Isidore Godfrey
Isidore Godfrey (27 September 1900 – 12 September 1977) was musical director of the D'Oyly Carte Opera Company for 39 years, from 1929 to 1968. He conducted most of the company's performances during that period, except for a few London seasons when Malcolm Sargent was guest conductor and brief periods in the summers of 1947 and 1948 when Boyd Neel filled in as guest conductor.
Godfrey led the company in numerous tours, both domestic and foreign, during his tenure, and he conducted most of the company's recordings over that long period.
Life and career
Godfrey was born in London and educated at Haberdashers' Aske's Boys' School.[1] He studied the piano under George Woodhouse, a pupil of Theodor Leschetizky,[2] and in 1914 made a public appearance, at the age of 13, playing in a joint recital at the Bechstein Hall given by Woodhouse's pupils.[3] Godfrey subsequently trained at the Guildhall School of Music, where he won prizes for ensemble playing, the Gold Medal for piano and the annual Mercers' Scholarship.[1][4] While still a student, he performed as an accompanist in London.[5]
Early career
On the recommendation of Sir Landon Ronald, Godfrey joined the D'Oyly Carte Opera Company as chorus master and assistant musical director of its smaller touring company in April 1925.[1][6] He moved to the main company in May 1926 and in 1929 took over as musical director on the retirement of Harry Norris.[7] Thereafter, his entire career was with D'Oyly Carte. A rare exception to touring with the company came in December 1932, when he shared the conducting with Sir Thomas Beecham at a royal charity matinée before King George V and Queen Mary.[8] In the same month, Godfrey conducted the first complete broadcast of a Gilbert and Sullivan opera, The Yeomen of the Guard, on Christmas Eve 1932, relayed live from the Savoy Theatre by the BBC.[9] Godfrey conducted all the Gilbert and Sullivan operas plus Cox and Box, in performance and for recordings, except Utopia Limited and The Grand Duke, though he recorded excerpts from the former. (Rupert D'Oyly Carte had considered reviving Utopia in the 1920s, but abandoned the idea as too expensive.)
Godfrey conducted most of the company's performances during his four decades as musical director, except for a few London seasons, when Malcolm Sargent was guest conductor, and brief periods in the summers of 1947 and 1948, when Boyd Neel was guest conductor. Godfrey's assistant musical directors included Alan E. Ward (1930–49), William Cox-Ife (1951–61) and James Walker (1961–68).[10] During Godfrey's long reign as musical director, he conducted artists who had worked under the direction of W. S. Gilbert, such as Henry Lytton, Leo Sheffield and Sydney Granville, and those who were performing at the last night of the D'Oyly Carte Opera Company in 1982, such as John Reed and Kenneth Sandford.[11][12] In his early years in charge, Godfrey, with Rupert D'Oyly Carte's backing, gradually cut down the number of encores routinely given at the company's performances.[13] The stars and the audiences both resisted, but Godfrey eventually made progress, particularly after the outbreak of World War II, when it was important to keep running times down to a reasonable length.[14]
Touring and later years
During his four decades as musical director, Godfrey took the D'Oyly Carte Opera Company on many tours, including eleven to America. The company did not travel with a band but instead used orchestra players hired locally. He recalled, "We would pick up perhaps eight orchestral players in the first town, take them with us on the tour and make up the orchestra with local players from each of the towns we visited.... On one occasion, I was rehearsing the Mikado overture when I noticed that one of the double-basses was plucking the strings in the opening bars. I pointed out that it was not to be played pizzicato but arco, with the bow. "Yeah", he said. "But I haven't got a bow." That's how it was sometimes!"[15]
In wartime Britain, the orchestral situation on tour sometimes verged on collapse. Godfrey’s weekly reports to the company office in London included wry accounts of drummers in Oxford who could not read music, a nervous cellist in Liverpool who played on three strings at once and a bass player in Wimbledon who took a night off and sent an inebriated substitute.[16] Even in peacetime Godfrey was not lavishly provided for in the orchestra pit. In the 1950s, the magazine The Gramophone commented: "Whenever Mr. Isidore Godfrey enters the orchestra pit to direct an opera by Sullivan, to whose music he has devoted much of his life, he must presumably steel his aesthetic sense to doing justice to the composer with the tiny forces at his disposal. ... One presumes that an opera company with a repertory of ten operas, playing to capacity without expensive stars and only repairs to scenery and costumes and with royalties pouring in from all over the country, could afford a permanent orchestra of reasonable strength."[17]
In June 1965 Godfrey was awarded the O.B.E., on which The Gramophone commented that "nothing short of a dukedom" could adequately reward him.[18] He retired from the D'Oyly Carte company in February 1968 and was succeeded as musical director by his deputy, James Walker, formerly of Decca Records. Godfrey married two members of the company – first, soprano chorister Marguerite Kynaston (they later divorced), and, in 1940, soprano (later contralto) principal Ann Drummond-Grant. After Drummond-Grant died, Godfrey married a third time in 1961.[7] After retirement, when he held the honorary position of President of the associate members of the D'Oyly Carte Trust, ill-health prevented him from making many guest appearances, but he conducted H.M.S. Pinafore during the company's centenary season in 1975.[19]
Godfrey died in London in 1977 just short of his 77th birthday.
Reputation
Godfrey was widely admired for his consistent skill in giving Arthur Sullivan's scores their essential joie de vivre. As early as 1926, Malcolm Sargent joining the D'Oyly Carte Opera Company found "a brilliant young assistant named Isidore Godfrey whom I realised at once was made of the right stuff for Sullivan".[20] In the 1930s, Neville Cardus praised Godfrey's musicianship and commanding presence, adding, "Mr Godfrey deserves a bigger band":[21]
- Mr Isidore Godfrey approaches his evening's labours with an imperious gesture; he swings round, and with a comprehensive eye reduces even a Gilbert and Sullivan audience to silence for an overture – a very remarkable feat of hypnotism. And then Mr Godfrey's baton attacks the score, as though about to plunge us into Götterdämmerung with his thin Falstaff's army of an orchestra.... Mr Godfrey by sheer force seems to draw some sonority out of his pitifully inadequate instrumental forces; Toscanini could do no more.[22]
In the 1960s, Philip Hope-Wallace of The Guardian spoke of "the animation, command and sheer genius for keeping things up to the mark of this most devoted servant of the tradition."[20] Of a 1964 production of Iolanthe at New York City Center, the New York Herald Tribune reported, "The carrot thatch we have loved all these years has now burnished to a silver gold alloy but it could have been dark green for all we cared. What really mattered was that [Godfrey] was there... and that the Company was in superb condition, the best that it has been in for years."[23] The New York Times concurred, "Isidore Godfrey, happily a fixture in the pit, leads the overture with a respect and affection for its delicacies and that is the fashion in which he orders the musical side of the entire performance."[24] "If ever a knighthood were deserved in the cause of true musical devotion, it is here," wrote the critic Ivan March in The Great Records.[25] In 2007 The Penguin Guide to Recorded Classical Music praised him as "inimitable".[26]
A dissenting voice was the critic Rodney Milnes, who spoke of Godfrey’s recordings as "leaden, lumpen and dull",[27] but his fellow critic Hugo Cole, who had been a D'Oyly Carte orchestra player under Godfrey, wrote admiringly, "he was like Henry Wood in that if you watched him you couldn't come in wrong."[28] Members of the company from Leslie Rands in the 1920s to John Reed in the 1960s praised Godfrey – known to company members as "Goddie" – for his musicianship and friendliness.[20][29]
Recordings
Godfrey's first recording with the D'Oyly Carte Opera Company was the 1933 The Sorcerer highlights for HMV,[30] followed by his first complete opera, The Mikado in 1936.[31] When the company returned to the recording studio after World War II, Godfrey conducted a series of eleven complete recordings from 1949–55 for Decca, comprising all the Gilbert and Sullivan operas in its repertory.[32]
From 1957–66, the company re-recorded its full repertory for Decca, this time in stereo,[33] adding the first professional recording of Cox and Box[34] and highlights from Utopia, Limited.[35] Godfrey once again conducted the entire series, except for Princess Ida and The Yeomen of the Guard, for which Sir Malcolm Sargent was guest conductor.
His final recordings for the company were a film of The Mikado in 1966[36] and the company's second stereo recording of The Pirates of Penzance in 1968.[37]
Notes
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 Ayre, p. 102
- ↑ "Irén Marik (Piano)", Bach Cantatas website (2007)
- ↑ The Manchester Guardian, 22 March 1914, p. 6
- ↑ The Times, 26 July 1924, p. 10
- ↑ The Observer, 29 October 1922
- ↑ Godfrey recalled, in The Gilbert & Sullivan Journal, September 1964, that when he joined the touring company, he played the harmonium in the orchestra, but no harmonium parts are called for in any of the Savoy opera manuscript scores.
- ↑ 7.0 7.1 Stone, David. Isidore Godfrey, Who Was Who in the D'Oyly Carte Opera Company, 22 June 2004
- ↑ The Times, 21 December 1932, p. 15
- ↑ The Times, 24 December 1932, p. 2
- ↑ Rollins and Witts, Appendix pp. II-VI
- ↑ Rollins and Witts, pp. 152–53
- ↑ Wilson and Lloyd, p. 213
- ↑ Joseph, p. 222
- ↑ Joseph, p. 258
- ↑ Ayre, p. 103
- ↑ Joseph, p. 263
- ↑ Wimbush, Roger. The Gramophone, September 1955, p. 67
- ↑ The Gramophone, August 1965, p. 17
- ↑ The Savoyard Vol XVI, No 3, January 1978, obituary tributes by Dame Bridget D'Oyly Carte and Kenneth Sandford.
- ↑ 20.0 20.1 20.2 Gilbert & Sullivan Journal, May 1965, Vol VIII, No 17, p. 280
- ↑ The Manchester Guardian, 13 April 1931, p. 11
- ↑ Cardus, Neville. The Manchester Guardian, 29 March 1932, p. 11
- ↑ New York Herald Tribune, 18 November 1964
- ↑ The New York Times, 18 November 1964
- ↑ March, Ivan (ed): The Great Records, Long Playing Record Library Ltd, 1967, p. 99
- ↑ Penguin Guide, p. 1335
- ↑ "Building a Library", BBC Radio 3 Record Review, 15 April 1995
- ↑ The Guardian, 29 June 1971, p. 8
- ↑ Reed, pp. 30 and 61
- ↑ The 1933 HMV Sorcerer reviewed at A Gilbert and Sullivan Archive (2003)
- ↑ The 1936 D'Oyly Carte recording of The Mikado reviewed at A Gilbert and Sullivan Archive (2003)
- ↑ Listing of the D'Oyly Carte Decca monaural recordings, with links to reviews of each recording at A Gilbert and Sullivan Archive (2001)
- ↑ Listing of the D'Oyly Carte Decca stereo recordings, with links to reviews of each recording at A Gilbert and Sullivan Archive (2003)
- ↑ 1961 Cox and Box recording reviewed at A Gilbert and Sullivan Archive (2001)
- ↑ 1964 Utopia Limited highlights recording reviewed at A Gilbert and Sullivan Archive (2005)
- ↑ The 1966 D'Oyly Carte Mikado film reviewed at A Gilbert and Sullivan Archive (2005)
- ↑ The 1968 D'Oyly Carte recording of Pirates reviewed at A Gilbert and Sullivan Archive (2003)
References
- Ayre, Leslie (1972). The Gilbert & Sullivan Companion. London: W.H. Allen & Co Ltd. Introduction by Martyn Green.
- Joseph, Tony: The D’Oyly Carte Opera Company 1875-1982, Bunthorne Books, Bristol, 1994, ISBN 0-9507992-1-1
- March, Ivan (ed): Penguin Guide to Recorded Classical Music, 2008 edition, Penguin Books, London, ISBN 978-0-14-103336-5
- Reed, John: Nothing Whatever to Grumble At (2006). Xlibris, ISBN 1-4257-0255-4
- Rollins, Cyril; R. John Witts (1961). The D'Oyly Carte Opera Company in Gilbert and Sullivan Operas. London: Michael Joseph.
- Scowcroft, Philip: "The Godfreys" in The Gaiety Annual (2002) pp. 19-22.
- Reeves, Ken: "The Godfrey Identification Parade" in The Gaiety Annual (2002) pp. 23-28.
- Wilson, Robin; Frederic Lloyd (1984). Gilbert & Sullivan: The D'Oyly Carte Years - The Official Picture History. London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson. ISBN 0-297-78505-2
External links
- Appreciation piece regarding Godfrey's career, Memories of the D'Oyly Carte website
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