Talk:Savoy opera
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[edit] Original comment
Patience opened at the Opera Comique, but it was transferred to the just-opened Savoy Theatre partway through its run; hence its being the first of the "real" Savoy Operas. Psmith 19:13, 12 Oct 2003 (UTC)
Okay. In that case the definition should read "written for first performance at the Savoy Theatre" or "intended for first performance at the Savoy Theatre" rather than "performed at the Savoy Theatre", since all the shows were performed at the Savoy eventually. I had interpreted "performed at the Savoy Theatre" to mean "first performed at the Savoy Theatre" -- hence starting with Iolanthe -- but if you think that a different definition is more in line with common usage in order to make Patience first, then let's put that definition into the article. -- Derek Ross
- It's certainly standard usage in my experience for Patience to be considered a
- Savoy Opera even in the strictest sense; I've changed the definition to one that : reflects this more clearly. Psmith 20:05, 12 Oct 2003 (UTC)
[edit] Revised definition
The prior edit defined "Savoy Opera" as:
- The Savoy Operas are a series of comic operas or operettas written by Gilbert and Sullivan. Strictly speaking, the term refers only to those whose first run or part thereof occurred at the Savoy Theatre in London (those from Patience onwards); in practice, the term is used more generally to refer to all the operas written by librettist W. S. Gilbert and composer Arthur Sullivan, and produced by Richard D'Oyly Carte.
I don't think there's any historical basis for the rather pedantic idea that, "strictly speaking," Savoy Opera includes only those operas whose first run was entirely, or in part, at the Savoy. Moreover, at the time they were being written, "Savoy Opera" referred to a style, of which G&S were the pre-eminent, but not exclusive, practitioners. The contemporary press, of course, could not have guessed that all of those other works would pass into near-oblivion, leaving the G&S pieces to stand alone for a genre that originally included far more.
The revised definition, I hope, captures the idea more accurately. Marc Shepherd 16:27, 12 June 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Duplicated list
I don't like the fact that the list of G&S Savoy operas is in the introduction and then repeated (and expanded) in the table lower down. Any objections to removing it? --Jmptdc 15:23, 25 July 2006 (UTC)
- You're right. However, if you look at the G&S Project page, I think we say something about a plan to move it to a "see also" list. I think this article should have the FULL list of operas played at the Savoy (including curtain raisers), but that we should note that the term Savoy Opera is usually used as a synonym for just the 14 G&S operas. May I suggest that you wait until Marc Shepherd returns before dealing with this redundancy? Best regards, --Ssilvers 20:21, 25 July 2006 (UTC)
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- The problem is that the term "Savoy Opera" has meant different things at different times. In modern parlance, "Savoy Opera" is practically synonymous with the thirteen operas G&S wrote for Richard D'Oyly Carte. Indeed, before I joined Wikipedia, the leading sentence of the present article said, "The Savoy Operas are a series of comedy operas or operettas written by Gilbert and Sullivan," and the article did not mention the existence of any others.
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- Originally, of course, Richard D'Oyly Carte employed other composers and librettists, and "Savoy Opera" meant anything written for that theatre. Those other works didn't achieve a foothold in the standard repertory, leaving the G&S works as an apparently isolated phenomenon.
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- As this is an Encyclopedia for the general reader, I think it's appropriate to call out — right up front — the thirteen works that most people would expect to see. The article then goes on to explain the history in more detail, and provides the longer list, which includes a large number of works that are seldom or never revived.
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- The two lists, of course, are not strictly duplicates; they provide different information. Marc Shepherd 01:16, 27 July 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Operetta
Carte intended his 'English' operas to banish French operetta from the London stage. In any case, there is no reason to remark on operetta here. It is true that the Savoy Operas influenced modern musicals, and we should not try to compare them to operettas in this article. This article has other issues to deal with. -- Ssilvers 05:48, 27 March 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Operetta!!!
I think that this is actually an unfortunate decision. The Savoy operas are by any rational definition "English Operettas" in all but name - and were designed (as you rightly state) to directly compete with French (and German) examples of that genre. Unfortunately it WAS the Victorian era, and French operetta in particular had a reputation (a deserved one, in some cases at least) for "naughtiness". English operetta called itself "comic opera" largely to avoid the "unsuitable for children and servants" tag that operetta had acquired. This article (and the one on "comic opera") both fail to properly note that this (quite erronious) use of the term "comic opera" to describe an operetta in English is a Victorian/Edwardian whim than causes totally unnecessary confusion when applied from the standpoint of the early twenty-first century.
Is Pirates of Penzance (for instance) more "operatic" than Offenbach's Brigands??? - plainly the exact reverse is the case.
I almost think that it would be better to approach G&S on the basis that it (and other Victorian/Edwardian English operetta) IS OPERETTA - with side references to the fact that it was sometimes termed "comic opera" (wrongly, because it wasn't at all) or "Savoy opera" (a definition that means too much, or too little, and no one is sure what it really means at all anyway) - principally due to Victorian prudery.
Soundofmusicals 23:46, 3 June 2007 (UTC)
- A work is what its composer says it is. If Stephen Sondheim calls Sweeney Todd a musical (although opera houses have played it), then it is a musical. If George Gershwin calls Porgy and Bess an opera (although it has been on Broadway), then it is an opera.
- Soundofmusicals is correct that Gilbert, Sullivan, and D'Oyly Carte had cultural reasons for wanting to avoid the term "operetta." Right or wrong, it's what they chose to do. Their terminology was widely adopted in the contemporary press, and in most (though not all) books written on their works for decades afterwards, and indeed up to the present day.
- Obviously, it would be appropriate to introduce validly-sourced statements to the effect that, despite the authors' preferred terminology, their works could reasonably be called "English operettas," although, to the best of my knowledge, that term is ahistorical as applied to Victorian comic opera.
- You can easily fall onto a slippery slope when asking questions like "Is X more 'operatic' than Y?" "Operatic" by what measure? Marc Shepherd 11:59, 5 June 2007 (UTC)