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Title |
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The Zoo |
| Composer |
|
Sir Arthur Sullivan (1842 - 1900) |
| Librettist |
|
B.C. Stevenson (Bolton Rowe) |
| Genre |
|
One-act light opera. |
|
First performance |
|
St. James's Theatre, London, 5 June, 1875. |
| Time of
action |
|
Around 1875. |
| Place of action |
|
The London Zoo, near the
bear-pit and the tea-pavillion. |
| Main parts |
|
Aesculapius Carboy |
tenor |
| |
|
Eliza Smith |
soprano |
| |
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Thomas Brown |
baritone |
| |
|
Laetitia |
soprano |
| |
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Mr. Grinder |
bass-baritone |
|
Prominence of chorus |
|
Large. |
|
Orchestra |
|
1 flute, 1
oboe, 2 clarinets, 1 bassoon, 2
French horns, 2 trumpets, 2 trombones, kettle-drums,
percussion, strings. |
|
Special demands |
|
None. On a levelstage the bear-pit may be
suggested by a parapet. |
|
Full
score and orchestral parts |
|
Available. |
|
Level |
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Quite easy. |
|
Length |
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About 1 hour (one act). |
| Music |
|
The Zoo contains very attractive music. The
chemist's song foreshadows Nanki-Poo's entrance in The Mikado. A
very amusing quartet is sung by the four lovers: two of them sing in lofty
style, while the other couple is discussing the food and drink to be had at
a Zoo. First they sing separately, then together! There is a hilarious scene
in which the crowd gives well-meant though contradictory advice when a
gentleman has fainted. Then there is a chorus that must be sung very softly
and politely; and of course Eliza's song about all her lovers, whom she can
no longer tell apart. |
| Story |
|
A young chemist is in love with a grocer's
daughter, whose father proves uncoöperative. In despair, the young man
wants to jump into the bear-pit. There is a certain Thomas Brown, seemingly
just an ordinary man but actually a duke in disguise, who is in love with
the lady who serves tea at the Zoo pavillion. To prove his love he orders
and consumes everything she has in store, which is too much for his stomach
and makes him faint. Bystanders restore him to consciousness and in doing so
discover his true identity: loosening his coat they find he is wearing the
insignia of the Order of the Garter. The story takes a complicated course:
the grocer pronounces a curse on his daughter and the despairing chemist;
when the tea-serving lady learns that she is to be a duchess she announces
that she'd rather stay with the animals. Subsequently the duke buys up the
Zoo and offers so much money to the amorous chemist that his beloved's
father waives his objections. In the end the two couples find happiness, the
crowd cheers them, so do the animals, and - yes, sir! - Brittania rules the
waves. |
|
Costumes |
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No change of costume, the duke's
excepted. A bear. |
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