His Majesty (opera)

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Advertising poster for 1897 production Dudley Hardy - Poster for His Majesty.jpg
Advertising poster for 1897 production

His Majesty, or, The Court of Vingolia is an English comic opera in two acts with dialogue by F. C. Burnand, lyrics by R. C. Lehmann, additional lyrics by Adrian Ross and music by Alexander Mackenzie.

Contents

The work premiered at the Savoy Theatre in London on 20 February 1897, running for only 61 performances until 24 April 1897, despite a strong cast including George Grossmith, Ilka Pálmay, Scott Russell, Fred Billington, Florence Perry and Walter Passmore. The D'Oyly Carte Opera Company then toured the opera throughout 1897 alongside more familiar Gilbert and Sullivan works.

Background

When the Gilbert and Sullivan partnership collapsed after the production of The Gondoliers in 1889, impresario Richard D'Oyly Carte struggled to find successful new works to present at the Savoy Theatre. He was able to bring Gilbert and Sullivan together briefly for two more operas, neither of which was a great success. In fact, after its disappointingly short run, their last piece, The Grand Duke (1896), was the only outright failure of a Gilbert and Sullivan opera. [1] Arthur Sullivan had produced two operas for the Savoy in the early 1890s with librettists other than W. S. Gilbert, but neither had proved particularly successful, and pieces by other composers, for example Mirette , had fared worse. [2]

Synopsis

The late father of King Ferdinand intended that Ferdinand marry Lucilla Chloris, the daughter of the king of Osturia, and Chloris has arrived at the Court of Vingolia for the wedding with her ladies. Ferdinand and the Princess have never met and have never seen any portrait of one another.

However, Ferdinand has fallen in love with the peasant maid Felice, the adopted daughter of an old woodman, and has wooed her while disguised as a court artist. Meanwhile, Princess Chloris is in love with Prince Max of Baluria. Prince Max devises a plan which, if carried out, will allow the Princess to elope with him, while Felice takes her place.

Boodel, the King's former master of the revels, has been listening in on various conversations but only hears the end of each of them. He concludes that there is a plot afoot to assassinate Ferdinand. He becomes especially suspicious of a trunk carried by Felice. Preparations for war begin. But it turns out that Felice and her trunk bear a secret that changes everything: Proof that she is, in fact, Chloris's older sister, and thus the one meant to be engaged to Ferdinand all along.

Production

George Grossmith and Ilka Palmay His-majesty-grossmith-palmay.jpg
George Grossmith and Ilka Pálmay

Carte assembled a high-quality team for His Majesty, including the well-known dramatist and writer F. C. Burnand and the well-respected composer Alexander Mackenzie. Lyrics were supplied by Rudolph Lehmann, though his career gave no hint of a particular talent at writing verse.

The piece was expected to draw the public solely on the strength of the return of George Grossmith after an absence of almost a decade from the Savoy Theatre. Grossmith was well and fondly remembered for his creation there of the comedy roles in the famous series of Gilbert and Sullivan operas, and during his years away, he had become the most popular solo piano entertainer in the country. [3] The Savoy audience was eager to see him perform together on stage with his successor in the Savoy opera roles, Walter Passmore. Rehearsals began in December 1896, an unusually long rehearsal period for the Savoy, but Mackenzie later recalled that even the company felt that the work was not wanted. [4] London's leading stage director, Charles Harris, was engaged, but he died a few days before the opera premiered, leaving the Cartes to finish his work. Richard D'Oyly Carte took ill, leaving the final arrangements to his wife, Helen. The Savoy's usual choreographer, John D'Auban arranged the dances.

The opening night met with instantaneous signs of disapproval. Grossmith received an ovation at his first appearance, but his entrance number met with a cool response from the house. The Whitehall Review declared that the audience preferred Passmore, and "whenever he appeared on the scene, hearty applause greeted him." [5] Though six encores were taken on the opening night, the piece seemed doomed to failure before its first public representation was complete. Only three principals came forward for their curtain call. Mackenzie was applauded warmly for his music, but when Burnand and Lehmann came forward, there was booing and hissing from all the private boxes and most of the pit. [6]

Critical reaction and aftermath

Although this would be his only comic opera, The Times called Mackenzie's score "appropriate throughout, musicianly, and very often marked by distinction as well as humour," though it called the book dull and "confused". [7] Other newspapers called Mackenzie's score "a comic oratorio", [8] "devoid of memorable tunes" [9] or "peculiarly unattractive, almost entirely devoid of humour, strangely wanting in charm, brightness, fizz and spontaneity" [10] and opined that "some of the best lines were appropriated to the most severe music". [11] The press uniformly found fault with the verbose libretto and felt that the music and book were not well suited to each other. They praised Passmore's comic acting but were disappointed by the nervous Grossmith, commenting that he was unsuited to the role of King Ferdinand. [10]

Mackenzie with Arthur Sullivan: 1897 cartoon alluding to the irony of the failure of His Majesty after Mackenzie's criticism of Sullivan for "wasting his talents" on comic opera. Sullivan to MacKenzie.png
Mackenzie with Arthur Sullivan: 1897 cartoon alluding to the irony of the failure of His Majesty after Mackenzie's criticism of Sullivan for "wasting his talents" on comic opera.

Grossmith lasted only four performances before pleading ill-health and returning to retirement. Charles H. Workman, playing Adam, filled in as Ferdinand until Henry Lytton arrived and was ready to play the King. The histrionic Hungarian actress, Ilka Pálmay, who had been engaged for The Grand Duke and was still under contract to Carte, played Felice, a role that gave her many opportunities to display her talents as ballad singer, opera soprano and comedian. Florence Perry, who had been playing smaller roles up to that point, was cast as Chloris. [12]

Alterations were made to the opera during Workman's tenure in the title role. Three songs were deleted, and the Act I Finale was shortened. Fred Billington became ill, and his part was taken by Jones Hewson for the remainder of the run. The opera closed on 24 April 1897 and was sent on tour with two D'Oyly Carte companies until September 1897, during which Mackenzie's autograph score was stolen. [13]

Musical numbers

Act I - Interior of the Palace of Vingolia. View of the Royal Art Galleries.
Walter Passmore and Fred Billington in Act II His-majesty-passmore-billington.jpg
Walter Passmore and Fred Billington in Act II
Act II - On the Vingolia Ramparts. Preparations for War.

Roles and opening cast

Cast list from opening night programme at the Savoy Theatre HisMajestyProgramme.jpg
Cast list from opening night programme at the Savoy Theatre

Notes

  1. Shepherd, Marc. "Introduction: Historical Context", The Grand Duke (piano score), New York: Oakapple Press, 2009
  2. Rollins, Cyril; R. John Witts (1962). The D'Oyly Carte Opera Company in Gilbert and Sullivan Operas: A Record of Productions, 1875–1961. London: Michael Joseph. p. 14. OCLC   504581419.
  3. Joseph, Tony. "Grossmith, George (1847–1912)" in Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press (2004), accessed 2 August 2010
  4. Mackenzie, A. C. A Musician's Narrative, p. 201, London, 1927
  5. The Whitehall Review, 27 February 1897
  6. Tillett, Selwyn. A Study of Two Savoy Operas, p. 31, the Sir Arthur Sullivan Society, 1996
  7. Review of His Majesty in The Times, 22 February 1897
  8. Saturday Review, 27 February 1897
  9. London Figaro, 25 February 1897
  10. 1 2 Reviews collected at The Gilbert and Sullivan Archive
  11. Morning Leader, 22 February 1897
  12. Introduction to His Majesty at The Gilbert and Sullivan Archive
  13. Tillett, Selwyn. A Study of Two Savoy Operas, p. 44, the Sir Arthur Sullivan Society, 1996

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References

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