By Daniel Jaffé

Published: Wednesday, 09 March 2022 at 12:00 am


Far from being a mere relic (or rather, relics) from the late Victorian age, Gilbert and Sullivan shows are still being performed around the world, with devoted fans both among musicians and their audiences. Of the 14 comic operas they wrote between 1875 and 1896 (not counting their first collaboration, Thespis – or The Gods Grown Old, whose success caught everyone by surprise and the music of which has nearly all been lost), at least four – The Mikado, Pirates of Penzance, HMS Pinafore and The Gondoliers – are firmly lodged in our everyday culture.

Whether the term ‘short sharp shock’ (taken from The Mikado), or ‘Three Little Girls’ (Mikado again), or the patter song ‘I am the very model of a modern major general’ (Pirates of Penzance), hardly a day goes by without some reference or allusion.

But how well do you know these shows? And are there any which deserve more of the limelight? Here is an attempt to list a top ten of G&S shows, in ascending order, with a frank assessment of their strengths and weaknesses. Do join the conversation – we’d be very interested to see your thoughts either on Facebook or Twitter.

Which are the best Gilbert and Sullivan operettas?

10. The Yeomen of the Guard – or The Merryman and his Maid

In 10th place is The Yeomen of the Guard. Both Gilbert and Sullivan are said to have rated this the most highly of their shows, and G&S fans even claim it comes close to opera in its style and depth of characterisation. They may have a point – in Jack Point, the strolling jester who is cheated out of his beloved companion, Elsie, and ends the show with a broken-hearted rendition of their song ‘The Merryman and his Maid’.

Yeoman’s premiere in 1888 was a huge success, its Victorian audience loving the more serious and ‘elevated’ plane of the story, effectively reflected in Sullivan’s music. But as opera, it’s frankly a poor specimen, most especially since Verdi’s Otello had premiered just the previous year, at one stroke totally overthrowing the tired conventions which G&S had so successfully lampooned in their previous shows. Yeoman, by contrast, is just a poor imitation of opera, grand or otherwise, though it has its modest moments, perhaps at its best with the gently melancholic ensemble ‘When a wooer goes a wooing’.

09. Iolanthe – or The Peer and the Peri

A typical Victorian piece of whimsy – a shepherd who is half mortal and half fairy falls in love with a girl who is a Ward in Chancery, leading to a clash of cultures between fairies and the House of Lords. Yet Iolanthe was also for its time a bit of cutting-edge theatre. It was the first show to be premiered (in 1882) at the Savoy Theatre, equipped with electric lighting which enabled all sorts of special stage effects. Its satire, too, was far more cutting than either press or general public expected from G&S – two of the songs were cut after the scathing reception they were given on the first night.

Today, the show – notwithstanding its satirising of British politics and the House of Lords in particular – seems terribly dated and is carried mostly by the music, which noticeably improves in inspiration with Act II – highlights are the Nightmare Song sung by the Lord Chancellor, and the cheerful trio ‘If you go in’ which remains a sure-fire success.

Act I has rather too much sub-Mendelssohn for the fairies, but enjoys one rousing march, to which the Peers process singing the taunt ‘Bow, bow, ye lower middle classes! Bow, bow, ye tradesmen, bow ye masses!’ It’s magnificent, yet it rather feeds the perception that G&S made, and continues to make, the less attractive features of the ruling classes appear endearing rather than reprehensible. And, one might ask, would the barb nowadays be aimed principally at the House of Lords…?

 

08. Trial by Jury

‘Trial by Jury’ is eighth. The second of Gilbert and Sullivan’s collaborations resulted in this ever-green one-act operetta. It can hardly be said to be a timeless story, as English law has changed considerably since the 1870s when it was created (the concept of ‘breach of promise’ as common law has fallen largely into disuse with changed societal expectations). But its portrayal of a corrupt and distracted judge and hypocritical jurors – let alone the foibles of the defendant! – are still telling, and Sullivan’s music heightens the humour and light-hearted charm of Gilbert’s libretto to the extent that the quality of their partnership was universally recognised by the critics at its premiere in 1875. True, it has none of the ear worms or showstopping melodies of their later shows, but it is always a pleasure to see this highly effective if relatively short piece.

 

07. The Sorcerer

Gilbert and Sullivan’s next show after Trial was this now relatively little-known gem, premiered in 1877. In an apparently unassuming English village in their own time lives Alexis, the son of a local baronet. Alexis is an ideologue of a type all too recognisable in recent history. Convinced that he can better his fellow men with a social experiment to be imposed on all – regardless of their personal circumstances and desires – during his own wedding, he commissions a local jobbing sorcerer to spike the tea to be served to the wedding guests, including the local villagers, with a love potion which will make them feel ‘the love that loves for love alone’ – in short, fall in love with the first adult person of the opposite gender they see, regardless of age or status.

Highlights include the title role’s tongue-twisting song, ‘My name is John Wellington Wells’; the duet between Alexis father, Sir Marmaduke, and his beloved but unavailable Lady Sangazure (in which their true feelings explode as rapid-fire asides in the midst of a stately melody in the style of a gavotte); and the splendidly silly chorus in anticipation of a feast of ‘The eggs and the ham, and the strawberry jam! The rollicking bun, and the gay Sally Lunn!’.

 

06. HMS Pinafore – or The Lass that Loved a Sailor

The popular ‘HMS Pinafore’ is in sixth place. Written in 1878 just as the British prime minister, Disraeli, was meeting apparent Russian threat by dispatching the British fleet to Constantinople, Gilbert and Sullivan’s first great hit is also their most overtly patriotic. It remains one of the most quoted and referenced of their shows. The tub thumping patriotism of ‘A British Tar’ has been sung with enthusiasm by Jean-Luc Picard in Insurrection and by Sallah in Raiders of the Lost Ark, and ‘For he is an Englishman’ inevitably featured in Chariots of Fire.