Erminie
Erminie is a comic opera in two acts composed by Edward Jakobowski with a libretto by Claxson Bellamy and Harry Paulton, based loosely on Charles Selby's 1834 melodrama, Robert Macaire. The piece first played in Birmingham, England and then in London in 1885 and enjoyed unusual international success that endured well into the twentieth century.
Performance history
Erminie opened at the Grand Theatre, Birmingham, England, on 26 October 1885. It transferred to the Comedy Theatre in London on 9 November 1885, starring Florence St. John who, being pregnant, ceded the role to a young Marie Tempest in December. On 18 February 1886, the piece moved to the Gaiety Theatre, London and then toured the British provinces[1] and throughout the world, reaching Australia by 1889.[2]
The Broadway, New York production was extraordinarily successful, opening at the Casino Theatre on 10 May 1886 and running for 571 performances.[3] It starred Pauline Hall as the title character and Francis Wilson as Cadeaux. Sylvia Gerrish was in the cast, with DeWolf Hopper and Sylvia Gerrish joining later. Erminie enjoyed many UK, U.S. and foreign productions and was revived on Broadway in 1893, 1899, 1903 and in 1921 with Wilson and Hopper again assuming their 1886 roles.[4] Erminie was performed as a staged concert production in July 2008 by the Lyric Theatre in Mountain View, California.[5]
Roles and original London cast
- Marquis de Pontvert – Fred Mervin
- Eugène Marcel (the Marquis' secretary) – Henry Bracy
- Vicomte Ernest de Brissac – Horace Bolini
- Captain Delaunay (a young officer) – Kate Everleigh
- Sergeant – A. D. Pierrepoint
- Dufois (the Landlord of the Lion d'Or) – George Marler
- Simon (a Waiter) – J. W. Bradbury
- Henri – Stanley Betjeman
- Pierre – Lottie Leigh
- Chevalier de Brabazon (the Marquis' guest) – Percy Compton
- Ravannes (a thief) – Frank Wyatt
- Cadeau (a thief) – Harry Paulton
- Cerise Marcel (Erminie's companion) – Violet Melnotte
- Javotte (Erminie's maid) – K. Munroe, later Marie Jansen
- Marie – Edith Vane
- Clementine – Delia Merton
- Princesse de Gramponeur – M. A. Victor
- Erminie de Pontvert – Florence St. John (later Marie Tempest)
- Mesdemoiselles St. Brice, D'Auvigne, De Nailles and de Sangres – Nellie Gordon, Kitty Graham, Marie Huntley and Violet Leigh
- Mesdames St. Brice, de Lage, de Brefchamp and de Chateauln – Lillie Teesdale, Ada Maxwell, Ethel Selwyn and Millie Gerard
- Antoinette, Charlotte, Jeanette, Mignon, Rosalie, Niniche, Nanine and Fanchette – Madge Bruce, Emilie Campbell, Anita Marzan, Florence Dudley, Carrie Solomon, Helen Gwynne, Mary Webb and Sylvia Southgate
Synopsis
- Act I
Erminie is the daughter of the Marquis de Pontvert. She has been promised, in an arranged marriage, to Ernest, Vicomte de Brissac. He is a young nobleman and the son of an old war comrade of Erminie's father. Erminie and Ernest have never met each other. Erminie, however, is secretly in love with her father's secretary, Eugène, and Ernest is secretly in love with Cerise Marcel, who is Eugene's sister and Erminie's friend. Eugène and Cerise are orphans who were taken into his household by Erminie's father. Eugene feels that his subservient position makes it impossible for him to ask the Marquis for Erminie's hand in marriage.
On his way to the betrothal ceremony, Ernest runs into a pair of crafty "philanthropists" (thieves), Ravennes and Cadeau, who steal his money and wardrobe and tie him to a tree. They disguise Ravennes as Ernest and Cadeau as a Baron and blunder into the Lion d'Or for the betrothal, saying that they were waylaid by thieves. Seeing the wealthy wedding guests, they scheme to make off with a lot of money. Cadeaux gets drunk, however, and his bad manners nearly spoil the scheme. Ernest eventually escapes his bonds and arrives late and in disordered attire at the Lion d'Or. Seeing Ernest, Ravennes cries "Seize the villain," claiming that Ernest is the thief who attacked them earlier in the day. Ernest is arrested and tossed in jail.
- Act II
At the Chateau Pontvert that evening, Ravennes, still disguised as Ernest, pretends sympathy for Erminie's love for Eugene. He promises to help her to elope. At the same time, she unwittingly helps him to rob the house and the wedding guests. Eventually, however, in a farcical comedy of errors and mistaken identities, the plan fails, and the robbers are arrested. Nevertheless, their scheming inadvertently rescues Erminie from the arranged marriage, as both pairs – Eugene and Erminie, and Ernest and Cerise – are happily united.
Musical numbers
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Namesake
A minor planet, 705 Erminia, is named after the work.
Notes
- ↑ Information about UK and other productions of Erminie
- ↑ Information about an Australian 1889 production of Erminie
- ↑ IBDB entry for the original New York run The number of performances is often erroneously stated to be much higher.
- ↑ Information about a number of productions of Erminie
- ↑ Kenig, Marc and Neil Midkiff. "Discovery Is Making a To-Do About Erminie", LyricTheatre.org
References
External links
- Information about productions of Erminie in Colorado
- Midi files and links to cast information and lyrics
- Libretto at Archive.org
- Erminie at the IBDB database
- Information about Jakobowski
- Listing for Erminie, 2008