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Title |
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Patience (or Bunthorne's Bride) |
| Composer |
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Sir Arthur Sullivan (1842 - 1900) |
| Librettist |
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William S. Gilbert (1836 - 1911) |
| Genre |
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Light opera. Two acts. |
|
First performance |
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Opéra Comique, London. 23 April, 1881. |
| Time of
action |
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Around 1880. |
| Place of action |
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- Before Castle Bunthorne.
- A glade.
|
| Main parts |
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Patience, a dairy maid |
soprano |
| |
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Reginald Bunthorne, a fleshly
poet |
baritone |
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Archibald Grosvenor, an idyllic
poet |
tenor (easy tessitura) |
| |
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The Lady Jane |
contralto |
|
Prominence of chorus |
|
Large. |
|
Orchestra |
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2 flutes, 1
oboe, 2 clarinets, 1 bassoon, 2
French horns, 2 trumpets, 2 trombones, kettle-drums,
percussion, strings. |
|
Special demands |
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None. |
|
Full
score and orchestral parts |
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Available. |
|
Level |
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Not difficult |
|
Length |
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About 2˝ hours. Two acts. |
| Music |
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Sullivan has written music that beautifully fits
the story, alternately refined and naive; at times
the contrasts are almost unsettling. As is usual with Sullivan, the work
contains an ensemble in which various tunes are first sung separately and
then simultaneously, but here it is given a special meaning: the ordinary
world and aestheticism are only seemingly in opposition. |
| Story |
|
Two rival poets, Bunthorne and Grosvenor, are
rapturously worshipped by a crowd of refined ladies, but are both in love
with Patience, a simple peasant girl. The former (who is rather like Oscar
Wilde) perseveres in his aesthetic way of life, but the latter in the end
prefers to become an ordinary chap. The ladies then follow Grosvenor's
example and also turn ordinary. Daily reality is represented by the very
down-to-earth dragoons, who are totally bewildered by all this aestheticism;
one of the funniest scenes is that in which they too do their best to become
aesthetic, in order to regain the ladies' good graces. All these changes
from ordinary to extraordinary and vice versa are very effective on
stage. Patience is the only one who remains herself throughout. She simply
does not succeed in turning different, though she feels obliged to do her
best. Not surprisingly, she gets the nicest man. In the end, the ladies
content themselves with the dragoons. The least attractive lady even
manages to hook a duke. All the engaged couples dance happily off. Bunthorne
remains alone, consoling himself with the lily in his button-hole: the flower of poetry
and emblem of aestheticism. |
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Costumes |
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Men: dragoons' uniforms.
Women: aesthetic gowns. |
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