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Gilbert & Sulllivan: The Pirates of Penzance - The Pirates: William Morgan, Gaynor Keeble, Henry Neill, & chorus - English National Opera, 2024 (Photo: Craig Fuller) |
Gilbert & Sullivan: The Pirates of Penzance; Isabelle Peters, William Morgan, Richard Suart, John Savournin, Gaynor Keeble, James Creswell, director: Mike Leigh/Sarah Tipple, conductor: Natalie Murray Beale; English National Opera at the London Coliseum
Reviewed 4 December 2024
A welcome opportunity to bask in the many delights of a full-scale performance of Gilbert & Sullivan's comic gem performed with engaging zest by a cast mixing innocence and experience
The Pirates of Penzance was Gilbert & Sullivan's fifth collaboration, though the first two were one-act operas (Thespis and Trial by Jury) and the third was the relatively unsuccessful The Sorcerer. The Pirates of Penzance was only the second major success, coming after HMS Pinafore and being followed by Patience and Iolanthe. The Gilbert's plot of the opera is particularly mad, drawing on ideas from from his shorter earlier pieces. It is, to an extent, an experimental piece, the two collaborators were still seeing what could be made to work. It lacks the overall sense of atmosphere and place that their best works have, though it includes Gilbert's knack of putting together two or three contrasting ideas and, with ineffable logic, turning things completely on their head.
It is a relatively compact work, and what keeps it in the repertoire is the enormous zest of the whole thing combined with Sullivan's music. Sullivan wrote it working with remarkable speed, and flying in chunks of their first collaboration, Thespis, the results are a flow of melody, and a series of operatic parodies that make the work great fun. Sullivan's operatic parodies, and his use of dramatic recitative bring a wonderful sense of bathos to the work, and help send up the crazier elements in traditional grand opera. It is, perhaps, no surprise, that Verdi's Il Trovatore features heavily in the parodies, but the heroine's coloratura in Poor wand'ring one would clearly have chimed in with many opera lovers. It is a device Sullivan would use again, for instance in Ruddigore, Mad Margaret introduces herself with a parody of an operatic mad scene.
English National Opera has revived Mike Leigh's 2015 production of Gilbert & Sullivan's The Pirates of Penzance. We caught the second performance, on Wednesday 4 December 2024 at the London Coliseum. Sarah Tipple was the revival director and Natalie Murray Beale, conducted, designs are by Alison Chitty, with Richard Suart as the Major General, John Savournin as the Pirate King, William Morgan as Frederic, Isabelle Peters as Mabel, Gaynor Keeble as Ruth, James Creswell as the Sergeant of Police, Henry Neill as Samuel, Bethan Langford as Edith, and Anna Elizabeth Cooper as Kate.
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Gilbert & Sulllivan: The Pirates of Penzance - Hymn to Poetry: end of Act I - English National Opera, 2024 (Photo: Craig Fuller) |
The production places Alison Chitty's traditional, period costumes complete with pirates straight out of a children's book, against a series of vividly coloured, abstract yet highly dramatic sets that bring out the cartoonish quality of the whole. The production was originally shared with Luxembourg and Saarbrücken and you feel that the production was designed to work well in smaller theatres and sometimes the vast open spaces of the London Coliseum stage, emphasised by the flat blocks of colour in Chitty's designs, rather dwarf the singers. This, of course, leads back to the eternal problem of doing G&S in the London Coliseum and you can't help wishing that ENO would bite the bullet and develop a relationship with a medium sized theatre where operetta could be made to work.