructed his plays around the established stars of whatever theater he happened to be writing for, as had been the case with ''Thespis'' and ''Trial by Jury''. Building on the team he had assembled for ''The Sorcerer,'' Gilbert no longer hired stars; he created them. He and Sullivan selected the performers, writing their operas for ensemble casts rather than individual stars.
  
The repertory system ensured that the comic patter character who performed the role of the sorcerer, John Wellington Wells, would become the ruler of the Queen's navy as Sir Joseph Porter in ''[[H.M.S. Pinafore]]'', then join the army as Major-General Stanley in ''[[The Pirates of Penzance]]'', and so on. Similarly, Mrs. Partlet in ''The Sorcerer'' transformed into Little Buttercup in ''Pinafore'', then into Ruth, the piratical maid-of-all-work in ''Pirates''. Relatively unknown performers whom Gilbert and Sullivan engaged early in the collaboration would stay with the company for many years, becoming stars of the Victorian stage. These included [[George Grossmith]], the principal comic; [[Rutland Barrington]], the lyric baritone; [[Richard Temple (opera singer)|Richard Temple]], the bass-baritone; and [[Jessie Bond]], the [[mezzo-soprano]] [[soubrette]].
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The repertory system ensured that the comic patter character who performed the role of the sorcerer, John Wellington Wells, would become the ruler of the Queen's navy as Sir Joseph Porter in ''[[H.M.S. Pinafore]],'' then join the army as Major-General Stanley in ''[[The Pirates of Penzance]]'', and so on. Similarly, Mrs. Partlet in ''The Sorcerer'' transformed into Little Buttercup in ''Pinafore'', then into Ruth, the piratical maid-of-all-work in ''Pirates''. Relatively unknown performers whom Gilbert and Sullivan engaged early in the collaboration would stay with the company for many years, becoming stars of the Victorian stage. These included [[George Grossmith]], the principal comic; [[Rutland Barrington]], the lyric baritone; [[Richard Temple (opera singer)|Richard Temple]], the bass-baritone; and [[Jessie Bond]], the [[mezzo-soprano]] [[soubrette]].
  
====The Pirates of Penzance====
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====''The Pirates of Penzance''====
[[Image:Pirate King1.jpg|left|thumb|200px|''[[The Pirates of Penzance|The Pirate King]]'']]''[[The Pirates of Penzance]]'' (New Year's eve, 1879), conceived in a fit of pique at the [[United States|American]] [[copyright]] pirates,<ref>[http://www.edwardsamuels.com/illustratedstory/isc10.htm Article about copyright pirating, focusing on Gilbert, Sullivan and Carte's efforts]</ref> also poked fun at [[grand opera]] conventions, sense of duty, family obligation, the "respectability" of civilisation and the peerage, and the relevance of a liberal education. The story also revisits ''Pinafore'''s theme of unqualified people in positions of authority, in the person of the [[Major General's Song|"modern Major-General"]] who has up-to-date knowledge about everything except the military. The Major-General and his many daughters escape from the tender-hearted Pirates of Penzance, who are all orphans, on the false plea that he is an orphan himself. The pirates learn of the deception and re-capture the Major-General, but when it is revealed that the pirates are all [[peerage|peers]], the Major-General bids them: "resume your ranks and legislative duties, and take my daughters, all of whom are beauties!"
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''[[The Pirates of Penzance]],'' conceived in a fit of pique at the [[United States|American]] [[copyright]] pirates, also poked fun at [[grand opera]] conventions, sense of duty, family obligation, the "respectability" of civilization and the peerage, and the relevance of a liberal education. The story also revisits ''Pinafore'''s theme of unqualified people in positions of authority, in the person of the [[Major General's Song|"modern Major-General"]] who has up-to-date knowledge about everything except the military. The Major-General and his many daughters escape from the tender-hearted Pirates of Penzance, who are all orphans, on the false plea that he is an orphan himself. The pirates learn of the deception and re-capture the Major-General, but when it is revealed that the pirates are all [[peerage|peers]], the Major-General bids them: "Resume your ranks and legislative duties, and take my daughters, all of whom are beauties!"
  
The piece premiered first in New York rather than London, in an (unsuccessful) attempt to secure the American copyright, and was another big success with both critics and audiences.<ref>[http://www.savoyoperas.org.uk/pirates/pp2.html Transcription of an opening night review in New York]</ref>  Gilbert, Sullivan and Carte tried for many years to control the American performance copyrights over their operas, without success.<ref>[http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=963540 Article on the pirating of G&S operas (and other works) and the development of performance copyrights]</ref>  Nevertheless, ''Pirates'' was a hit in both New York, again spawning numerous imitators, and then in London, and it became one of the most frequently performed, translated and parodied Gilbert and Sullivan works, also enjoying a successful 1981 [[Broadway theatre|Broadway]] revival by [[Joseph Papp]].
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The piece premiered first in New York rather than London, in an (unsuccessful) attempt to secure the American copyright, and was another big success with both critics and audiences.<ref>Savoy Operas, [http://www.savoyoperas.org.uk/pirates/pp2.html Transcription of an opening night review in New York.] January, 1880. Retrieved September 21, 2018.</ref>  Gilbert, Sullivan, and Carte tried for many years to control the American performance copyrights over their operas, without success.<ref>Zvi S. Rosen, [http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=963540 The Twilight of the Opera Pirates: A Prehistory of the Right of Public Performance for Musical Compositions] ''Cardozo Arts & Entertainment Law Journal'' 24 (2007). Retrieved September 21, 2018.</ref>
  
In 1880, Sullivan wrote the [[cantata]] ''[[The Martyr of Antioch]]'', presented at the [[Leeds]] Triennial Music Festival, with a libretto modified by Gilbert from an 1822 epic poem by [[Henry Hart Milman]] concerning the martyrdom of [[Margaret the Virgin|St. Margaret of Antioch]] in the 3rd century.  Sullivan became the conductor of the Leeds festival beginning in 1880 and conducted the performance.  It could be said that ''Martyr'' was the 15th opera of the partnership, since the [[Carl Rosa Opera Company]] presented the work as an opera in 1898.<ref>[http://math.boisestate.edu/GaS/other_sullivan/martyr/index.html Web page devoted to ''Martyr'' at the Gilbert and Sullivan Archive]</ref>
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===Savoy Operas===
 
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During the run of the Gilbert and Sullivan's next opera, ''Patience,'' Carte built the [[Savoy Theatre]], which became the partnership's permanent home and was the first theater in the world to be lit entirely by electric lighting.
===Savoy Theatre opens: ''Patience'' to ''Princess Ida''===
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====''Patience''====
 
[[Image:Grossmith as Bunthorne.jpg|right|200px|thumb|[[George Grossmith|Grossmith]] as Bunthorne in ''[[Patience (opera)|Patience]]'']]
 
''[[Patience (operetta)|Patience]]'' (1881) satirised the [[aesthetic movement]] in general and its colourful poets, in particular, combining aspects of [[Algernon Charles Swinburne]], [[Dante Gabriel Rossetti]], [[Oscar Wilde]], [[James McNeill Whistler]] and others in the rival poets Bunthorne and Grosvenor.  Grossmith, who created the role of Bunthorne, based his makeup, wig and costume on Swinburne and especially Whistler, as seen in the adjacent photo.<ref>Ellmann, Richard ''Oscar Wilde'', (Knopf, 1988) pp. 135 and 151-152 ISBN 0-394-55484-1</ref> The work also lampoons male vanity and chauvinism in the military.  The story concerns two rival "aesthetic" poets, who attract the attention of the young ladies of the village, who had been engaged to the members of a cavalry regiment.  But the two poets are each in love with Patience, the village milkmaid, who detests one of them and feels that it is her duty to avoid the other despite her love for him.  Richard D'Oyly Carte was the booking manager for [[Oscar Wilde]], a then lesser-known proponent of aestheticism, and dispatched Wilde on an American lecture tour in conjunction with the opera's U.S. run, so that American audiences might better understand what the satire was all about. 
 
 
 
During the run of ''Patience'', Carte built the large, modern [[Savoy Theatre]], which became the partnership's permanent home. It was the first theatre (indeed the world's first public building) to be lit entirely by electric lighting.<ref>See [http://www.arthurlloyd.co.uk/SavoyTheatre.htm this article on the Savoy Theatre] from arthurlloyd.co.uk, Retrieved on [[2007-07-20]].  See also [http://www.theambassadors.com/savoy/info/index.html this article from the Ambassador Theatre Group Limited]</ref>  ''Patience'' moved into the Savoy after six months at the Opera Comique and ran for a total of 578 performances, surpassing the run of ''[[H.M.S. Pinafore]]'' and becoming the second longest-running work of musical theatre up to that time in history.<ref name=Cloches>The longest was the [[operetta]] ''[[Les Cloches de Corneville]]'', which held the title until ''[[Dorothy (opera)|Dorothy]]'' in 1886.  See [http://www.dgillan.screaming.net/stage/th-longr.html this article on longest runs in the theatre up to 1920]</ref>
 
 
 
====''Iolanthe''====
 
''[[Iolanthe]]'' (1882) was the first of the operas to open at the Savoy. The fully electric Savoy made possible numerous special effects, such as sparkling magic wands for the female chorus of fairies. The opera poked fun at English law and the [[House of Lords]] and made much of the war between the sexes.  The critics felt that Sullivan's work in ''Iolanthe'' had taken a step forward.  ''[[The Daily Telegraph]]'' wrote, "The composer has risen to his opportunity, and we are disposed to account ''Iolanthe'' his best effort in all the Gilbertian series."<ref>Quoted in Allen 1975b, p. 176</ref> Similarly, the ''Theatre'' asserted that "the music of ''Iolanthe'' is Dr Sullivan's ''chef d'oeuvre''. The quality throughout is more even, and maintained at a higher standard, than in any of his earlier works..."<ref>William Beatty-Kingston, ''Theatre'', [[1 January]] [[1883]], quoted in Baily 1966, p. 246</ref>
 
 
 
''Iolanthe'' is one of a number of Gilbert's works, including ''[[The Wicked World]]'' (1873), ''[[Broken Hearts]]'' (1875), ''[[Princess Ida]]'' (1884) and ''[[Fallen Fairies]]'' (1909), where the introduction of men and "mortal love" into a tranquil world of women wreaks havoc with the status quo.<ref>[http://math.boisestate.edu/gas/other_gilbert/html/broken_hearts_synopsis.html Article on ''Broken Hearts'' from the G&S Archive]</ref>  Gilbert had created several "fairy comedies" at the [[Haymarket Theatre]] in the early 1870s.  These plays, influenced by the fairy work of [[James Planché]], are founded upon the idea of self-revelation by characters under the influence of some magic or some supernatural interference.<ref>[http://www.bartleby.com/223/0815.html ''The Cambridge History of English and American Literature in 18 Volumes'' (1907–21).  Volume XIII. "The Victorian Age", Part One.  VIII. Nineteenth-Century Drama, § 15. W. S. Gilbert.]</ref>
 
 
 
[[Image:Barnett as Fairy Queen.jpg|left|thumb|200px|[[Alice Barnett|Barnett]] as The Fairy Queen]]In 1882, Gilbert had a telephone installed in his home and at the prompt desk at the Savoy Theatre so that he could monitor performances and rehearsals from his home study.  Gilbert had referred to the new technology in ''Pinafore'' in 1878, only two years after the device was invented and before London even had telephone service.  Sullivan had one installed as well, and on [[13 May]] [[1883]], at a party to celebrate the composer's 41st birthday, the guests, including the [[Prince of Wales]] (later [[Edward VII]]), heard a direct relay of parts of ''Iolanthe'' from the Savoy.  This was probably the first live "broadcast" of an opera.<ref>Bradley (1996), p. 176</ref>
 
 
 
During the run of ''Iolanthe'', in 1883, Sullivan was [[British honours system|knight]]ed by [[Victoria of the United Kingdom|Queen Victoria]].  Although it was the operas with Gilbert that had earned him the broadest fame, the honour was conferred for his services to serious music. The musical establishment, and many critics, believed that this should put an end to his career as a composer of comic opera&mdash;that a musical [[knighthood|knight]] should not stoop below oratorio or [[grand opera]].<ref>Baily, p. 250</ref>  Sullivan, despite the financial security of writing for the Savoy, increasingly viewed his work with Gilbert as unimportant, beneath his skills, and repetitious.  Furthermore, he was unhappy that he had to simplify his music to ensure that Gilbert's words could be heard. But paradoxically, in  February 1883, just after ''Iolanthe'' opened, Sullivan had signed a five-year agreement with Gilbert and Carte requiring him to produce a new comic opera on six months' notice.<ref name=Carpet/>
 
 
 
====''Princess Ida''====
 
[[Image:Ida men.gif|right|thumb|250px|Princess Ida forswears the world of men.]]''[[Princess Ida]]'' (1884) spoofed [[women's education]] and [[male chauvinism]] and continued the theme from ''Iolanthe'' of the war between the sexes. The opera is based on [[Alfred Tennyson, 1st Baron Tennyson|Tennyson]]'s poem ''The Princess: A Medley''. Gilbert had written a [[blank verse]] farce based on the same material in 1870, called ''[[The Princess (play)|The Princess]]'', and he reused a good deal of the dialogue from his earlier play in the libretto of ''Princess Ida''.  ''Ida'' is the only Gilbert and Sullivan work with dialogue entirely in blank verse and is also the only one of their works in three acts.  [[Lillian Russell]] had been engaged to create the title role, but Gilbert did not believe that she was dedicated enough, and when she missed a rehearsal, she was dismissed.<ref>Stedman, pp. 200-01</ref>
 
 
 
''Princess Ida'' was the first of the Gilbert and Sullivan operas that, by the partnership's previous standards, was not a success. A particularly hot summer in London did not help ticket sales.  The piece ran for a comparatively short 246 performances and was not revived in London until 1919. Sullivan had been satisfied with the libretto, but two months after ''Ida'' opened, Sullivan told Carte that "it is impossible for me to do another piece of the character of those already written by Gilbert and myself."<ref name=Carpet/>  As ''Princess Ida'' showed signs of flagging, Carte realized that, for the first time in the partnership's history, no new opera would be ready when the old one closed.  On [[22 March]] [[1884]], he gave Gilbert and Sullivan contractual notice that a new opera would be required in six months' time.<ref>Jacobs, p. 187</ref>  In the meantime, when ''Ida'' closed, Carte produced a revival of ''The Sorcerer''.
 
 
 
===Dodging the magic lozenge: ''The Mikado'' to ''The Gondoliers''===
 
 
====''The Mikado''====
 
====''The Mikado''====
The most successful of the Savoy Operas was ''[[The Mikado]]'' (1885), which made fun of English bureaucracy, thinly disguised by a Japanese setting. Gilbert initially proposed a story for a new opera about a magic lozenge that would change the characters,<ref>Gilbert eventually found another opportunity to present his "lozenge plot" in ''[[The Mountebanks (opera)|The Mountebanks]]'', written with [[Alfred Cellier]] in 1892</ref> which Sullivan found artificial and lacking in "human interest and probability", as well as being too similar to their earlier opera, ''The Sorcerer''. As dramatised in the film ''[[Topsy-Turvy]]'',<ref>albeit with the repetition of the apocryphal sword-falling story, see Jones, Brian (Spring 1985), "The sword that never fell", ''W. S. Gilbert Society Journal'' 1 (1): 22–25</ref> the author and composer were at an impasse until [[8 May]] [[1884]], when Gilbert dropped the lozenge idea and agreed to provide a libretto without any supernatural elements.
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[[Image:The Mikado Three Little Maids.jpg|thumb|250px|right|Lithograph of the "Three Little Maids" from ''The Mikado'']]
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The most successful of the Savoy Operas was ''[[The Mikado]]'' (1885), which made fun of English bureaucracy, thinly disguised by a Japanese setting. Gilbert initially proposed a story for a new opera about a magic lozenge that would change the characters (which he later presented in ''[[The Mountebanks (opera)|The Mountebanks]],'' written with [[Alfred Cellier]], in 1892), but Sullivan found it artificial and lacking in "human interest and probability," as well as being too similar to their earlier opera, ''The Sorcerer.''  The author and composer were at an impasse until May 8, 1884, when Gilbert dropped the lozenge idea and agreed to provide a libretto without any supernatural elements.  
  
[[Image:The Mikado Three Little Maids.jpg|thumb|250px|left|Lithograph of the "Three Little Maids" from ''The Mikado'']]The story focuses on a "cheap tailor," Ko-Ko, who is promoted to the position of Lord High Executioner of the town of Titipu. Ko-Ko loves his ward, Yum-Yum, but she loves a musician, who is really the son of the emperor of Japan (the Mikado), and who is in disguise to escape the attentions of the elderly and amorous Katisha. The Mikado has decreed that executions must resume without delay in Titipu. When news arrives that the Mikado will be visiting the town, Ko-Ko assumes that he is coming to ascertain whether Ko-Ko has carried out the executions. Too timid to execute anyone, Ko-Ko cooks up a conspiracy to misdirect the Mikado, which goes awry. Eventually, Ko-Ko must persuade Katisha to marry him, in order to save his own life and the lives of the other conspirators.
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The story of ''The Mikado'' focuses on a "cheap tailor," Ko-Ko, who is promoted to the position of Lord High Executioner of the town of Titipu. Ko-Ko loves his ward, Yum-Yum, but she loves a musician, who is really the son of the emperor of Japan (the Mikado), and who is in disguise to escape the attentions of the elderly and amorous Katisha. The Mikado has decreed that executions must resume without delay in Titipu. When news arrives that the Mikado will be visiting the town, Ko-Ko assumes that he is coming to ascertain whether Ko-Ko has carried out the executions. Too timid to execute anyone, Ko-Ko cooks up a conspiracy to misdirect the Mikado, which goes awry. Eventually, Ko-Ko must persuade Katisha to marry him, in order to save his own life and the lives of the other conspirators.
  
With the opening of trade between England and Japan, Japanese imports, art and styles became fashionable in London, making the time ripe for an opera set in Japan. Gilbert said, {{cquote|I cannot give you a good reason for our... piece being laid in Japan.  It... afforded scope for picturesque treatment, scenery and costume, and I think that the idea of a chief magistrate, who is... judge and actual executioner in one, and yet would not hurt a worm, may perhaps please the public.<ref>[http://www.lyricoperasandiego.com/Education/MikadoGenesis.htm Quoted at Lyricoperasandiego.com]</ref>}}
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With the opening of trade between England and Japan, Japanese imports, art, and styles became fashionable in London, making the time ripe for an opera set in Japan.  
  
Setting the opera in [[Japan]], an exotic locale far away from Britain, allowed Gilbert and Sullivan to satirise British politics and institutions more freely by clothing them in superficial Japanese trappings. Gilbert wrote, "The Mikado of the opera was an imaginary monarch of a remote period and cannot by any exercise of ingenuity be taken to be a slap on an existing institution."<ref>[http://pamphletpress.org/index.cfm?sec=7&story_id=69 Review of ''The Mikado'' discussing the depiction of Japan in ''The Mikado'']</ref>  [[G. K. Chesterton]] compared it to [[Jonathan Swift]]'s ''[[Gulliver's Travels]]'': "Gilbert pursued and persecuted the evils of modern England till they had literally not a leg to stand on, exactly as Swift did...  I doubt if there is a single joke in the whole play that fits the Japanese.  But all the jokes in the play fit the English... About England Pooh-bah is something more than a satire; he is the truth."<ref>[http://www.lyricoperasandiego.com/Education/MikadoGenesis.htm Lyric Opera San Diego site]</ref> Several of the later operas are similarly set in foreign or fictional locales, including ''[[The Gondoliers]]'', ''[[Utopia Limited]]'', and ''[[The Grand Duke]]''.
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Setting the opera in [[Japan]], an exotic locale far away from Britain, allowed Gilbert and Sullivan to satirize British politics and institutions more freely by clothing them in superficial Japanese trappings. Gilbert wrote, "The Mikado of the opera was an imaginary monarch of a remote period and cannot by any exercise of ingenuity be taken to be a slap on an existing institution."<ref>TechAnnounce, [https://techannounce.ttu.edu/Client/ViewMessage.aspx?MsgId=215519 TTU Opera Theatre Presents Gilbert & SUllivan's Hilarious ''The Mikado.''] Texas Tech University, October 30, 2017. Retrieved September 21, 2018.</ref>  
  
''The Mikado'' became the partnership's longest-running hit, enjoying 672 performances at the Savoy Theatre, which was the second longest run for any work of musical theatre (surpassing the 571 performances of ''Pinafore'' and 576 of ''Patience'') and one of the longest runs of any theatre piece up to that time.<ref>The longest-running piece of musical theatre was the [[operetta]] ''[[Les Cloches de Corneville]]'', which held the title until ''[[Dorothy (opera)|Dorothy]]'' in 1886.  See [http://www.dgillan.screaming.net/stage/th-longr.html this article on longest runs in the theatre up to 1920]</ref>  ''The Mikado'' remains the most frequently performed Savoy Opera.<ref>[http://www.hcs.harvard.edu/hrgsp/old/productions/mik97/mik97hist.htm Note on the popularity of ''The Mikado'']</ref>  It has been translated into numerous languages and is one of the most frequently played musical theatre pieces in history.<ref>[http://www.musicals101.com/gilbert3.htm See here][http://www.libertystory.net/LSARTSGILBERT.htm and here]</ref> 
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''The Mikado'' became the partnership's longest-running hit, enjoying 672 performances at the Savoy Theatre, which was the second longest run for any work of musical theater (surpassing the 571 performances of ''Pinafore'' and 576 of ''Patience'') and one of the longest runs of any theater piece up to that time. ''The Mikado'' remains the most frequently performed production at the Savoy Opera, and is widely regarded as Gilbert and Sullivan's most popular and successful work.
  
====''Ruddigore''====
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===After ''The Mikado''===
''[[Ruddigore]]'' (1887), a topsy-turvy take on Victorian [[melodrama]], was less successful than most of the earlier collaborations with a run of 288 performances. The original title, ''Ruddygore'', together with some of the plot devices, including the revivification of ghosts, drew negative comments from critics.<ref>[http://diamond.boisestate.edu/gas/ruddigore/html/appeal.html See the [[Pall Mall Gazette]]'s satire of ''Ruddygore''.]  Gilbert's response to being told the two spellings meant the same thing was: "Not at all, for that would mean that if I said that I admired your ruddy countenance, which I do, I would be saying that I liked your bloody cheek, which I don't."  See [http://hcs.harvard.edu/hrgsp/old/productions/rud68/rud68arg.htm this article at Harvard's website] and [http://homepages.ihug.co.nz/~melbear/witter.htm this information from the Australian G&S site.]</ref>  Gilbert and Sullivan respelled the title and made a number of changes and cuts.<ref>A copy of the ''Ruddigore'' libretto, including material cut before the first night and during the initial run, is {{PDFlink|[http://diamond.boisestate.edu/gas/ruddigore/ruddygore.pdf available here.]|294&nbsp;[[Kibibyte|KiB]]<!-- application/pdf, 301170 bytes -->}}</ref>  Nevertheless, the piece was profitable,<ref>[http://math.boisestate.edu/gas/ruddigore/html/intro.html Information from the book ''Tit-Willow or Notes and Jottings on Gilbert and Sullivan Operas''] by Guy H. and Claude A. Walmisley (Privately Printed, Undated, early 20th century)</ref> and the reviews were not all bad.  For instance, the ''[[Illustrated London News]]'' praised the work and both Gilbert and, especially, Sullivan: "Sir Arthur Sullivan has eminently succeeded alike in the expression of refined sentiment and comic humour. In the former respect, the charm of graceful melody prevails; while, in the latter, the music of the most grotesque situations is redolent of fun."<ref>[http://www.savoyoperas.org.uk/ruddigore/rud5.html ''Illustrated London News'' Review of ''Ruddygore'' dated 9 January 1887]</ref>  Further changes were made, including a new overture, when [[Rupert D'Oyly Carte]] revived ''Ruddigore'' after the [[First World War]], and the piece was regularly performed by the D'Oyly Carte Opera Company thereafter.<ref>Critical apparatus in Hulme, David Russell, ed., ''Ruddigore''. Oxford: Oxford University Press (2000)</ref>
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''Ruddigore,'' a supernatural tale, was the pair's next release and became quite controversial due to its subject matter. It was followed in 1888, by ''The Yeoman of the Guard,'' and in 1898 by ''The Gondoliers.'' Gilbert and Sullivan then spent close to four years away from the stage, returning in 1893, with ''Utopia, Limited.'' Their final collaboration, ''The Grand Duke,'' was first performed in 1896, and marked the end of their oft-quarrelsome, quarter century-long partnership. Together, they produced 14 comic operas. In 1883, Sullivan was knighted by [[Queen Victoria]]. In 1907, Gilbert, too, was knighted, by [[King Edward VII]].
  
Some of the plot elements of ''Ruddigore'' were introduced by Gilbert in his earlier one-act opera, ''[[Ages Ago]]'' (1869), including the tale of the wicked ancestor and the device of the ghostly ancestors stepping out of their portraits. When ''Ruddigore'' closed, no new opera was ready.  Gilbert again proposed a version of the "lozenge" plot for their next opera, and Sullivan reiterated his desire to leave the partnership. While the two men worked out their artistic differences, Carte produced revivals of such old favourites as ''[[H.M.S. Pinafore]]'', ''[[The Pirates of Penzance]]'', and ''[[The Mikado]]''.
+
==Quarrels==
 +
Gilbert and Sullivan quarreled several times over the choice of the subject for a new production. After both ''Princess Ida'' and ''Ruddigore,'' which were less successful than the seven other operas from ''H.M.S. Pinafore'' to ''The Gondoliers,'' Sullivan asked to leave the partnership, saying that he found Gilbert's plots repetitive and that the operas were not artistically satisfying to him. While the two artists worked out their differences, Carte kept the Savoy open with revivals of their earlier works. On each occasion, after a few months' pause, Gilbert responded with a libretto that met Sullivan's objections, and the partnership was able to continue successfully.<ref name=Carpet/>
  
====''The Yeomen of the Guard''====
+
During the run of ''The Gondoliers,'' however, Gilbert challenged Carte over the expenses of the production. Carte had charged the cost of a new carpet for the Savoy Theatre lobby to the partnership. Gilbert believed that this was a maintenance expense that should be charged to Carte alone. Sullivan, however, sided with Carte, who was building a theater in London for the production of new English grand operas, with Sullivan's ''[[Ivanhoe (opera)|Ivanhoe]]'' as the inaugural work.  
[[Image:Denny and Bond.jpg|right|250px|thumb|[[W.H. Denny]] as Wilfred and [[Jessie Bond]] as Phoebe in ''Yeomen'']]''[[The Yeomen of the Guard]]'' (1888), their only joint work with a serious ending, concerns a pair of strolling players—a jester and a singing girl—who are caught up in a risky intrigue at the [[Tower of London]] during the 16th century. The dialogue, though in prose, is quasi-[[William Shakespeare|Shakespearian]], or [[Early Modern English|early modern English]], in style, and there is no satire of British institutions.  For some of the plot elements, Gilbert had reached back to his 1875 tragedy, ''[[Broken Hearts]]''. ''The Times'' praised the libretto: "It should... be acknowledged that Mr. Gilbert has earnestly endeavoured to leave familiar grooves and rise to higher things."<ref>[http://homepages.ihug.co.nz/~melbear/yeomen.htm Quoted at the Australian G&S website.]</ref>  Although not a grand opera, the new libretto provided Sullivan with the opportunity to write his most ambitious score to date.  The critics, who had recently lauded the composer for his successful oratorio, ''[[The Golden Legend (oratorio)|The Golden Legend]]'', considered the score to ''Yeomen'' to be Sullivan's finest, including its overture, which was written in [[sonata form]], rather than as a sequential pot-pourri of tunes from the opera, as in most of his other overtures.  The ''Daily Telegraph'' wrote:
 
{{cquote|The accompaniments...are delightful to hear, and especially does the treatment of the woodwind compel admiring attention.  Schubert himself could hardly have handled those instruments more deftly, written for them more lovingly...  We place the songs and choruses in ''The Yeomen of the Guard'' before all his previous efforts of this particular kind. Thus the music follows the book to a higher plane, and we have a genuine English opera...<ref>Quoted in Allen 1975, p. 312</ref>}}
 
  
''Yeomen'' was a hit, running for over a year, with strong New York and touring productions.  During the run, on [[12 March]] [[1889]], Sullivan wrote to Gilbert, {{cquote|I have lost the liking for writing comic opera, and entertain very grave doubts as to my power of doing it...  You say that in a serious opera, ''you'' must more or less sacrifice yourself.  I say that this is just what I have been doing in all our joint pieces, and, what is more, must continue to do in comic opera to make it successful.<ref>Jacobs, p. 283</ref>}}  Sullivan insisted that the next opera must be a [[grand opera]].  Gilbert did not feel that he could write a grand opera libretto, but he offered a compromise that Sullivan ultimately accepted.  The two would write a light opera for the Savoy, and at the same time, Sullivan a grand opera (''[[Ivanhoe (opera)|Ivanhoe]]'') for a new theatre that Carte was constructing to present British grand opera. After a brief impasse over the choice of subject, Sullivan accepted an idea connected with [[Venice]] and Venetian life, as "this seemed to me to hold out great chances of bright colour and taking music."<ref>Jacobs, p. 288</ref>
+
In 1891, after many failed attempts at reconciliation by the pair and their producer, Richard D'Oyly Carte, Gilbert and Sullivan's music publisher, [[Chappell & Co.|Tom Chappell]], stepped in to mediate between two of his most profitable artists, and within two weeks he had succeeded.<ref>John Wolfson, ''Final Curtain: The Last Gilbert and Sullivan Operas: Including the Unpublished Rehearsal Librettos and Twenty Unpublished Gilbert Lyrics'' (London: Chappell in association with A. Deutsch, 1976, ISBN 978-0903443128).</ref>
  
====''The Gondoliers''====
+
However, Gilbert and Sullivan produced only two further operas together.
[[Image:Marco and Giuseppe.jpg|250px|left|thumb|[[Rutland Barrington|Barrington]] and [[Courtice Pounds|Pounds]] as Giuseppe and Marco in ''The Gondoliers'']]''[[The Gondoliers]]'' (1889) takes place partly in Venice and partly in a kingdom ruled by a pair of gondoliers who attempt to remodel the monarchy in a spirit of "republican equality."<ref>[http://diamond.boisestate.edu/gas/gondoliers/html/index.html ''The Gondoliers'' at The Gilbert and Sullivan Archive],  Retrieved on [[2007-07-21]].</ref>  Gilbert recapitulates a number of his earlier themes, including the satire of class distinctions figuring in many of his earlier librettos.  The libretto also reflects Gilbert's fascination with the "Stock Company Act", highlighting the absurd convergence of natural persons and legal entities, which plays an even larger part in the next opera, ''Utopia Limited''.  Press accounts were almost entirely favourable.  The ''Illustrated London News'' reported:
 
{{cquote|...Gilbert has returned to the Gilbert of the past, and everyone is delighted. He is himself again. The Gilbert of the ''[[Bab Ballads]]'', the Gilbert of whimsical conceit, inoffensive cynicism, subtle satire, and playful paradox; the Gilbert who invented a school of his own, who in it was schoolmaster and pupil, who has never taught anybody but himself, and is never likely to have any imitator&mdash;this is the Gilbert the public want to see, and this is the Gilbert who on Saturday night was cheered till the audience was weary of cheering any more.<ref name = "fvpqpk">Baily, p. 344</ref>}}
 
  
Sullivan's old collaborator on ''[[Cox and Box]]'' (later the editor of ''[[Punch (magazine)|Punch]]'' magazine), [[Francis Burnand|F. C. Burnand]], wrote to the composer: "Magnificento!...I envy you and W.S.G. being able to place a piece like this on the stage in so complete a fashion."<ref name = "fvpqpk"/>  The opera enjoyed a run longer than any of their other joint works except for ''[[H.M.S. Pinafore]]'' and ''[[The Mikado]]''.  There was a command performance of ''The Gondoliers'' for [[Queen Victoria]] and the royal family at [[Windsor Castle]] in 1891, the first Gilbert and Sullivan opera to be so honoured.  ''The Gondoliers'' was Gilbert and Sullivan's last great success.
+
==Rights==
 +
Because of the unusual success of the operas, the D'Oyly Carte Opera Company was able, from the start, to license the works to other professional companies, such as the [[J.C. Williamson Gilbert and Sullivan Opera Company]], and to amateur societies. For almost a century, until the British copyrights expired in 1961, and even afterwards, the D'Oyly Carte Opera Company influenced productions of the operas worldwide, creating a "performing tradition" for most of the operas that is still referred to today by many directors. D'Oyly Carte produced several well-regarded recordings of most of the operas, helping to keep them popular through the decades.
  
===The carpet quarrel===
+
Today, numerous professional repertory companies (for example, [[NYGASP]], [[Carl Rosa Opera Company]], Somerset Opera, [[Opera della Luna]], [[Opera a la Carte]], [[Skylight opera theatre]], [[Ohio Light Opera]], and [[Washington Savoyards]]), opera companies, amateur societies, churches, schools, and universities continue to produce the works.<ref>The Gilbert and Sullivan Archive at Boise State University, [http://math.boisestate.edu/gas/html/websites/index.html Websites of Performing Groups.] Retrieved July 19, 2008.</ref> The most popular Gilbert and Sullivan works are still performed from time to time by major opera companies.<ref>Opera Base, [http://www.operabase.com/oplist.cgi?id=none&lang=en&is=&by=Sullivan&loc=&stype=abs&sd=30&sm=10&sy=2005&etype=abs&ed=31&em=10&ey=2007 Performances, by city&mdash;Composer: Arthur Sullivan.] Retrieved July 19, 2008.</ref>  A three-week long [[International Gilbert and Sullivan Festival]] is held every August in [[Buxton|Buxton, England]].
[[Image:1881 Savoy Theatre.jpg|right|thumb|200px|right|[[Savoy Theatre]] c.1881]]
 
Gilbert and Sullivan sometimes had a strained working relationship, partly caused by the fact that each man saw himself allowing his work to be subjugated to the other's, and partly caused by the opposing personalities of the two—Gilbert was often confrontational and notoriously thin-skinned (though prone to acts of extraordinary kindness), while Sullivan eschewed conflict.<ref>See, e.g., Stedman, pp. 254-56 and 323-24 and Ainger, pp. 193-94.</ref>  In addition, Gilbert imbued his [[libretto|libretti]] with "topsy-turvy" situations in which the social order was turned upside down.  After a time, these subjects were often at odds with Sullivan's desire for realism and emotional content.<ref>See, e.g. Ainger, p. 288, or Wolfson, p. 3</ref> Also, Gilbert's political satire often poked fun at the wealthy and powerful whom Sullivan sought out for friendship and patronage.<ref>See, e.g. Jacobs, p. 73; Crowther, Andrew, [http://diamond.boisestate.edu/gas/html/gilbert_l.html The Life of W.S. Gilbert.] The Gilbert and Sullivan Archive at Boise State University, Retrieved on [[2007-05-21]]; and Bond, Jessie, [http://math.boisestate.edu/GaS/books/bond/chapter16_txt.htm The Reminiscences of Jessie Bond: Chapter 16.] The Gilbert and Sullivan Archive at Boise State University, Retrieved on [[2007-05-21]]</ref>
 
  
Gilbert and Sullivan quarrelled several times over the choice of a subject.  After both ''Princess Ida'' and ''Ruddigore'', which were less successful than the seven other operas from ''H.M.S. Pinafore'' to ''The Gondoliers'', Sullivan asked to leave the partnership, saying that he found Gilbert's plots repetitive and that the operas were not artistically satisfying to him.  While the two artists worked out their differences, Carte kept the Savoy open with revivals of their earlier works.  On each occasion, after a few months' pause, Gilbert responded with a libretto that met Sullivan's objections, and the partnership was able to continue successfully.<ref name=Carpet/>
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==Cultural influence==
 
+
In the past 125 years, Gilbert and Sullivan have pervasively influenced popular culture in the English-speaking world,<ref name=Bradley2005/> and lines and quotations from the Gilbert and Sullivan operas have become part of the English language (even if not originated by Gilbert), such as, "let the punishment fit the crime" and "A policeman's lot is not a happy one."<ref name="Green">Edward Green, [http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/magazine/3634126.stm Ballads, songs, and speeches] ''BBCNews'', September 20, 2004. Retrieved September 21, 2018.</ref> The operas have influenced political style and discourse, literature, film, and television, have been widely parodied by humorists, and have been quoted in legal rulings.
During the run of ''The Gondoliers'', however, Gilbert challenged Carte over the expenses of the production. Carte had charged the cost of a new carpet for the Savoy Theatre lobby to the partnership. Gilbert believed that this was a maintenance expense that should be charged to Carte alone. As scholar Andrew Crowther has explained:
 
{{cquote|After all, the carpet was only one of a number of disputed items, and the real issue lay not in the mere money value of these things, but in whether Carte could be trusted with the financial affairs of Gilbert and Sullivan. Gilbert contended that Carte had at best made a series of serious blunders in the accounts, and at worst deliberately attempted to swindle the others. It is not easy to settle the rights and wrongs of the issue at this distance, but it does seem fairly clear that there was something very wrong with the accounts at this time. Gilbert wrote to Sullivan on 28 May, 1891, a year after the end of the "Quarrel", that Carte had admitted "an unintentional overcharge of nearly £1,000 in the electric lighting accounts alone.<ref name=Carpet/>}}
 
 
 
Sullivan sided with Carte, who was building a theatre in London for the production of new English grand operas, with Sullivan's ''[[Ivanhoe (opera)|Ivanhoe]]'' as the inaugural work. While the protracted quarrel worked itself out in the courts and in public, Gilbert wrote ''[[The Mountebanks (opera)|The Mountebanks]]'' with [[Alfred Cellier]] and the flop ''[[Haste to the Wedding]]'' with [[George Grossmith]],<ref name=PlayList>[http://diamond.boisestate.edu/gas/other_gilbert/html/other_gilbert.html Gilbert's Plays.] The Gilbert and Sullivan Archive at Boise State University, Retrieved on [[2007-05-21]].</ref> and Sullivan also wrote ''[[Haddon Hall (opera)|Haddon Hall]]'' with Sidney Grundy.
 
 
 
In 1891, after many failed attempts at reconciliation by the pair and their producer, Richard D'Oyly Carte, Gilbert and Sullivan's music publisher, [[Chappell & Co.|Tom Chappell]], stepped in to mediate between two of his most profitable artists, and within two weeks he had succeeded.<ref>Wolfson, p. 7</ref>
 
  
===Last works===
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The American and British [[musical theatre|musical]] owes a tremendous debt to Gilbert and Sullivan, who were admired and copied by early authors and composers such as [[Ivan Caryll]], [[Adrian Ross]], [[Lionel Monckton]], [[P.G. Wodehouse]],<ref> [http://books.guardian.co.uk/authors/author/0,,-248,00.html PG Wodehouse (1881–1975)] ''The Guardian'', July 22, 2008. Retrieved September 21, 2018.</ref> [[Guy Bolton]], [[Victor Herbert]], and [[Ivor Novello]], and later [[Irving Berlin]], [[Jerome Kern]], [[Oscar Hammerstein II]], and [[Andrew Lloyd Webber]].<ref name=Bradley2005/> Gilbert's lyrics served as a model for such twentieth century [[Broadway theatre|Broadway]] lyricists as [[Cole Porter]],<ref>American Masters For Teachers, [http://www.pbs.org/wnet/americanmasters/education/lesson35_procedures.html Lesson 35&mdash;Cole Porter: You're the Top.] ''PBS''. Retrieved September 21, 2018.</ref> [[Ira Gershwin]], and [[Lorenz Hart]].<ref name=PeterDowns/>  [[Noel Coward]] wrote:
[[Image:Utopia Limited Poster.jpg|thumb|right|400px|The drawing room scene from Act II of ''Utopia'']]
+
<blockquote>I was born into a generation that still took light music seriously. The lyrics and melodies of Gilbert and Sullivan were hummed and strummed into my consciousness at an early age. My father sang them, my mother played them, my nurse, Emma, breathed them through her teeth while she was washing me, dressing me and undressing me and putting me to bed. My aunts and uncles, who were legion, sang them singly and in unison at the slightest provocation….<ref>Noel Coward, ''The Noel Coward Song Book'' (Routledge, 1984, ISBN 978-0416009613).</ref></blockquote>
[[Image:Glad to See You Together.png|thumb|250px|left|The ''Entr'acte'' expresses its pleasure that Gilbert and Sullivan are reunited.]]
 
''[[Utopia, Limited]]'' (1893), their penultimate opera, was a very modest success, and ''[[The Grand Duke]]'' (1896) was an outright failure.<ref>Wolfson, passim</ref> Neither work entered the "canon" of regularly-performed Gilbert and Sullivan works until the D'Oyly Carte Opera Company made the first complete professional recordings of the two operas in the 1970s. Gilbert also offered Sullivan ''[[His Excellency (opera)|His Excellency]]'' (1894), but Gilbert's insistence on casting [[Nancy McIntosh]], his protégée from ''Utopia'', led to Sullivan's refusal, and it was instead composed by [[F. Osmond Carr]].<ref> Wolfson, pp. 61-65</ref>
 
  
After ''The Grand Duke'', the partners saw no reason to work together again. Sullivan, by this time in exceedingly poor health, died four years later, although to the end he continued to write new comic operas for the Savoy with other librettists, most successfully with [[Basil Hood]] in ''[[The Rose of Persia]]'' (1899), and ''[[The Emerald Isle]]'' (1901) (finished by [[Edward German]] after Sullivan's death). By the time of Sullivan's death, Gilbert wrote that any memory of their rift had been "completely bridged over," and "the most cordial relations existed between us."  He stated that Sullivan was ''"A composer of the rarest genius — who, because he was a composer of the rarest genius, was as modest and as unassuming as a neophyte should be, but seldom is...  I remember all that he has done for me in allowing his genius to shed some of its lustre upon my humble name."''<ref>[http://math.boisestate.edu/GaS/books/walbrook/chap18.html Walbrook, Chapter 18]</ref> Gilbert went into semi-retirement, although he continued to direct revivals of the Savoy Operas and wrote new plays occasionally. He wrote only one more comic opera, ''[[Fallen Fairies]]'' ([[1909]]; music by [[Edward German]]), which was not a success.<ref>Bailey, p. 425</ref>  [[Richard D'Oyly Carte]] died in 1901, and his widow, [[Helen Carte|Helen]], and then his son, [[Rupert D'Oyly Carte|Rupert]], followed by his granddaughter, [[Bridget D'Oyly Carte|Bridget]], continued to direct the activities of the D'Oyly Carte Opera Company, which staged revivals of the Gilbert and Sullivan operas until it closed in 1982.
+
Gilbert and Sullivan's work provides a rich cultural resource outside of their influence upon musicals. The works of Gilbert and Sullivan are themselves frequently satirized.<ref> [http://www.jeliza.net/parody/ Gilbert & Sullivan Parody Archive] Retrieved September 21, 2018.</ref> Well known examples of this include [[Tom Lehrer]]'s "[[The Elements (song)|The Elements]]," [[Allan Sherman]]'s, ''[[The Two Ronnies]],'' and [[Anna Russell]]'s famous routines, as well as the animated TV series ''[[Animaniacs]]' HMS Yakko'' episode. Gilbert and Sullivan comic operas are commonly referenced in literature, film, and television—such as the 1998 film, ''Star Trek: Insurrection''—in various ways that include extensive use of Sullivan's music or where action occurs during a performance of a Gilbert and Sullivan opera. There are also a number of Gilbert and Sullivan biopics, such as [[Mike Leigh]]'s ''[[Topsy-Turvy]]''.
  
[[Image:Comic Opera at the Savoy.png|thumb|right|230px|"Good times will come again" – [[George Grossmith|Grossmith]] tries to cheer up [[Richard D'Oyly Carte|D'Oyly Carte]] after the failure of ''[[The Grand Duke]]''.]]Sir [[Henry Wood]] explained the enduring success of the collaboration as follows:
+
<blockquote>The musical is not, of course, the only cultural form to show the influence of G&S. Even more direct heirs are those witty and satirical songwriters found on both sides of the Atlantic in the twentieth century like [[Michael Flanders]] and [[Donald Swann]] in the United Kingdom and [[Tom Lehrer]] in the United States. The influence of Gilbert is discernible in a vein of British comedy that runs through [[John Betjeman]]'s verse via [[Monty Python]] and [[Private Eye (magazine)|Private Eye]] to… television series like ''[[Yes, Minister]]''… where the emphasis is on wit, irony, and poking fun at the establishment from within it in a way which manages to be both disrespectful of authority and yet cosily comfortable and urbane.<ref name=Bradley2005/></blockquote>
{{cquote|...Sullivan has never had an equal for brightness and drollery, for humour without coarseness and without vulgarity, and for charm and grace. His orchestration is delightful: he wrote with full understanding of every orchestral voice. Above all, his music is perfectly appropriate to the words of which it is the setting... He found the right, the only cadences to fit Gilbert's happy and original rhythms, and to match Gilbert's fun or to throw Gilbert's frequent irony, pointed although not savage, into relief. Sullivan's music is much more than the accompaniment of Gilbert's libretti, just as Gilbert's libretti are far more than words to Sullivan's music. We have two masters who are playing a concerto. Neither is subordinate to the other; each gives what is original, but the two, while neither predominates, are in perfect correspondence. This rare harmony of words and music is what makes these operas entirely unique. They are the work not of a musician and his librettist nor of a poet and one who sets his words to music, but of two geniuses.<ref>[http://math.boisestate.edu/GaS/books/walbrook/foreword.html Sir [[Henry Wood]]'s foreword to Walbrook]</ref>}}
 
  
Because of the unusual success of the operas, the D'Oyly Carte Opera Company were<!--British usage—> able, from the start, to license the works to other professional companies, such as the [[J. C. Williamson Gilbert and Sullivan Opera Company]], and to amateur societies.  For almost a century, until the British copyrights expired in 1961, and even afterwards, the D'Oyly Carte Opera Company influenced productions of the operas worldwide, creating a "performing tradition" for most of the operas that is still referred to today by many directors.  D'Oyly Carte produced several well-regarded recordings of most of the operas, helping to keep them popular through the decades.
+
It is not surprising, given the focus of Gilbert on politics, that politicians and political observers have often found inspiration in these works. U.S. Supreme Court Justice [[William Rehnquist]] added gold stripes to his judicial robes after seeing them used by the [[Lord Chancellor]] in a production of ''Iolanthe''.<ref> [http://archive.li/pVOcU Sporting stripes set Rehnquist apart] ''Milwaukee Journal Sentinal'', September 4, 2005. Retrieved September 21, 2018.</ref> Alternatively, [[Charles Falconer, Baron Falconer of Thoroton|Lord Chancellor Charles Falconer]] is recorded as objecting so strongly to ''Iolanthe'''s comic portrayal of Lord Chancellors that he supported moves to disband the office.<ref name="Green"/> British politicians, beyond quoting some of the more famous lines, have delivered speeches in the form of Gilbert and Sullivan pastiches. These include Conservative [[Peter Lilley]]'s speech mimicking the form of "I've got a little list" from ''The Mikado,'' listing those he was against, including "sponging socialists" and "young ladies who get pregnant just to jump the housing queue."<ref name="Green" /> Political humor based on Gilbert and Sullivan's style and characters continues to be written.
 
 
Today, numerous professional repertory companies,<ref>For example, [[NYGASP]], [[Carl Rosa Opera Company]], Somerset Opera, [[Opera della Luna]], [[Opera a la Carte]], [[Skylight opera theatre]], [[Ohio Light Opera]], and [[Washington Savoyards]]</ref> opera companies, amateur societies, churches, schools and universities continue to produce the works.<ref>[http://math.boisestate.edu/gas/html/websites/index.html Websites of Performing Groups.] The Gilbert and Sullivan Archive at Boise State University, Retrieved on [[2007-05-21]]</ref> The most popular G&S works are still performed from time to time by major opera companies,<ref>[http://www.operabase.com/oplist.cgi?id=none&lang=en&is=&by=Sullivan&loc=&stype=abs&sd=30&sm=10&sy=2005&etype=abs&ed=31&em=10&ey=2007 Performances, by city&mdash;Composer: Arthur Sullivan.] operabase.com, Retrieved on [[2007-05-21]]</ref>  A three-week long [[International Gilbert and Sullivan Festival]] is held every August in [[Buxton|Buxton, England]].
 
 
 
==Cultural influence==
 
[[Image:Detail from Design for an Aesthetic theatrical poster.png|thumb|200px|Detail from a ''[[Punch (magazine)|Punch]]'' cartoon, showing Sullivan and Gilbert.]]
 
{{Main|Cultural influence of Gilbert and Sullivan}}
 
In the past 125 years, Gilbert and Sullivan have pervasively influenced popular culture in the English-speaking world,<ref>Bradley (2005), Chapter 1.</ref>  and lines and quotations from the Gilbert and Sullivan operas have become part of the English language (even if not originated by Gilbert), such as "[[short, sharp shock]]", "What never? Well, hardly ever!", "let the punishment fit the crime", and "A policeman's lot is not a happy one".<ref name="Green">Green, Edward. [http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/magazine/3634126.stm "Ballads,songs, and speeches"] (sic).<!--Please do not correct the punctuation in this article title.  It is wrong at the BBC, indicated by sic, and if the article link goes dead, the correct title is needed, including the error—> BBC, [[20 September]] [[2004]]. Retrieved on [[2007-05-21]].</ref><ref>Lawrence, Arthur H. [http://math.boisestate.edu/GaS/other_sullivan/lawrence/lawrence_3.html "An illustrated interview with Sir Arthur Sullivan"] Part 3, from ''The Strand Magazine'', Vol. xiv, No.84 (December 1897).  Retrieved on [[2007-05-21]].</ref>  The operas have influenced political style and discourse, literature, film and television, have been widely parodied by humorists, and have been quoted in legal rulings.<ref>References to Gilbert and Sullivan have appeared in the following [[U.S. Supreme Court]] rulings, for example, ''Allied Chemical Corp. v. Daiflon, Inc.'', 449 U.S. 33, 36 (1980) ("What never? Well, hardly ever!"); and ''Richmond Newspapers, Inc. v. Virginia'', 448 U.S. 555, 604 (1980) (dissent of Justice Rehnquist, quoting the Lord Chancellor).</ref>
 
 
 
The American and British [[musical theatre|musical]] owes a tremendous debt to G&S, who were admired by and copied by early authors and composers such as [[Ivan Caryll]], [[Adrian Ross]], [[Lionel Monckton]], [[P. G. Wodehouse]],<ref>[http://books.guardian.co.uk/authors/author/0,,-248,00.html PG Wodehouse (1881–1975),] guardian.co.uk, Retrieved on [[2007-05-21]]</ref><ref>[http://home.lagrange.edu/arobinson/wodehousegilbert.htm List of allusions to G&S in Wodehouse]</ref> [[Guy Bolton]], [[Victor Herbert]], and [[Ivor Novello]], and later [[Irving Berlin]], [[Jerome Kern]], [[Oscar Hammerstein II]], and [[Andrew Lloyd Webber]].<ref>[[Ian Bradley|Bradley]] (2005), p. 9</ref>  Gilbert's lyrics served as a model for such 20th-century [[Broadway theatre|Broadway]] lyricists as [[Cole Porter]],<ref>[http://www.pbs.org/wnet/americanmasters/education/lesson35_procedures.html Lesson 35&mdash;Cole Porter: You're the Top.] PBS.org, American Masters for Teachers, Retrieved on [[2007-05-21]].</ref> [[Ira Gershwin]],<ref>Furia, Phillip. [http://www.us.oup.com/us/catalog/general/subject/Music/PopularMusic/Jazz/~~/dmlldz11c2EmY2k9OTc4MDE5NTExNTcwMw== Ira Gershwin: The Art of a Lyricist.] Oxford University Press, Retrieved on [[2007-05-21]].</ref> and [[Lorenz Hart]].<ref name=PeterDowns />  [[Noel Coward]] wrote:
 
{{cquote|I was born into a generation that still took light music seriously. The lyrics and melodies of Gilbert and Sullivan were hummed and strummed into my consciousness at an early age. My father sang them, my mother played them, my nurse, Emma, breathed them through her teeth while she was washing me, dressing me and undressing me and putting me to bed. My aunts and uncles, who were legion, sang them singly and in unison at the slightest provocation...<ref>''The Noel Coward Song Book'', (London: Methuen, 1953), p. 9</ref>
 
|Introduction to ''The Noel Coward Song Book''}}
 
 
 
Gilbert and Sullivan's work provides a rich cultural resource outside of their influence upon musicals. The works of Gilbert and Sullivan are themselves frequently pastiched.<ref>[http://www.cris.com/~oakapple/gasdisc/miscderv.htm List of links to reviews and analysis of recordings of a number of G&S parodies]</ref>  Well known examples of this include [[Tom Lehrer]]'s [[The Elements (song)|The Elements]],<ref>[http://www.cris.com/~oakapple/gasdisc/mdlehrer.htm Review and analysis of Lehrer's G&S parodies]</ref> [[Allan Sherman]]'s, [[The Two Ronnies]]<ref>[http://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B000VA3J6G The Two Ronnies's G&S parody is in their 1973 Christmas special]</ref> and [[Anna Russell]]'s famous routines,<ref>[http://www.cris.com/~oakapple/gasdisc/mdanna.htm Review and analysis of Russell's G&S parody]</ref> and the animated TV series ''[[Animaniacs]]''' ''HMS Yakko'' episode.  Gilbert and Sullivan comic operas are commonly referenced in literature, film and television in various ways that include extensive use of Sullivan's music or where action occurs during a performance of a Gilbert and Sullivan opera.  There are also a number of Gilbert and Sullivan biopics, such as [[Mike Leigh]]'s ''[[Topsy-Turvy]]''.
 
{{cquote|The musical is not, of course, the only cultural form to show the influence of G&S.  Even more direct heirs are those witty and satirical songwriters found on both sides of the Atlantic in the twentieth century like [[Michael Flanders]] and [[Donald Swann]] in the United Kingdom and [[Tom Lehrer]] in the United States.  The influence of Gilbert is discernible in a vein of British comedy that runs through [[John Betjeman]]'s verse via [[Monty Python]] and [[Private Eye (magazine)|Private Eye]] to... television series like ''[[Yes, Minister]]''... where the emphasis is on wit, irony, and poking fun at the establishment from within it in a way which manages to be both disrespectful of authority and yet cosily comfortable and urbane.| [[Ian Bradley]]|(2005)}}
 
 
 
It is not surprising, given the focus of Gilbert on politics, that politicians and political observers have often found inspiration in these works. U.S. Supreme Court Justice [[William Rehnquist]] added gold stripes to his judicial robes after seeing them used by the [[Lord Chancellor]] in a production of ''Iolanthe''.<ref>[http://www.jsonline.com/story/index.aspx?id=353263 "Sporting stripes set Rehnquist apart".] Milwaukee Journal Sentinel Online, [[September 4]] [[2005]]. Retrieved on [[2007-05-26]].</ref> Alternatively, [[Charles Falconer, Baron Falconer of Thoroton|Lord Chancellor Charles Falconer]] is recorded as objecting so strongly to ''Iolanthe'''s comic portrayal of Lord Chancellors that he supported moves to disband the office.<ref name="Green" /> British politicians, beyond quoting some of the more famous lines, have delivered speeches in the form of Gilbert and Sullivan pastiches. These include Conservative [[Peter Lilley]]'s speech mimicking the form of "I've got a little list" from ''The Mikado'', listing those he was against, including "sponging socialists" and "young ladies who get pregnant just to jump the housing queue".<ref name="Green" /> Political humour based on Gilbert and Sullivan's style and characters continues to be written.<ref>See, e.g., [http://www.dailymail.co.uk/pages/live/articles/columnists/columnists.html?in_article_id=465034&in_page_id=1772&in_author_id=322&in_check=N this ''Daily Mail'' editorial piece, dated June 29, 2007]</ref>
 
  
 
==Collaborations==
 
==Collaborations==
[[Image:Pirates of Penzance (A.S. Seer, 1880).jpg|thumb|1880 ''Pirates'' poster]]
 
 
'''Major works and original London runs'''
 
'''Major works and original London runs'''
*''[[Thespis (operetta)|Thespis]]'', or, ''The Gods Grown Old'' (1871) 63 performances
+
*''[[Thespis (operetta)|Thespis]],'' or, ''The Gods Grown Old'' (1871) 63 performances
 
*''[[Trial by Jury]]'' (1875) 131 performances
 
*''[[Trial by Jury]]'' (1875) 131 performances
 
*''[[The Sorcerer]]'' (1877) 178 performances
 
*''[[The Sorcerer]]'' (1877) 178 performances
*''[[H.M.S. Pinafore]]'', or, ''The Lass That Loved a Sailor'' (1878) 571 performances
+
*''[[H.M.S. Pinafore]],'' or, ''The Lass That Loved a Sailor'' (1878) 571 performances
*''[[The Pirates of Penzance]]'', or, ''The Slave of Duty'' (1879) 363 performances
+
*''[[The Pirates of Penzance]],'' or, ''The Slave of Duty'' (1879) 363 performances
 
*''[[The Martyr of Antioch]]'' (cantata) (1880) (Gilbert modified the poem by [[Henry Hart Milman]]) N/A
 
*''[[The Martyr of Antioch]]'' (cantata) (1880) (Gilbert modified the poem by [[Henry Hart Milman]]) N/A
*''[[Patience (operetta)|Patience]]'', or ''Bunthorne's Bride'' (1881) 578 performances
+
*''[[Patience (operetta)|Patience]],'' or ''Bunthorne's Bride'' (1881) 578 performances
*''[[Iolanthe]]'', or, ''The Peer and the Peri'' (1882) 398 performances
+
*''[[Iolanthe]],'' or, ''The Peer and the Peri'' (1882) 398 performances
*''[[Princess Ida]]'', or, ''Castle Adamant'' (1884) 246 performances
+
*''[[Princess Ida]],'' or, ''Castle Adamant'' (1884) 246 performances
*''[[The Mikado]]'', or, ''The Town of Titipu'' (1885) 672 performances
+
*''[[The Mikado]],'' or, ''The Town of Titipu'' (1885) 672 performances
*''[[Ruddigore]]'', or, ''The Witch's Curse'' (1887) 288 performances
+
*''[[Ruddigore]],'' or, ''The Witch's Curse'' (1887) 288 performances
*''[[The Yeomen of the Guard]]'', or, ''The Merryman and his Maid'' (1888) 423 performances
+
*''[[The Yeomen of the Guard]],'' or, ''The Merryman and his Maid'' (1888) 423 performances
*''[[The Gondoliers]]'', or, ''The King of Barataria'' (1889) 554 performances
+
*''[[The Gondoliers]],'' or, ''The King of Barataria'' (1889) 554 performances
*''[[Utopia, Limited]]'', or, ''The Flowers of Progress'' (1893) 245 performances
+
*''[[Utopia, Limited]],'' or, ''The Flowers of Progress'' (1893) 245 performances
*''[[The Grand Duke]]'', or, ''The Statutory Duel'' (1896) 123 performances
+
*''[[The Grand Duke]],'' or, ''The Statutory Duel'' (1896) 123 performances
  
 
'''Parlour ballads'''
 
'''Parlour ballads'''
Line 181: Line 132:
 
== Alternative versions ==
 
== Alternative versions ==
 
;Translations
 
;Translations
Gilbert and Sullivan operas have been translated into many languages, including Portuguese, Yiddish, Hebrew, Swedish, Danish, Estonian, Spanish (reportedly including a version of ''Pinafore'' transformed into [[zarzuela]] style), and many others.
+
Gilbert and Sullivan operas have been translated into many languages, including Portuguese, Yiddish, Hebrew, Swedish, Danish, Estonian, Spanish (reportedly including a version of ''Pinafore'' transformed into [[zarzuela]] style), and many others.  
  
There are many German versions of Gilbert and Sullivan operas, including the popular ''Der Mikado''. There is even a German version of ''The Grand Duke''. Some German translations were made by Friedrich Zell and Richard Genée, librettists of ''[[Die Fledermaus]]'', ''[[Eine Nacht in Venedig]]'' and other Viennese operettas, who even translated one of  Sullivan's  lesser-known operas, ''[[The Chieftain]]'', as ''("Der Häuptling").''
+
There are many German versions of Gilbert and Sullivan operas, including the popular ''Der Mikado''. There is even a German version of ''The Grand Duke''. Some German translations were made by Friedrich Zell and Richard Genée, librettists of ''[[Die Fledermaus]]'', ''[[Eine Nacht in Venedig]]'' and other Viennese operettas, who even translated one of  Sullivan's  lesser-known operas, ''[[The Chieftain]],'' as ''("Der Häuptling").''
  
 
;Ballets  
 
;Ballets  
* ''[[Pirates of Penzance - The Ballet!]]'' (formerly called ''Pirates! The Ballet'')
+
* ''[[Pirates of Penzance—The Ballet!]]'' (1991—formerly called ''Pirates! The Ballet'')
* ''[[Pineapple Poll]]'' - from a story by Gilbert - and music by Sullivan
+
* ''[[Pineapple Poll]]''—from a story by Gilbert and music by Sullivan
  
 
;Adaptations  
 
;Adaptations  
*''[[The Swing Mikado]]'' (1938; Chicago - all-black cast)
+
*''[[The Swing Mikado]]'' (1938; Chicago—all-black cast)
 
*''[[The Hot Mikado (1939 production)|The Hot Mikado]]'' (1939) and ''[[Hot Mikado]]'' (1986)
 
*''[[The Hot Mikado (1939 production)|The Hot Mikado]]'' (1939) and ''[[Hot Mikado]]'' (1986)
 
*''The Jazz Mikado''  
 
*''The Jazz Mikado''  
Line 198: Line 149:
 
*''[[The Pirate Movie]]'' (1982), starring [[Christopher Atkins]] and [[Kristy McNichol]].
 
*''[[The Pirate Movie]]'' (1982), starring [[Christopher Atkins]] and [[Kristy McNichol]].
 
*''The Ratepayers' Iolanthe'' (1984; [[Olivier Award]]-winning musical)
 
*''The Ratepayers' Iolanthe'' (1984; [[Olivier Award]]-winning musical)
*''Di Yam Gazlonim'' by Al Grand (1985; a [[Yiddish]] adaptation of ''Pirates''; a New York production was nominated for a 2007 [[Drama Desk Award]])
+
*''Di Yam Gazlonim'' by Al Grand (1985; a [[Yiddish]] adaptation of ''Pirates;'' a New York production was nominated for a 2007 [[Drama Desk Award]])
*''[[Pirates of Penzance - The Ballet!]]'' (1991)
 
 
*''Parson's Pirates'' by [[Opera della Luna]] (2002)
 
*''Parson's Pirates'' by [[Opera della Luna]] (2002)
 
*''The Ghosts of [[Ruddigore]]'' by [[Opera della Luna]] (2003)
 
*''The Ghosts of [[Ruddigore]]'' by [[Opera della Luna]] (2003)
 +
 +
==See Also==
 +
* [[Arthur Sullivan]]
 +
* [[Musical Theater]]
 +
* [[Opera]]
 +
* [[W.S. Gilbert]]
  
 
==Notes==
 
==Notes==
Line 207: Line 163:
  
 
==References==
 
==References==
* {{cite book|last=Ainger|first=Michael|year=2002|title=Gilbert and Sullivan, a Dual Biography|location=Oxford|publisher=Oxford University Press|id=ISBN 0195147693}}
+
* Ainger, Michael. ''Gilbert and Sullivan, a Dual Biography.'' Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2002. ISBN 978-0195147698.  
* {{cite book|last=Allen|first=Reginald|year=1975|title=The First Night Gilbert and Sullivan|location=London|publisher=Chappell & Co. Ltd}}
+
* Ayre, Leslie. ''The Gilbert and Sullivan Companion.'' London: W.H. Allen & Co Ltd., 1972. ISBN 978-0396066347.
*{{cite book|last=Ayre|first=Leslie|year=1972|title=The Gilbert & Sullivan Companion|location=London|publisher=W.H. Allen & Co Ltd}} Introduction by [[Martyn Green]].
+
* Baily, Leslie. ''The Gilbert and Sullivan Book.'' London: Spring Books, 1966.  
* {{cite book|last=Baily|first=Leslie|year=1966|title=The Gilbert and Sullivan Book|location=London|publisher=Spring Books|edition=new ed.}}
+
* Benford, Harry. ''The Gilbert & Sullivan Lexicon,'' 3rd ed. Ann Arbor, Michigan: The Queensbury Press, 1999. ISBN 0966791614.
*{{cite book|last=Benford|first=Harry|year=1999|title=The Gilbert & Sullivan Lexicon, 3rd Revised Edition|location=Ann Arbor, Michigan|publisher=The Queensbury Press|isbn = 0-9667916-1-4}}
+
* Bradley, Ian. ''The Complete Annotated Gilbert and Sullivan.'' Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1996. ISBN 978-0198165033.
* {{cite book|last=Bradley|first=Ian|authorlink=Ian Bradley|year=1996|title=The Complete Annotated Gilbert and Sullivan|location=Oxford, England|publisher=Oxford University Press|isbn = 019816503X}}
+
* Bradley, Ian. ''Oh Joy! Oh Rapture! The Enduring Phenomenon of Gilbert and Sullivan.'' Oxford University Press, 2005. ISBN 978-0195167009.
* {{cite book | last = Bradley | first = Ian| authorlink=Ian Bradley|title = Oh Joy! Oh Rapture! The Enduring Phenomenon of Gilbert and Sullivan | publisher = Oxford University Press | year = 2005 | isbn = 0195167007}}
+
* Cellier, François, and Cunningham Bridgeman. ''Gilbert and Sullivan and Their Operas: With Recollections and Anecdotes of D'Oyly Carte & Other Famous Savoyards.'' London: Issac Pitman & Sons, 1914.
* {{cite book|last=Cellier|first=François and Cunningham Bridgeman|year=1914|title=Gilbert and Sullivan and Their Operas|location=London|publisher=Sir Isaac Pitman & sons, ltd}} This book is [http://books.google.com/books?id=RgARAAAAIAAJ&pgis=1 available online at Google books.]  Retrieved on [[2007-06-10]].
+
* Coward, Noel. ''The Noel Coward Song Book''. Routledge, 1984. ISBN 978-0416009613
* {{cite book|last=Fitzgerald|first=Percy Hetherington|year=1899|title=The Savoy Opera and the Savoyards|location=London|publisher=Chatto & Windus}} This book is [http://books.google.com/books?id=EhkjAAAAMAAJ available online at Google books.] Retrieved on [[2007-06-10]].
+
* Fitzgerald, Percy H. ''The Savoy Opera and the Savoyards.'' London: Chatto & Windus, 1899.
* {{cite book|last=Jacobs|first=Arthur|year=1986|title=Arthur Sullivan A Victorian Musician|publisher=Oxford University Press|id=ISBN 0-19-282033-8}}
+
* Gilbert, W. S., and Reginald Allen. ''The First Night Gilbert and Sullivan: Containing Complete Librettos of the Fourteen Operas, Exactly as Presented at Their Première Performances''. London: Chappell, 1976. ISBN 978-0903443104.
* {{cite book|last=Stedman|first=Jane W.|year=1996|title=W. S. Gilbert, A Classic Victorian & His Theatre|publisher=Oxford University Press|id=ISBN 0-19-816174-3}}
+
* Jacobs, Arthur. ''Arthur Sullivan: A Victorian Musician.'' Oxford University Press, 1984. ISBN 978-0193154438.
* {{cite book|last=Williamson|first=Audrey|year=1953|title=Gilbert and Sullivan Opera|location=London|publisher=Marion Boyars}}
+
* Stedman, Jane W. ''W.S. Gilbert: A Classic Victorian and his Theatre.'' Oxford University Press, 1996. ISBN 978-0198161745.
* {{cite book|last=Walbrook|first=H.M.|year=1922|title=Gilbert & Sullivan Opera, A History and a Comment|location=London|publisher=F. V. White & Co. Ltd}} ([http://math.boisestate.edu/GaS/books/walbrook/index.html available online here])
+
* Williamson, Audrey. ''Gilbert & Sullivan Opera: An Assessment.'' London: Marion Boyars, 2000 (original 1982). ISBN 978-0714527666.
* {{cite book | last=Wolfson| first=John| year=1976 | title=Final curtain: The last Gilbert and Sullivan Operas| publisher=Chappell in association with A. Deutsch| location=London}} ISBN 0-903443-12-0
+
* Walbrook, H.M. ''Gilbert & Sullivan Opera, A History and a Comment.'' London: F. V. White & Co. Ltd., 1922.  
 
+
* Wolfson, John. ''Final Curtain: The Last Gilbert and Sullivan Operas: Including the Unpublished Rehearsal Librettos and Twenty Unpublished Gilbert Lyrics.'' London: Chappell in association with A. Deutsch, 1976. ISBN 978-0903443128
 +
* Wren, Gayden. ''A Most Ingenious Paradox: The Art of Gilbert and Sullivan''. Oxford University Press, 2006. ISBN 978-0195301724
  
 
==External links==
 
==External links==
All links retrieved June 27, 2008.
+
All links retrieved August 29, 2018.
 
*[http://diamond.boisestate.edu/gas/ The Gilbert and Sullivan Archive]
 
*[http://diamond.boisestate.edu/gas/ The Gilbert and Sullivan Archive]
*[http://www.musicals101.com/g&s101.htm Historical survey of G&S]   
+
*[http://www.musicals101.com/g&s101.htm Gilbert & Sullivan 101]   
 
*[http://www.library.rochester.edu/index.cfm?page=4090 University of Rochester's online Gilbert & Sullivan exhibit]  
 
*[http://www.library.rochester.edu/index.cfm?page=4090 University of Rochester's online Gilbert & Sullivan exhibit]  
*[http://www.cris.com/~oakapple/savoynet Savoynet G&S discussion list - an email-based G&S listserv] 
+
*[http://www.mugss.org/ Manchester Universities Gilbert and Sullivan Society]
*[http://cgi.ebay.com/Stories-of-Gilbert-and-Sullivan-Operas-1st-Printing_W0QQitemZ330102112891QQcmdZViewItem The stories of G&S operas written for children]
 
 
 
;Music and discographies
 
*[http://oldsoaks.mugss.org/shows/2002/index.htm MP3 files of music from ''[[The Pirates of Penzance]]''] 2002 performance by The Manchester University Gilbert & Sullivan Society
 
*[http://oldsoaks.mugss.org/shows/1998/index.htm MP3 files of music from ''[[The Mikado]]''] 1998 performance by The Manchester University Gilbert & Sullivan Society
 
*[http://math.boisestate.edu/gas/midi/html/midi_home.html G&S Archive MIDI homepage]
 
*[http://www.cris.com/~oakapple/gasdisc/index.htm The Gilbert and Sullivan Discography]
 
*[http://www.cris.com/~oakapple/gasdisc/miscderv.htm Links to reviews and analysis of numerous recordings of "G&S Derived Works"]
 
 
 
;Appreciation society and performing group links
 
 
*[http://www.gilbertandsullivansociety.org.uk/listEvents.htm The Gilbert and Sullivan Society, London]
 
*[http://www.gilbertandsullivansociety.org.uk/listEvents.htm The Gilbert and Sullivan Society, London]
*[http://negass.org/index.html The New England Gilbert and Sullivan Society (includes links to other North American societies)]
 
 
*[http://g-and-s.org/  The Gilbert and Sullivan Society of New York]
 
*[http://g-and-s.org/  The Gilbert and Sullivan Society of New York]
*[http://diamond.boisestate.edu/gas/html/websites/index.html G&S Archive "Performing Groups" page] Comprehensive listing of performing companies.
+
*[https://www.thesavoytheatre.com/ The Savoy Theatre]
  
 +
[[Category:Art, music, literature, sports and leisure]]
 +
[[Category:Performing arts]]
 +
[[Category:Music]]
 
{{Credits|220314436}}
 
{{Credits|220314436}}

Latest revision as of 10:04, 14 December 2022

Arthur Sullivan

Gilbert and Sullivan refers to the Victorian era partnership of librettist W. S. Gilbert (1836–1911) and composer Arthur Sullivan (1842–1900). Together, they wrote fourteen comic operas between 1871 and 1896, of which H.M.S. Pinafore, The Pirates of Penzance, and The Mikado are among the best known.[1]

Gilbert, who wrote the words, created fanciful topsy-turvy worlds for these operas, where each absurdity is taken to its logical conclusion—fairies rub elbows with British lords, flirting is a capital offense, gondoliers ascend to the monarchy, and pirates turn out to be noblemen who have gone wrong.[2] Sullivan, seven years younger than Gilbert, composed the music, contributing memorable melodies that could convey both humor and pathos.

Producer Richard D'Oyly Carte brought Gilbert and Sullivan together and nurtured their collaboration.[3] He built the Savoy Theatre in 1881, to present their joint works—which came to be known as the Savoy Operas—and he founded the D'Oyly Carte Opera Company, which performed and promoted their works for over a century.

The Gilbert and Sullivan operas have enjoyed broad and enduring international success and are still performed frequently throughout the English-speaking world.[4] The collaboration introduced innovations in content and form that directly influenced the development of musical theater through the twentieth century.[5] The operas have also influenced political discourse, literature, film, and television and have been widely parodied and imitated by humorists.

Early history

Gilbert before Sullivan

W.S. Gilbert was born in London, on November 18, 1836. His father, William, was a naval surgeon who later wrote novels and short stories, some of which included illustrations by his son.[6] In 1861, the younger Gilbert began to write illustrated stories, poems and articles of his own to supplement his income. Many of these would later be mined as a source of ideas for his plays and operas, particularly his series of illustrated poems, called the Bab Ballads.[7]

One of Gilbert's illustrations for his Bab Ballad "Gentle Alice Brown."

In the Bab Ballads and his early plays, Gilbert developed a unique "topsy-turvy" style, where the humor was derived by setting up a ridiculous premise and working out its logical consequences, however absurd. Mike Leigh describes the "Gilbertian" style as follows:

With great fluidity and freedom, [Gilbert] continually challenges our natural expectations. First, within the framework of the story, he makes bizarre things happen, and turns the world on its head. Thus the Learned Judge marries the Plaintiff, the soldiers metamorphose into aesthetes, and so on, and nearly every opera is resolved by a deft moving of the goalposts… His genius is to fuse opposites with an imperceptible sleight of hand, to blend the surreal with the real, and the caricature with the natural. In other words, to tell a perfectly outrageous story in a completely deadpan way.[2]

Ages Ago, during the rehearsals for which Frederic Clay introduced Gilbert to Sullivan.

Gilbert developed his innovative theories on the art of stage direction, following theatrical reformer Tom Robertson.[6] At the time Gilbert began writing, theater in Britain was in disrepute.[8] Gilbert helped to reform and elevate the respectability of the theater, especially beginning with his six short family-friendly comic operas, or "entertainments," for Thomas German Reed.[7]

Sullivan before Gilbert

Sullivan was born in London on May 13, 1842. His father was a military bandmaster, and by the time Arthur had reached the age of 8, he was proficient with all the instruments in the band. In school, he began to compose anthems and songs. In 1856, he received the first Mendelssohn Prize and studied at the Royal Academy of Music and at Leipzig, where he also took up conducting. His graduation piece, completed in 1861, was a suite of incidental music to Shakespeare's The Tempest. Revised and expanded, it was performed at the Crystal Palace in 1862, and was an immediate sensation. He began building a reputation as England's most promising young composer, composing a symphony, a concerto, and several overtures, among them the Overture di Ballo, in 1870.

His early major works for the voice included The Masque at Kenilworth (1864); an oratorio, The Prodigal Son (1869); and a dramatic cantata, On Shore and Sea (1871). He composed a ballet, L'Île Enchantée (1864), and incidental music for a number of Shakespeare plays. Other early pieces that were praised were his Symphony in E, Concerto for Cello and Orchestra, and Overture in C (In Memoriam) (all three of which premiered in 1866). These commissions, however, were not sufficient to keep Sullivan afloat. He worked as a church organist and taught to earn his living, as as well composing hymns and songs.[9]

Sullivan's first foray into comic opera was Cox and Box (1866), written with librettist F.C. Burnand for an informal gathering of friends. Public performance followed, with W.S. Gilbert (then writing dramatic criticism for Fun) saying that Sullivan's score "is, in many places, of too high a class for the grotesquely absurd plot to which it is wedded."[10] Sullivan and Burnand followed their success with a second comic opera, The Contrabandista (1867).

Joint work

First collaborations

Gilbert and Sullivan's first collaboration gave little indication of the success that was to come their way. The two were first paired in 1871, when the manager of the Gaiety Theatre in the Aldwych, John Hollingshead, commissioned the two up and comers for the production of a musical burlesque show. Titled Thespis, the show was rushed, actors were under rehearsed and over worked. In fact, the first performance ran an hour long, lines were forgotten, and booing could be heard when it finally ended.[11]

And yet, the musical showed elements common in future Gilbert and Sullivan plays, particularly the ridiculous premise (in this case, the classic Greek and Roman deities go on vacation, leaving a troupe of actors in charge of Mount Olympus). Despite the fact that the show starred two big names of the time, J.L. Toole and Nellie Farren, it opened to mixed reviews; however, it did manage a modest ten-week run.[11]

Gilbert and Sullivan would not be paired together for another three years, until they were commissioned to write Trial by Jury.

In 1874, Gilbert wrote a short libretto on commission from producer–composer Carl Rosa, whose wife would have played the leading role, but her death in childbirth canceled the project and left the libretto an orphan. Not long afterwards, Richard D'Oyly Carte was managing the Royalty Theatre, and he needed a short opera to be played as an after piece to Offenbach's La Périchole. Gilbert already had available the libretto he had written for Rosa, and Carte suggested that Sullivan write the score. The composer was delighted with it, and Trial by Jury was composed in a matter of weeks.

The piece is one of Gilbert's humorous spoofs of the law and the legal profession, based on his brief experience as a barrister. It concerns a breach of promise of marriage suit. The defendant argues that damages should be slight, since "he is such a very bad lot," while the plaintiff argues that she loves the defendant fervently and seeks "substantial damages." After much argument, the judge resolves the case by marrying the lovely plaintiff himself. With Sullivan's brother, Fred, as the Learned Judge, the opera was a runaway hit, outlasting the run of La Périchole. Provincial tours and productions at other theaters quickly followed.[12]

After the success of Trial by Jury, Gilbert and Sullivan were suddenly in demand to write more operas together. Over the next two years, Richard D'Oyly Carte was one of several theatrical managers who negotiated with the team but were unable to come to terms. Carte also proposed a revival of Thespis for the 1875 Christmas season, which Gilbert and Sullivan would have revised, but he was unable to obtain financing for the project.

Sorcerer to Pirates

Sorcerer

Carte's real ambition was to develop an English form of light opera that would displace the bawdy burlesques and badly translated French operettas then dominating the London stage. He assembled a syndicate and formed the Comedy Opera Company, with Gilbert and Sullivan commissioned to write a comic opera that would serve as the centerpiece for an evening's entertainment.

An early poster showing scenes from The Sorcerer, Pinafore, and Trial by Jury.

Gilbert found inspiration in one of his own short stories, "The Elixir of Love," which concerned the complications arising when a love potion is distributed to all the residents of a small village. The leading character was a Cockney businessman who happened to be a sorcerer, a purveyor of blessings (not much called for) and curses (very popular). Gilbert and Sullivan were tireless taskmasters, seeing to it that The Sorcerer opened as a fully polished production, in marked contrast to the under-rehearsed Thespis.[13] While The Sorcerer won critical acclaim, it did not duplicate the success of Trial by Jury. Nevertheless, Carte and his syndicate were sufficiently encouraged to commission another full-length opera from the team.

H.M.S. Pinafore

Gilbert and Sullivan scored their first international hit with H.M.S. Pinafore (1878), satirizing the rise of unqualified people to positions of authority and poking good-natured fun at the Royal Navy and the English obsession with social status (building on a theme introduced in The Sorcerer, love between members of different social classes). As with many of the Gilbert and Sullivan operas, a surprise twist changes everything dramatically near the end of the story.

Gilbert oversaw the designs of sets and costumes, and he directed the performers on stage. Sullivan personally oversaw the musical preparation. The result was a new crispness and polish in the English musical theater.[14]

H.M.S. Pinafore ran in London for 571 performances.[15] Hundreds of unauthorized, or "pirated," productions of Pinafore appeared in America, where the show was exceptionally popular.[11]

The libretto of H.M.S. Pinafore relied on stock character types, many of which were familiar from European opera (and some of which grew out of Gilbert's earlier association with the German Reeds): The heroic protagonist (tenor) and his love-interest (soprano); the older woman with a secret or a sharp tongue (contralto); the baffled lyric baritone—the girl's father; and a classic villain (bass-baritone). Gilbert and Sullivan added the element of the comic patter-singing character. With the success of H.M.S. Pinafore, the D'Oyly Carte repertory and production system was cemented, and each opera would make use of these stock character types. Before The Sorcerer, Gilbert had constructed his plays around the established stars of whatever theater he happened to be writing for, as had been the case with Thespis and Trial by Jury. Building on the team he had assembled for The Sorcerer, Gilbert no longer hired stars; he created them. He and Sullivan selected the performers, writing their operas for ensemble casts rather than individual stars.

The repertory system ensured that the comic patter character who performed the role of the sorcerer, John Wellington Wells, would become the ruler of the Queen's navy as Sir Joseph Porter in H.M.S. Pinafore, then join the army as Major-General Stanley in The Pirates of Penzance, and so on. Similarly, Mrs. Partlet in The Sorcerer transformed into Little Buttercup in Pinafore, then into Ruth, the piratical maid-of-all-work in Pirates. Relatively unknown performers whom Gilbert and Sullivan engaged early in the collaboration would stay with the company for many years, becoming stars of the Victorian stage. These included George Grossmith, the principal comic; Rutland Barrington, the lyric baritone; Richard Temple, the bass-baritone; and Jessie Bond, the mezzo-soprano soubrette.

The Pirates of Penzance

The Pirates of Penzance, conceived in a fit of pique at the American copyright pirates, also poked fun at grand opera conventions, sense of duty, family obligation, the "respectability" of civilization and the peerage, and the relevance of a liberal education. The story also revisits Pinafore's theme of unqualified people in positions of authority, in the person of the "modern Major-General" who has up-to-date knowledge about everything except the military. The Major-General and his many daughters escape from the tender-hearted Pirates of Penzance, who are all orphans, on the false plea that he is an orphan himself. The pirates learn of the deception and re-capture the Major-General, but when it is revealed that the pirates are all peers, the Major-General bids them: "Resume your ranks and legislative duties, and take my daughters, all of whom are beauties!"

The piece premiered first in New York rather than London, in an (unsuccessful) attempt to secure the American copyright, and was another big success with both critics and audiences.[16] Gilbert, Sullivan, and Carte tried for many years to control the American performance copyrights over their operas, without success.[17]

Savoy Operas

During the run of the Gilbert and Sullivan's next opera, Patience, Carte built the Savoy Theatre, which became the partnership's permanent home and was the first theater in the world to be lit entirely by electric lighting.

The Mikado

Lithograph of the "Three Little Maids" from The Mikado

The most successful of the Savoy Operas was The Mikado (1885), which made fun of English bureaucracy, thinly disguised by a Japanese setting. Gilbert initially proposed a story for a new opera about a magic lozenge that would change the characters (which he later presented in The Mountebanks, written with Alfred Cellier, in 1892), but Sullivan found it artificial and lacking in "human interest and probability," as well as being too similar to their earlier opera, The Sorcerer. The author and composer were at an impasse until May 8, 1884, when Gilbert dropped the lozenge idea and agreed to provide a libretto without any supernatural elements.

The story of The Mikado focuses on a "cheap tailor," Ko-Ko, who is promoted to the position of Lord High Executioner of the town of Titipu. Ko-Ko loves his ward, Yum-Yum, but she loves a musician, who is really the son of the emperor of Japan (the Mikado), and who is in disguise to escape the attentions of the elderly and amorous Katisha. The Mikado has decreed that executions must resume without delay in Titipu. When news arrives that the Mikado will be visiting the town, Ko-Ko assumes that he is coming to ascertain whether Ko-Ko has carried out the executions. Too timid to execute anyone, Ko-Ko cooks up a conspiracy to misdirect the Mikado, which goes awry. Eventually, Ko-Ko must persuade Katisha to marry him, in order to save his own life and the lives of the other conspirators.

With the opening of trade between England and Japan, Japanese imports, art, and styles became fashionable in London, making the time ripe for an opera set in Japan.

Setting the opera in Japan, an exotic locale far away from Britain, allowed Gilbert and Sullivan to satirize British politics and institutions more freely by clothing them in superficial Japanese trappings. Gilbert wrote, "The Mikado of the opera was an imaginary monarch of a remote period and cannot by any exercise of ingenuity be taken to be a slap on an existing institution."[18]

The Mikado became the partnership's longest-running hit, enjoying 672 performances at the Savoy Theatre, which was the second longest run for any work of musical theater (surpassing the 571 performances of Pinafore and 576 of Patience) and one of the longest runs of any theater piece up to that time. The Mikado remains the most frequently performed production at the Savoy Opera, and is widely regarded as Gilbert and Sullivan's most popular and successful work.

After The Mikado

Ruddigore, a supernatural tale, was the pair's next release and became quite controversial due to its subject matter. It was followed in 1888, by The Yeoman of the Guard, and in 1898 by The Gondoliers. Gilbert and Sullivan then spent close to four years away from the stage, returning in 1893, with Utopia, Limited. Their final collaboration, The Grand Duke, was first performed in 1896, and marked the end of their oft-quarrelsome, quarter century-long partnership. Together, they produced 14 comic operas. In 1883, Sullivan was knighted by Queen Victoria. In 1907, Gilbert, too, was knighted, by King Edward VII.

Quarrels

Gilbert and Sullivan quarreled several times over the choice of the subject for a new production. After both Princess Ida and Ruddigore, which were less successful than the seven other operas from H.M.S. Pinafore to The Gondoliers, Sullivan asked to leave the partnership, saying that he found Gilbert's plots repetitive and that the operas were not artistically satisfying to him. While the two artists worked out their differences, Carte kept the Savoy open with revivals of their earlier works. On each occasion, after a few months' pause, Gilbert responded with a libretto that met Sullivan's objections, and the partnership was able to continue successfully.[3]

During the run of The Gondoliers, however, Gilbert challenged Carte over the expenses of the production. Carte had charged the cost of a new carpet for the Savoy Theatre lobby to the partnership. Gilbert believed that this was a maintenance expense that should be charged to Carte alone. Sullivan, however, sided with Carte, who was building a theater in London for the production of new English grand operas, with Sullivan's Ivanhoe as the inaugural work.

In 1891, after many failed attempts at reconciliation by the pair and their producer, Richard D'Oyly Carte, Gilbert and Sullivan's music publisher, Tom Chappell, stepped in to mediate between two of his most profitable artists, and within two weeks he had succeeded.[19]

However, Gilbert and Sullivan produced only two further operas together.

Rights

Because of the unusual success of the operas, the D'Oyly Carte Opera Company was able, from the start, to license the works to other professional companies, such as the J.C. Williamson Gilbert and Sullivan Opera Company, and to amateur societies. For almost a century, until the British copyrights expired in 1961, and even afterwards, the D'Oyly Carte Opera Company influenced productions of the operas worldwide, creating a "performing tradition" for most of the operas that is still referred to today by many directors. D'Oyly Carte produced several well-regarded recordings of most of the operas, helping to keep them popular through the decades.

Today, numerous professional repertory companies (for example, NYGASP, Carl Rosa Opera Company, Somerset Opera, Opera della Luna, Opera a la Carte, Skylight opera theatre, Ohio Light Opera, and Washington Savoyards), opera companies, amateur societies, churches, schools, and universities continue to produce the works.[20] The most popular Gilbert and Sullivan works are still performed from time to time by major opera companies.[21] A three-week long International Gilbert and Sullivan Festival is held every August in Buxton, England.

Cultural influence

In the past 125 years, Gilbert and Sullivan have pervasively influenced popular culture in the English-speaking world,[4] and lines and quotations from the Gilbert and Sullivan operas have become part of the English language (even if not originated by Gilbert), such as, "let the punishment fit the crime" and "A policeman's lot is not a happy one."[22] The operas have influenced political style and discourse, literature, film, and television, have been widely parodied by humorists, and have been quoted in legal rulings.

The American and British musical owes a tremendous debt to Gilbert and Sullivan, who were admired and copied by early authors and composers such as Ivan Caryll, Adrian Ross, Lionel Monckton, P.G. Wodehouse,[23] Guy Bolton, Victor Herbert, and Ivor Novello, and later Irving Berlin, Jerome Kern, Oscar Hammerstein II, and Andrew Lloyd Webber.[4] Gilbert's lyrics served as a model for such twentieth century Broadway lyricists as Cole Porter,[24] Ira Gershwin, and Lorenz Hart.[5] Noel Coward wrote:

I was born into a generation that still took light music seriously. The lyrics and melodies of Gilbert and Sullivan were hummed and strummed into my consciousness at an early age. My father sang them, my mother played them, my nurse, Emma, breathed them through her teeth while she was washing me, dressing me and undressing me and putting me to bed. My aunts and uncles, who were legion, sang them singly and in unison at the slightest provocation….[25]

Gilbert and Sullivan's work provides a rich cultural resource outside of their influence upon musicals. The works of Gilbert and Sullivan are themselves frequently satirized.[26] Well known examples of this include Tom Lehrer's "The Elements," Allan Sherman's, The Two Ronnies, and Anna Russell's famous routines, as well as the animated TV series Animaniacs' HMS Yakko episode. Gilbert and Sullivan comic operas are commonly referenced in literature, film, and television—such as the 1998 film, Star Trek: Insurrection—in various ways that include extensive use of Sullivan's music or where action occurs during a performance of a Gilbert and Sullivan opera. There are also a number of Gilbert and Sullivan biopics, such as Mike Leigh's Topsy-Turvy.

The musical is not, of course, the only cultural form to show the influence of G&S. Even more direct heirs are those witty and satirical songwriters found on both sides of the Atlantic in the twentieth century like Michael Flanders and Donald Swann in the United Kingdom and Tom Lehrer in the United States. The influence of Gilbert is discernible in a vein of British comedy that runs through John Betjeman's verse via Monty Python and Private Eye to… television series like Yes, Minister… where the emphasis is on wit, irony, and poking fun at the establishment from within it in a way which manages to be both disrespectful of authority and yet cosily comfortable and urbane.[4]

It is not surprising, given the focus of Gilbert on politics, that politicians and political observers have often found inspiration in these works. U.S. Supreme Court Justice William Rehnquist added gold stripes to his judicial robes after seeing them used by the Lord Chancellor in a production of Iolanthe.[27] Alternatively, Lord Chancellor Charles Falconer is recorded as objecting so strongly to Iolanthe's comic portrayal of Lord Chancellors that he supported moves to disband the office.[22] British politicians, beyond quoting some of the more famous lines, have delivered speeches in the form of Gilbert and Sullivan pastiches. These include Conservative Peter Lilley's speech mimicking the form of "I've got a little list" from The Mikado, listing those he was against, including "sponging socialists" and "young ladies who get pregnant just to jump the housing queue."[22] Political humor based on Gilbert and Sullivan's style and characters continues to be written.

Collaborations

Major works and original London runs

  • Thespis, or, The Gods Grown Old (1871) 63 performances
  • Trial by Jury (1875) 131 performances
  • The Sorcerer (1877) 178 performances
  • H.M.S. Pinafore, or, The Lass That Loved a Sailor (1878) 571 performances
  • The Pirates of Penzance, or, The Slave of Duty (1879) 363 performances
  • The Martyr of Antioch (cantata) (1880) (Gilbert modified the poem by Henry Hart Milman) N/A
  • Patience, or Bunthorne's Bride (1881) 578 performances
  • Iolanthe, or, The Peer and the Peri (1882) 398 performances
  • Princess Ida, or, Castle Adamant (1884) 246 performances
  • The Mikado, or, The Town of Titipu (1885) 672 performances
  • Ruddigore, or, The Witch's Curse (1887) 288 performances
  • The Yeomen of the Guard, or, The Merryman and his Maid (1888) 423 performances
  • The Gondoliers, or, The King of Barataria (1889) 554 performances
  • Utopia, Limited, or, The Flowers of Progress (1893) 245 performances
  • The Grand Duke, or, The Statutory Duel (1896) 123 performances

Parlour ballads

  • The Distant Shore (1874)
  • The Love that Loves Me Not (1875)
  • Sweethearts (1875), based on Gilbert's 1874 play, Sweethearts

Alternative versions

Translations

Gilbert and Sullivan operas have been translated into many languages, including Portuguese, Yiddish, Hebrew, Swedish, Danish, Estonian, Spanish (reportedly including a version of Pinafore transformed into zarzuela style), and many others.

There are many German versions of Gilbert and Sullivan operas, including the popular Der Mikado. There is even a German version of The Grand Duke. Some German translations were made by Friedrich Zell and Richard Genée, librettists of Die Fledermaus, Eine Nacht in Venedig and other Viennese operettas, who even translated one of Sullivan's lesser-known operas, The Chieftain, as ("Der Häuptling").

Ballets
  • Pirates of Penzance—The Ballet! (1991—formerly called Pirates! The Ballet)
  • Pineapple Poll—from a story by Gilbert and music by Sullivan
Adaptations
  • The Swing Mikado (1938; Chicago—all-black cast)
  • The Hot Mikado (1939) and Hot Mikado (1986)
  • The Jazz Mikado
  • The Black Mikado
  • Hollywood Pinafore (1945)
  • The Cool Mikado (1962)
  • The Pirate Movie (1982), starring Christopher Atkins and Kristy McNichol.
  • The Ratepayers' Iolanthe (1984; Olivier Award-winning musical)
  • Di Yam Gazlonim by Al Grand (1985; a Yiddish adaptation of Pirates; a New York production was nominated for a 2007 Drama Desk Award)
  • Parson's Pirates by Opera della Luna (2002)
  • The Ghosts of Ruddigore by Opera della Luna (2003)

See Also

Notes

  1. Peter G. Davis, Classical Music Review: Smooth Sailing New York Magazine, January 21, 2002. Retrieved September 21, 2018.
  2. 2.0 2.1 Mike Leigh, True anarchists. The Guardian, November 4, 2006. Retrieved September 21, 2018.
  3. 3.0 3.1 Andrew Crowther, The Carpet Quarrel Explained. The Gilbert and Sullivan Archive. Retrieved September 21, 2018.
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 Ian Bradley, Oh Joy! Oh Rapture! The Enduring Phenomenon of Gilbert and Sullivan (Oxford University Press, 2005, ISBN 978-0195167009).
  5. 5.0 5.1 Peter Downs, Actors Cast Away Cares, Hartford Courant, October 18, 2006.
  6. 6.0 6.1 Andrew Crowther, The Life of W.S. Gilbert The Gilbert and Sullivan Archive. Retrieved September 21, 2018.
  7. 7.0 7.1 Jane W. Stedman, W.S. Gilbert: A Classic Victorian and his Theatre (Oxford University Press, 1996, ISBN 978-0198161745).
  8. The Reminiscences of Jessie Bond: Introduction, The Gilbert and Sullivan Archive. Retrieved September 21, 2018.
  9. Stephen Turnbull, Biography of W. S. Gilbert, Gilbert and Sullivan Archive. Retrieved September 21, 2018.
  10. Gayden Wren, A Most Ingenious Paradox: The Art of Gilbert and Sullivan (Oxford University Press, 2006, ISBN 978-0195301724).
  11. 11.0 11.1 11.2 Rupert Christiansen, Thespis: When Gilbert met Sullivan. The Telegraph, March 6, 2008. Retrieved September 21, 2018.
  12. H.M. Walbrook, Gilbert and Sullivan Opera, a History and Comment (Chapter 3), The Gilbert and Sullivan Archive. Retrieved September 21, 2018.
  13. The Sorcerer Gilbert and Sullivan Archive. Retrieved September 21, 2018.
  14. Leslie Baily, The Gilbert and Sullivan Book (London: Spring Books, 1966).
  15. Ian Bradley, The Complete Annotated Gilbert and Sullivan (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1996, ISBN 978-0198165033).
  16. Savoy Operas, Transcription of an opening night review in New York. January, 1880. Retrieved September 21, 2018.
  17. Zvi S. Rosen, The Twilight of the Opera Pirates: A Prehistory of the Right of Public Performance for Musical Compositions Cardozo Arts & Entertainment Law Journal 24 (2007). Retrieved September 21, 2018.
  18. TechAnnounce, TTU Opera Theatre Presents Gilbert & SUllivan's Hilarious The Mikado. Texas Tech University, October 30, 2017. Retrieved September 21, 2018.
  19. John Wolfson, Final Curtain: The Last Gilbert and Sullivan Operas: Including the Unpublished Rehearsal Librettos and Twenty Unpublished Gilbert Lyrics (London: Chappell in association with A. Deutsch, 1976, ISBN 978-0903443128).
  20. The Gilbert and Sullivan Archive at Boise State University, Websites of Performing Groups. Retrieved July 19, 2008.
  21. Opera Base, Performances, by city—Composer: Arthur Sullivan. Retrieved July 19, 2008.
  22. 22.0 22.1 22.2 Edward Green, Ballads, songs, and speeches BBCNews, September 20, 2004. Retrieved September 21, 2018.
  23. PG Wodehouse (1881–1975) The Guardian, July 22, 2008. Retrieved September 21, 2018.
  24. American Masters For Teachers, Lesson 35—Cole Porter: You're the Top. PBS. Retrieved September 21, 2018.
  25. Noel Coward, The Noel Coward Song Book (Routledge, 1984, ISBN 978-0416009613).
  26. Gilbert & Sullivan Parody Archive Retrieved September 21, 2018.
  27. Sporting stripes set Rehnquist apart Milwaukee Journal Sentinal, September 4, 2005. Retrieved September 21, 2018.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Ainger, Michael. Gilbert and Sullivan, a Dual Biography. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2002. ISBN 978-0195147698.
  • Ayre, Leslie. The Gilbert and Sullivan Companion. London: W.H. Allen & Co Ltd., 1972. ISBN 978-0396066347.
  • Baily, Leslie. The Gilbert and Sullivan Book. London: Spring Books, 1966.
  • Benford, Harry. The Gilbert & Sullivan Lexicon, 3rd ed. Ann Arbor, Michigan: The Queensbury Press, 1999. ISBN 0966791614.
  • Bradley, Ian. The Complete Annotated Gilbert and Sullivan. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1996. ISBN 978-0198165033.
  • Bradley, Ian. Oh Joy! Oh Rapture! The Enduring Phenomenon of Gilbert and Sullivan. Oxford University Press, 2005. ISBN 978-0195167009.
  • Cellier, François, and Cunningham Bridgeman. Gilbert and Sullivan and Their Operas: With Recollections and Anecdotes of D'Oyly Carte & Other Famous Savoyards. London: Issac Pitman & Sons, 1914.
  • Coward, Noel. The Noel Coward Song Book. Routledge, 1984. ISBN 978-0416009613
  • Fitzgerald, Percy H. The Savoy Opera and the Savoyards. London: Chatto & Windus, 1899.
  • Gilbert, W. S., and Reginald Allen. The First Night Gilbert and Sullivan: Containing Complete Librettos of the Fourteen Operas, Exactly as Presented at Their Première Performances. London: Chappell, 1976. ISBN 978-0903443104.
  • Jacobs, Arthur. Arthur Sullivan: A Victorian Musician. Oxford University Press, 1984. ISBN 978-0193154438.
  • Stedman, Jane W. W.S. Gilbert: A Classic Victorian and his Theatre. Oxford University Press, 1996. ISBN 978-0198161745.
  • Williamson, Audrey. Gilbert & Sullivan Opera: An Assessment. London: Marion Boyars, 2000 (original 1982). ISBN 978-0714527666.
  • Walbrook, H.M. Gilbert & Sullivan Opera, A History and a Comment. London: F. V. White & Co. Ltd., 1922.
  • Wolfson, John. Final Curtain: The Last Gilbert and Sullivan Operas: Including the Unpublished Rehearsal Librettos and Twenty Unpublished Gilbert Lyrics. London: Chappell in association with A. Deutsch, 1976. ISBN 978-0903443128
  • Wren, Gayden. A Most Ingenious Paradox: The Art of Gilbert and Sullivan. Oxford University Press, 2006. ISBN 978-0195301724

External links

All links retrieved August 29, 2018.

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