The Mikado the Articles in This Study Guide Are Not Meant to Mirror Or Interpret Any Productions at the Utah Shakespeare Festival
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AUDITION PIECES – “THE MIKADO” Role Audition Piece Chappell Pg
AUDITION PIECES – “THE MIKADO” Role Audition Piece Chappell Pg.# Kalmus / Schirmer Pg.# THE MIKADO Solo: “A more humane Mikado” (to chorus entrance) 149 Act 2 #6 172 Act 2 # 17 bass or bass/baritone Ens.: “See how the fates their gifts allot” 162 Act 2 #8 190 Act 2 #19 Dialogue: “Obliged… -> theatrical performances” NANKI-POO Solo: ”A wand’ring minstrel, I” (to chorus entrance) 27 Act 1 #2 23 Act 1 #2 tenor Ens. “Were you not to Ko-Ko plighted” 80 Act 1 #9 88 Act 1 #9 Ens.: “Brightly dawns our wedding day” 133 Act 2 #3 151 Act 2 #14 Dialogue: “This is simply appalling” (whole scene) Dialogue: “Yum-Yum, at last we are alone” (whole scene) KO-KO Solo: “On a tree by a river…” 175 Act 2 #11 208 Act 2 #22 baritone Ens.: “I am so proud” 84 Act 1 #10 93 Act 1 #10 Ens.: “See how the fates their gifts allot” 162 Act 2 #8 190 Act 2 #19 Ens.: “There is beauty …” 179 Act 2 #12 213 Act 2 #23 Dialogue: “This is simply appalling” (whole scene) POOH-BAH Solo: “Young man, despair” 41 Act 1 #4 42 Act 1 #4 baritone Ens.: “I am so proud” 84 Act 1 #10 93 Act 1 #10 Ens.: “See how the fates their gifts allot” 162 Act 2 #8 190 Act 2 #19 Dialogue: “It is. -> sneering” PISH-TUSH Solo: “Our great Mikado, virtuous man” 34 Act 1 #3 32 Act 1 #3 baritone Ens.: “I am so proud” 84 Act 1 #10 93 Act 1 #10 Ens.: “Brightly dawns our wedding day” 133 Act 2 #3 151 Act 2 #14 Dialogue: “Obliged… -> theatrical performances” (reads The Mikado’s lines) GO-TO (A NOBLE) Solo: “Why, who are you who ask this question?” 26 Act 1 #1 Recit. -
The Dublin Gate Theatre Archive, 1928 - 1979
Charles Deering McCormick Library of Special Collections Northwestern University Libraries Dublin Gate Theatre Archive The Dublin Gate Theatre Archive, 1928 - 1979 History: The Dublin Gate Theatre was founded by Hilton Edwards (1903-1982) and Micheál MacLiammóir (1899-1978), two Englishmen who had met touring in Ireland with Anew McMaster's acting company. Edwards was a singer and established Shakespearian actor, and MacLiammóir, actually born Alfred Michael Willmore, had been a noted child actor, then a graphic artist, student of Gaelic, and enthusiast of Celtic culture. Taking their company’s name from Peter Godfrey’s Gate Theatre Studio in London, the young actors' goal was to produce and re-interpret world drama in Dublin, classic and contemporary, providing a new kind of theatre in addition to the established Abbey and its purely Irish plays. Beginning in 1928 in the Peacock Theatre for two seasons, and then in the theatre of the eighteenth century Rotunda Buildings, the two founders, with Edwards as actor, producer and lighting expert, and MacLiammóir as star, costume and scenery designer, along with their supporting board of directors, gave Dublin, and other cities when touring, a long and eclectic list of plays. The Dublin Gate Theatre produced, with their imaginative and innovative style, over 400 different works from Sophocles, Shakespeare, Congreve, Chekhov, Ibsen, O’Neill, Wilde, Shaw, Yeats and many others. They also introduced plays from younger Irish playwrights such as Denis Johnston, Mary Manning, Maura Laverty, Brian Friel, Fr. Desmond Forristal and Micheál MacLiammóir himself. Until his death early in 1978, the year of the Gate’s 50th Anniversary, MacLiammóir wrote, as well as acted and designed for the Gate, plays, revues and three one-man shows, and translated and adapted those of other authors. -
The Mikado Program
GENEVA CONCERTS presents TheThe MikadoMikado Albert Bergeret, Artistic Director Saturday, September 24, 2011 • 7:30 p.m. Smith Opera House 1 GENEVA CONCERTS, INC. 2011-2012 SEASON Saturday, 24 September 2011, 7:30 p.m. New York Gilbert & Sullivan Players The Mikado Sunday, 11 December 2011, 3:00 p.m. Imani Winds A Christmas Concert This tour engagement of Imani Winds is funded through the Mid Atlantic Tours program of Mid Atlantic Arts Foundation with support from the National Endowment for the Arts. Friday, 2 March 2012, 7:30 p.m. Rochester Philharmonic Orchestra Christoph Campestrini, conductor Juliana Athayde, violin Music of Barber and Brahms Friday, 30 March 2012, 7:30 p.m. Brian Sanders’ JUNK Patio Plastico Plus Saturday, 28 April 2012, 7:30 p.m. Cantus On the Shoulders of Giants Performed at the Smith Opera House, 82 Seneca Street, Geneva, New York These concerts are made possible by the New York State Council on the Arts with the support of Governor Andrew Cuomo and the New York State Legislature, and a continuing subscription from Hobart and William Smith Colleges. 2 GENEVA CONCERTS, INC. Saturday, September 24, 2011 at 7:30 p.m. The Mikado or, The Town of Titipu Libretto by Sir William S. Gilbert Music by Sir Arthur Sullivan First Performed at the Savoy Theatre, London, England, March 14, 1885 Stage Direction: Albert Bergeret & David Auxier Music Director: Albert Bergeret; Asst. Music Director: Andrea Stryker-Rodda Conductor: Albert Bergeret Scenic Design: Albère Costume Design: Gail J. Wofford & Kayko Nakamura Lighting Design: Brian Presti Production Stage Manager: David Sigafoose* Assistant Stage Manager: Annette Dieli DRAMATIS PERSONAE The Mikado of Japan .....................................................................Quinto Ott* Nanki-Poo (His son, disguised as a wandering minstrel) . -
The Mikado the Articles in This Study Guide Are Not Meant to Mirror Or Interpret Any Productions at the Utah Shakespeare Festival
Insights A Study Guide to the Utah Shakespeare Festival The Mikado The articles in this study guide are not meant to mirror or interpret any productions at the Utah Shakespeare Festival. They are meant, instead, to be an educational jumping-off point to understanding and enjoying the plays (in any production at any theatre) a bit more thoroughly. Therefore the stories of the plays and the interpretative articles (and even characters, at times) may differ dramatically from what is ultimately produced on the Festival’s stages. Insights is published by the Utah Shakespeare Festival, 351 West Center Street; Cedar City, UT 84720. Bruce C. Lee, communications director and editor; Phil Hermansen, art director. Copyright © 2011, Utah Shakespeare Festival. Please feel free to download and print Insights, as long as you do not remove any identifying mark of the Utah Shakespeare Festival. For more information about Festival education programs: Utah Shakespeare Festival 351 West Center Street Cedar City, Utah 84720 435-586-7880 www.bard.org. Cover photo: Erin Annarella (top), Carol Johnson, and Sarah Dammann in The Mikado, 1996 Contents Information on the Play Synopsis 4 CharactersThe Mikado 5 About the Playwright 6 Scholarly Articles on the Play Mere Pish-Posh 8 Utah Shakespeare Festival 3 351 West Center Street • Cedar City, Utah 84720 • 435-586-7880 Synopsis: The Mikado Nanki-Poo, the son of the royal mikado, arrives in Titipu disguised as a peasant and looking for Yum- Yum. Without telling the truth about who he is, Nanki-Poo explains that several months earlier he had fallen in love with Yum-Yum; however she was already betrothed to Ko-Ko, a cheap tailor, and he saw that his suit was hopeless. -
Gilbert & Sullivan
ST DAVIDS PLAYERS 14th - 18th OCTOBER 2014 PLEASE ST DAVIDS PLAYERS NOTE: www.stdavidsplayers.co.uk St David’s Players take no responsibility for any oers or advert content contained in this le. Special oers shown in adverts may no longer be valid. eat well with Riverford get your 3rd vegbox free free * vegbox Libretto by W S Gilbert Music by Arthur Sullivan in the edition by David Russell Hulme © Oxford University Press 2000. Performed by arrangement with Oxford University Press. All rights reserved. Director Jane May Musical Director Mark Perry 14th - 18th OCTOBER 2014 Nightly at 7.30pm Matinée on Saturday 18th at 2.30pm enjoy better veg vegboxes from £10.35 ST LOYE’S FOUNDATION healthy, seasonal, all organic Supporting free delivery ST LOYE’S FOUNDATION in 2014 e Exeter Barneld eatre is tted Members of the audience are asked to Members of the audience are reminded try a seasonal organic vegbox today with free delivery with an Inductive Loop system. SWITCH OFF any mobile phones and the unauthorised use of photographic, T Members of the audience with hearing other mobile devices (including SMS text recording or video equipment is not aids should set them to the ‘T’ position messaging and Internet browsing) permitted in the auditorium call 01803 762059 or visit www.riverford.co.uk/FTBF14 ank you *Free vegbox on your 3rd delivery when you place a regular vegbox order. New customers only. Programme © 2014 | Published by St David’s Players | www.stdavidsplayers.co.uk Programme design and typesetting by D Saint | [email protected] Print services arranged by Backstage Supplies Ltd. -
Trial by Jury [Operetta, in One Act; Text by Gilbert. First Produced at The
Trial by Jury [Operetta, in one act; text by Gilbert. First produced at the Royalty Theatre, London, March 25, 1875.] PERSONAGES. Learned Judge. Plaintiff. Defendant. Counsel for the Plaintiff. Usher. Foreman of the Jury. Associate. First Bridesmaid. [Barristers, attorneys, journeymen, and bridesmaids.] The scene is laid in a London Court of Justice; time, the nineteenth century. The little operetta, "Trial by Jury," was the first result of the successful collaboration of Gilbert and Sullivan, though it gave little hint of the extraordinary excellence as well as popularity of the long list which followed it. "The words and music were written and all the rehearsals completed within three weeks, and all London went to see it," says Sullivan's biographer. It was produced March 25, 1875, and had quite a run, Frederick Sullivan, Sir Arthur's brother, appearing in the rôle of the judge and contributing much to its success. The story is a satire upon the English courts, the incident being a breach of promise case. Edwin is sued by Angelina. The usher impresses upon the jury its duty to divest itself of prejudice in one breath, and in the next seeks to prejudice it against the defendant by most violent denunciations of him. When Edwin enters he is at once requested by the jury to "dread our damages." He tells them how he became "the lovesick boy" first of one and then of another. The jurymen in chorus, while admitting that they were fickle when young, declare that they are now respectable and have no sympathy with him. The judge enters, and after informing the audience how he came to the bench, announces he is ready to try the breach of promise case. -
I Have a Song to Sing O! Program.Pdf
Musical Numbers With Cat-like Tread, Upon Our Prey We Steal (The Pirates of Penzance) ...........................Ensemble I Have a Song to Sing, O! (The Yeomen of the Guard) ..................... James Mills and Sarah Caldwell Smith Am I Alone and Unobserved? (Patience)............................................... James Mills A British Tar (H.M.S. Pinafore) ................................Alex Corson, Albert Bergeret, Artistic Director Matthew Wages, David Wannen I’m Called Little Buttercup Wand’ring Minstrels (H.M.S. Pinafore) .............. Angela Christine Smith in We’re Called Gondolieri (The Gondoliers) ...................................Alex Corson and Matthew Wages Take a Pair of Sparkling Eyes (The Gondoliers) ...................................Alex Corson Oh, Better Far to Live and Die (The Pirates of Penzance) ................. Matthew Wages and Men Director: James Mills When All Night Long a Chap Remains (Iolanthe) ..........................................David Wannen Music Director & Conductor: Albert Bergeret Executive Producer: David Wannen Three Little Maids From School are We (The Mikado) .............................Rebecca Hargrove, Editor: Danny Bristoll Angela Christine Smith, Sarah Caldwell Smith Sarah Caldwell Smith, Soprano The Sun, Whose Rays are All Ablaze Rebecca Hargrove, Soprano (The Mikado) ..............................Rebecca Hargrove Angela Christine Smith, Contralto Here’s a How-de-do! Alex Corson, Tenor (The Mikado) ......................................Alex Corson, James Mills, Comic Baritone James -
Krantz [email protected] Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia + Delta Omicron = Sinfonicron G&S Works, with Date and Length of Original London Run • Thespis 1871 (63)
Sinfonicron Light Opera presents Ruddigore, or The Witch’s Curse January 23-26, 2020 Kimball Theatre Osher Lifelong Learning Institute November 15, 2019 Ken Krantz [email protected] Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia + Delta Omicron = Sinfonicron G&S Works, with date and length of original London run • Thespis 1871 (63) • Trial by Jury 1875 (131) • The Sorcerer 1877 (178) • HMS Pinafore 1878 (571) • The Pirates of Penzance 1879 (363) • Patience 1881 (578) • Iolanthe 1882 (398) G&S Works, Continued • Princess Ida 1884 (246) • The Mikado 1885 (672) • Ruddigore 1887 (288) • The Yeomen of the Guard 1888 (423) • The Gondoliers 1889 (554) • Utopia, Limited 1893 (245) • The Grand Duke 1896 (123) Elements of Gilbert’s stagecraft • Topsy-Turvydom (a/k/a Gilbertian logic) • Firm directorial control • The typical issue: Who will marry the soprano? • The typical competition: tenor vs. patter baritone • The Lozenge Plot • Literal lozenge: Used in The Sorcerer and never again • Virtual Lozenge: Used almost constantly Ruddigore: A “problem” opera • The horror show plot • The original spelling of the title: “Ruddygore” • Whatever opera followed The Mikado was likely to suffer by comparison Ruddigore Time: Early 19th Century Place: Cornwall, England Act 1: The village of Rederring Act 2: The picture gallery of Ruddigore Castle, one week later Ruddigore Dramatis Personae Mortals: •Sir Ruthven Murgatroyd, Baronet, disguised as Robin Oakapple (Patter Baritone) •Richard Dauntless, his foster brother, a sailor (Tenor) •Sir Despard Murgatroyd, Sir Ruthven’s younger brother -
The New York Gilbert and Sullivan Players'
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE February 7, 2020 CONTACT: DeAnn Lubell-Ames – (760) 831-3090 Note: Photos available at http://mccallumtheatre.com/index.php/media The New York Gilbert And Sullivan Players’ “The Mikado” McCallum Theatre Monday – March 9 – 7:00pm Palm Desert, CA – The McCallum Theatre welcomes the New York Gilbert and Sullivan Players to Palm Desert for a performance of the company’s all-new, critically acclaimed production of The Mikado, at 7:00pm, Monday, March 9. The Mikado sets the real-life characters of Victorian London’s D’Oyly Carte Opera Company within the imagined Japanese town of Titipu. Audiences will meet Messrs. Gilbert, Sullivan, and D’Oyly Carte themselves, and join them on a fantastic voyage to a land where the timeless libretto, beautiful music, and a fantastical cast of characters await. According to director and choreographer David Auxier-Loyola, and producer David Wannen: “The Mikado is undoubtedly the most popular piece of musical theater of all time, when its 135-year history is taken into account. For decades, a production of G&S’ satirical opera could be seen somewhere in the English-speaking world every day of the year. Its libretto has found its way into our language, with expressions such as the ‘grand Pooh-Bah’ and ‘Let the punishment fit the crime.’ Several films have been made of or about the work, including Mike Leigh’s 1999 film Topsy-Turvy. “Over the past decade, The Mikado has prompted a great deal of discussion in New York and in other cities across the United States about bringing classic productions, and particularly their performance practices, into the 21st century. -
W. S. Gilbert & a Classic in Humour
W. S. GILBERT A MID-VICTORIAN ARISTOPHANES BY EDITH HAMILTON & THE ENGLISH ARISTOPHANES BY WALTER SICHEL & A CLASSIC IN HUMOUR BY MAX BEERBOHM Edited 2011 by David Trutt Los Angeles, California, USA email: [email protected] Web Site: www.haddon-hall.com 2 INTRODUCTION Included herein are two lengthy essays which seek to relate the Victorian comic playwright W. S. Gilbert to the Greek comic poet Aristophanes. Aristophanes lived from about 450 BC to 385 BC, mostly under the shadow of the Peloponnesian War between Greece and Sparta, which eventually led to the downfall of Greece. He was the most celebrated writer of what is known as Old Comedy and the only one whose plays have survived in more than fragmentary form. Aristophanes is credited with writing at least forty plays, of which eleven have survived to the present. One critic states that “Savoy opera captures some of Aristophanes’ mingling of topsy- turvy fantasy and tripping rhythm. But in sheer poetic invention Aristophanes’ lacks a real successor.” This critic considers Aristophanes a master satirist, but the two authors, Edith Hamilton and Walter Sichel make a distinction between satire and irony. They claim that the plays of Aristophanes and Gilbert were displays of masterful irony; further they claim that in this genre Gilbert is on the same high level as Aristophanes. As Sichel writes, “Both Aristophanes and Gilbert were pure ironists. Direct satire maps out the country which it invades, but irony is always on the confines of ambiguous territory. As we survey its inhabitants they seem to be in perpetual somersaults — and yet they are always standing on their feet.” AND “That is Gilbert’s irony. -
Social Discourse in the Savoy Theatre's
SOCIAL DISCOURSE IN THE SAVOY THEATRE’S PRODUCTIONS OF THE NAUTCH GIRL (1891) AND UTOPIA LIMITED (1893): EXOTICISM AND VICTORIAN SELF-REFLECTION William L. Hicks, B.M. Thesis Prepared for the Degree of MASTER OF MUSIC UNIVERSITY OF NORTH TEXAS August 2003 APPROVED: John Michael Cooper, Major Professor Margaret Notley, Committee Member Mark McKnight, Committee Member James C. Scott, Dean of the College of Music C. Neal Tate, Dean of the Robert B. Toulouse School of Graduate Studies Hicks, William L, Social Discourse in the Savoy Theatre’s Productions of The Nautch Girl (1891) and Utopia Limited (1893): Exoticism and Victorian Self-Reflection. Master of Music (Musicology), August 2003, 107 pp., 4 illustrations, 12 musical examples, references, 91 titles. As a consequence to Gilbert and Sullivan’s famed Carpet Quarrel, two operettas with decidedly “exotic” themes, The Nautch Girl; or, The Rajah of Chutneypore, and Utopia Limited; or, The Flowers of Progress were presented to London audiences. Neither has been accepted as part of the larger Savoy canon. This thesis considers the conspicuous business atmosphere of their originally performed contexts to understand why this situation arose. Critical social theory makes it possible to read the two documents as overt reflections on British imperialism. Examined more closely, however, the operettas reveal a great deal more about the highly introverted nature of exotic representation and the ambiguous dialogue between race and class hierarchies in late nineteenth-century British society. Copyright, 2003 by William L. Hicks ii ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS Because of the obscurity of The Nautch Girl and Utopia Limited, I am greatly indebted to the booksellers Christopher Browne and Wilfred M. -
Trial by Jury W: S
Trial by Jury W: S. Gilbert Arthur Sullivan Scene: A court of 'rwshce' rhe Bench faces thb rturlienee, and eatends along the baek court. ?he Judgels desk c., with canopg of the ooerhead.' ,rury-boa 8., counselb seati ,t. Barristers, Attorneys, ,furgmen, and public discoaered. Itlo. 1. "Hark, the hour of ten is sound.ing,, Opening Chorus and. Solo Ensemble and Usher Piano Printed 30209 r in the U.S.A. by G. Schirmer, Inc - (Curtain) Ch o rus SOPRANO and ALTO Hark, the hour of ten is sound Hearts with anx TENOR and BASS L_--',,...--- 1',: - C u-: --:---- fears are bound Hall of Jus - crou'ds sur - round t----- 39209 39209 Breath- ing hope a An- ge- li - na, Short- ly will ap - pear. For day flft, Sum- moned stern d;Ly 1n this sub 1l&, fe 11&, sum- moned by Alternative Parts na, Short- lY - na, Short- Hark, the is sound - Hearts with anx ious fears are bound - Hal1 Jus - tice Breath-ing hope and For to-day this a- re- na, 6 fTeqor may double Bass here 39200 8 Morlerato Noui Ju - ry - men, hear my ad - vul-gar pre- mind, From . bi - as free of ev 'ry tri - al 39?00 f r-- s----1 Si - lence! From bi- as free of ev-'rv kind.This lis - ten to the plain- tiff's case: ob - serve the fea- tures of her face- The bro - ken- heart - ed kind, This 39209 Cho rus Unison the plain-tiff's shrieks, The ruf- fian - ly de - fen- dant speaks-L'p- .------.