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J. M. Gordon

John McRobbie Gordon, John McRobbie (12 October 1857 – 22 February 1944) was a Scottish singer, actor, stage manager and director, known as an influential stage director of the D'Oyly Carte Opera Company after the death of W. S. Gilbert.

J. M. Gordon

In his early career Gordon appeared in the chorus and minor roles in D'Oyly Carte productions, and after a period as a freelance actor, manager and director, he returned to the company permanently in 1910, as stage manager, and later stage director, establishing a reputation as a firm disciplinarian and upholder of the performing practices originated by Gilbert.

Life and career edit

Early years edit

Gordon was born in Lumphanan, Aberdeenshire, the eldest son of Samuel McRobbie (died 1896), a carpenter and farmer.[1] Gordon retained his Aberdeen accent throughout his life.[2] The family was musical and did not discourage the boy's ambitions for a career as a singer, although they worried that life on the stage would be precarious.[3] Gordon left school early to help his father with carpentry work and, from the age of 17, worked in his cousins' carpentry business in Aberdeen; at the same time he continued to sing in choirs and to take music classes, and he formed a concert party.[4] He studied at the short-lived Aberdeen Conservatoire before moving to London in 1880.[5] He took his mother's maiden name as a stage name to avoid embarrassing his more puritanical relatives, who disapproved of the theatre.[6] Gordon joined a touring opera company, playing baritone roles in such works as La Sonnambula and Fra Diavolo. In 1881 he was understudy to the baritone lead in the West End production of Audran's La Mascotte. Further small roles in touring opera companies followed. In 1883, while playing Marvejol in Audran's Olivette,[7] he married a fellow member of the company, May Piemonté.[8]

In 1883 Gordon joined one of the D'Oyly Carte Opera Company touring companies as a member of the chorus in Gilbert and Sullivan's Patience. In 1884, he played the part of Colonel Calverley in Patience on tour.[9] Richard D'Oyly Carte saw him perform and offered him the chance to join the main London company at the Savoy Theatre, as a chorus member and understudy.[10] Gordon remained a member of the company until 1890, playing Piscator in The Carp, a one-act curtain raiser, when it accompanied Ruddigore (1887), and Harrington Jarramie in Mrs. Jarramie's Genie (another curtain raiser), when it accompanied The Yeomen of the Guard (1888).[11] He was in the chorus in the original runs of Princess Ida (1884), The Mikado (1885), Ruddigore, The Yeomen of the Guard and The Gondoliers (1889), and the 1885 revival of Trial by Jury and The Sorcerer at the Savoy.[11]

In the 1890s, Gordon managed, and acted in, his own touring company, "The Gordon 'At Home' Party". It comprised variously four or five performers, playing a series of short pieces including Mock Turtles.[12] He also ran his own band.[11] By the early 1900s, he was working as a freelance conductor and stage director for British amateur operatic societies. Among the works he directed were Sullivan's The Emerald Isle, Planquette's Les cloches de Corneville, Cellier's Dorothy and The Mountebanks, and Gilbert's play Sweethearts.[13]

D'Oyly Carte stage manager and director edit

Throughout his freelance period Gordon maintained his links with D'Oyly Carte, coaching young singers for the touring companies and the Savoy in his spare time. After Carte's death in 1901, Gordon continued to coach singers for Helen Carte after she took over the opera company. In March 1907 he served as stage manager to the D'Oyly Carte touring company.[14] At the Savoy in July of that year, during the D'Oyly Carte's first London repertory season, he directed the revival of Iolanthe.[15]

In 1910 Gordon accepted Helen Carte's offer of a permanent position as stage manager to the company, and he gave up his freelance activities.[16] Gilbert died in 1911, and Helen Carte died two years later. The opera company was inherited by her stepson, Rupert D'Oyly Carte, who hired Gordon in December 1911 as stage manager.[11] According to a 2014 biographical sketch of Gordon, Carte needed a stage manager who would maintain the company's production standards and preserve Gilbert's traditions and style. Gordon's skills, attention to detail and tenacity, together with his experience with the company under Gilbert's direction, were what Carte required.[11] One of Carte's priorities was to arrive at an authorised text. Over the years Gilbert had tweaked his libretti, removing out-of-date references and adding new ones. He had also permitted a few interpolations by senior members of the company. Gordon, whose close contacts with Gilbert had included work on the prompt books for the Savoy operas, was entrusted with preparing an authoritative set of libretti. In general, he retained the few "gags" that Gilbert had approved, and otherwise returned to the original 1870s and '80s texts.[17][n 1]

 
(l to r) Gordon, Norris, Winifred Lawson, Leo Sheffield, Henry Lytton, Eileen Sharp and Darrell Fancourt – publicity shot for Princess Ida, 1924

Gordon stage managed and then directed D'Oyly Carte productions for the next twenty-eight years. He coached new artists on the blocking, dances, and line readings for each part, and maintained strict quality control over the productions. He was named stage director for the company in 1922 and served in that capacity for seventeen years.[18] When The Sorcerer was revived in 1916 after a long absence from the company's repertory, Gordon directed the production.[19] In consultation with Rupert D'Oyly Carte, he was responsible for making major textual revisions to Ruddigore when it was revived, for the first time, in December 1921. Around the same time, he worked with the company's musical director, Harry Norris, to create the radically shortened "Savoy Edition" of Cox and Box, and he approved any changes to stage business, such as Darrell Fancourt's introduction of the Mikado's famous laugh.[20] His relations with Malcolm Sargent, whom Carte brought in to conduct London seasons in 1926 and 1929–30, were less harmonious. Sargent's brisk tempos upset Gordon, who protested unavailingly that they interfered with the pacing of the stage action. Some senior company members agreed with Gordon, but Carte backed Sargent.[21]

Gordon retired in July 1939, but briefly came out of retirement in late 1939 and early 1940 to coach Grahame Clifford, who had taken over at short notice from Martyn Green as principal comedian.[22] He died at his home in Brighton at the age of 87 after a fall in the wartime blackout.[22] His only surviving daughter, Lily, preserved many of his papers with information about the company's productions. His memoirs, written after his retirement, were edited by his great-niece Elizabeth Benney and published by Pitcairn-Knowles in 2014.[23]

Reputation edit

Many members of D'Oyly Carte wrote anecdotes about Gordon's dedication and the value of his instruction. Derek Oldham described him as:

a tiger for knowing and getting what he wanted! He was only really happy when he was rehearsing. He loved rehearsing. ... He was the everlasting secret joke of the Company ... and there were some funny tales. ... But he had that company on its toes. It is sometimes said that the vintage years of [the company] were from 1919 and the six years following. Well, they were all due to old man Gordon. … Later, as he became older and tired, it showed itself in the fact that he was not so flexible. He became a martinet in tiny little things of "business" and tradition, and would not allow the individuality of the actor to colour a part, as he used to in my time ... making for a dull uniformity. But what a producer when at his best. ... Gordon gave me diction, much solid stage technique, and nursed the passion and sincerity for my job.[24]

Viola Wilson, who was a soprano with the company near the end of Gordon's career, wrote this description in her memoir:

He worshipped Gilbert and this was reflected in his own productions. Although a stickler for tradition, he believed first and foremost in building up an intelligent performance. Short and slight, James Gordon kept a small step ladder [to see over the heads of the chorus] near the prompt corner so he could stand on it, peer through his pince-nez spectacles at us and not miss a single movement. He knew the exact spot where we should stand and no one dared be half an inch out of place. From the stage we could see his luminous pen jotting down notes which he later handed to us. Some of these I still have: "You took three steps too close to Strephon during the duet." "Keep your arms steady during song and sing with more feeling" and so on.[11]

Notes, references and sources edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ "Gags" approved by Gilbert and retained by Gordon included Pooh-Bah's "No money – no grovel!" and Nanki-Poo's "Modified rapture!" in The Mikado. Examples of Gordon’s removal of Gilbert's own updatings included reverting from "a tuppenny tube young man" to the original "a threepenny bus young man" in Patience.[17]

References edit

  1. ^ Gordon, pp. 1 and 10
  2. ^ "Obituary", The Glasgow Herald, 25 February 1944
  3. ^ Gordon, Introduction, p. ii
  4. ^ Gordon, pp. 5 and 7
  5. ^ Gordon, pp. 10 and 13
  6. ^ Gordon, Introduction and p. 13
  7. ^ "Olivette at West Hartlepool", The North-Eastern Daily Gazette, 4 January 1904, p. 3
  8. ^ Gordon, pp. 21 and 27
  9. ^ Gordon, p. 33
  10. ^ Gordon, p. 36
  11. ^ a b c d e f Stone, David. J.M. Gordon, Who Was Who in the D'Oyly Carte Opera Company, 17 July 2014, accessed 21 April 2015
  12. ^ The Era, 14 August 1897, p. 12; and "Local Topics", Shoreditch Observer, 11 December 1897, p. 3
  13. ^ Gordon, pp. 59, 60 and 62
  14. ^ Rollins and Witts, p. 123
  15. ^ Rollins and Witts, p. 21; and Bullough, John Malcolm. "Deeside Man Carries On Gilbert Traditions", Aberdeen Press and Journal, 13 December 1937, p. 6
  16. ^ Gordon, p. 71
  17. ^ a b Joseph, p. 165
  18. ^ Rollins and Witts, Appendix pp. I–IV
  19. ^ Bullough, John Malcolm. "Deeside Man Carries On Gilbert Traditions", Aberdeen Press and Journal, 13 December 1937, p. 6
  20. ^ Joseph, p. 260
  21. ^ Reid, pp. 142–43
  22. ^ a b Gordon, Introduction
  23. ^ Gordon, passim
  24. ^ Taylor, Roy (ed). "Derek Oldham Remembers", at the Memories of the D'Oyly Carte website, accessed 21 December 2009

Sources edit

  • Gordon, J. M. (2014). The Memoirs of J M Gordon 1856–1944: Stage Director D'Oyly Carte Opera Company. Elizabeth Benney (ed). Tunbridge Wells: Richard Pitcairn-Knowles. ISBN 978-0-9558591-4-4.
  • Green, Martyn (1961). Martyn Green's Treasury of Gilbert & Sullivan. London: Michael Joseph. OCLC 974331284.
  • Joseph, Tony (1994). The D'Oyly Carte Opera Company, 1875–1982: An Unofficial History. London: Bunthorne Books. ISBN 978-0-9507992-1-6
  • Reid, Charles (1968). Malcolm Sargent: a biography. London: Hamish Hamilton Ltd. ISBN 978-0-241-91316-1.
  • Rollins, Cyril; R. John Witts (1962). The D'Oyly Carte Opera Company in Gilbert and Sullivan Operas: A Record of Productions, 1875–1961. London: Michael Joseph. OCLC 504581419.

External links edit

  • Recollections of Harry Norris

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John McRobbie Gordon ne John McRobbie 12 October 1857 22 February 1944 was a Scottish singer actor stage manager and director known as an influential stage director of the D Oyly Carte Opera Company after the death of W S Gilbert J M GordonIn his early career Gordon appeared in the chorus and minor roles in D Oyly Carte productions and after a period as a freelance actor manager and director he returned to the company permanently in 1910 as stage manager and later stage director establishing a reputation as a firm disciplinarian and upholder of the performing practices originated by Gilbert Contents 1 Life and career 1 1 Early years 1 2 D Oyly Carte stage manager and director 2 Reputation 3 Notes references and sources 3 1 Notes 3 2 References 3 3 Sources 4 External linksLife and career editEarly years edit Gordon was born in Lumphanan Aberdeenshire the eldest son of Samuel McRobbie died 1896 a carpenter and farmer 1 Gordon retained his Aberdeen accent throughout his life 2 The family was musical and did not discourage the boy s ambitions for a career as a singer although they worried that life on the stage would be precarious 3 Gordon left school early to help his father with carpentry work and from the age of 17 worked in his cousins carpentry business in Aberdeen at the same time he continued to sing in choirs and to take music classes and he formed a concert party 4 He studied at the short lived Aberdeen Conservatoire before moving to London in 1880 5 He took his mother s maiden name as a stage name to avoid embarrassing his more puritanical relatives who disapproved of the theatre 6 Gordon joined a touring opera company playing baritone roles in such works as La Sonnambula and Fra Diavolo In 1881 he was understudy to the baritone lead in the West End production of Audran s La Mascotte Further small roles in touring opera companies followed In 1883 while playing Marvejol in Audran s Olivette 7 he married a fellow member of the company May Piemonte 8 In 1883 Gordon joined one of the D Oyly Carte Opera Company touring companies as a member of the chorus in Gilbert and Sullivan s Patience In 1884 he played the part of Colonel Calverley in Patience on tour 9 Richard D Oyly Carte saw him perform and offered him the chance to join the main London company at the Savoy Theatre as a chorus member and understudy 10 Gordon remained a member of the company until 1890 playing Piscator in The Carp a one act curtain raiser when it accompanied Ruddigore 1887 and Harrington Jarramie in Mrs Jarramie s Genie another curtain raiser when it accompanied The Yeomen of the Guard 1888 11 He was in the chorus in the original runs of Princess Ida 1884 The Mikado 1885 Ruddigore The Yeomen of the Guard and The Gondoliers 1889 and the 1885 revival of Trial by Jury and The Sorcerer at the Savoy 11 In the 1890s Gordon managed and acted in his own touring company The Gordon At Home Party It comprised variously four or five performers playing a series of short pieces including Mock Turtles 12 He also ran his own band 11 By the early 1900s he was working as a freelance conductor and stage director for British amateur operatic societies Among the works he directed were Sullivan s The Emerald Isle Planquette s Les cloches de Corneville Cellier s Dorothy and The Mountebanks and Gilbert s play Sweethearts 13 D Oyly Carte stage manager and director edit Throughout his freelance period Gordon maintained his links with D Oyly Carte coaching young singers for the touring companies and the Savoy in his spare time After Carte s death in 1901 Gordon continued to coach singers for Helen Carte after she took over the opera company In March 1907 he served as stage manager to the D Oyly Carte touring company 14 At the Savoy in July of that year during the D Oyly Carte s first London repertory season he directed the revival of Iolanthe 15 In 1910 Gordon accepted Helen Carte s offer of a permanent position as stage manager to the company and he gave up his freelance activities 16 Gilbert died in 1911 and Helen Carte died two years later The opera company was inherited by her stepson Rupert D Oyly Carte who hired Gordon in December 1911 as stage manager 11 According to a 2014 biographical sketch of Gordon Carte needed a stage manager who would maintain the company s production standards and preserve Gilbert s traditions and style Gordon s skills attention to detail and tenacity together with his experience with the company under Gilbert s direction were what Carte required 11 One of Carte s priorities was to arrive at an authorised text Over the years Gilbert had tweaked his libretti removing out of date references and adding new ones He had also permitted a few interpolations by senior members of the company Gordon whose close contacts with Gilbert had included work on the prompt books for the Savoy operas was entrusted with preparing an authoritative set of libretti In general he retained the few gags that Gilbert had approved and otherwise returned to the original 1870s and 80s texts 17 n 1 nbsp l to r Gordon Norris Winifred Lawson Leo Sheffield Henry Lytton Eileen Sharp and Darrell Fancourt publicity shot for Princess Ida 1924Gordon stage managed and then directed D Oyly Carte productions for the next twenty eight years He coached new artists on the blocking dances and line readings for each part and maintained strict quality control over the productions He was named stage director for the company in 1922 and served in that capacity for seventeen years 18 When The Sorcerer was revived in 1916 after a long absence from the company s repertory Gordon directed the production 19 In consultation with Rupert D Oyly Carte he was responsible for making major textual revisions to Ruddigore when it was revived for the first time in December 1921 Around the same time he worked with the company s musical director Harry Norris to create the radically shortened Savoy Edition of Cox and Box and he approved any changes to stage business such as Darrell Fancourt s introduction of the Mikado s famous laugh 20 His relations with Malcolm Sargent whom Carte brought in to conduct London seasons in 1926 and 1929 30 were less harmonious Sargent s brisk tempos upset Gordon who protested unavailingly that they interfered with the pacing of the stage action Some senior company members agreed with Gordon but Carte backed Sargent 21 Gordon retired in July 1939 but briefly came out of retirement in late 1939 and early 1940 to coach Grahame Clifford who had taken over at short notice from Martyn Green as principal comedian 22 He died at his home in Brighton at the age of 87 after a fall in the wartime blackout 22 His only surviving daughter Lily preserved many of his papers with information about the company s productions His memoirs written after his retirement were edited by his great niece Elizabeth Benney and published by Pitcairn Knowles in 2014 23 Reputation editMany members of D Oyly Carte wrote anecdotes about Gordon s dedication and the value of his instruction Derek Oldham described him as a tiger for knowing and getting what he wanted He was only really happy when he was rehearsing He loved rehearsing He was the everlasting secret joke of the Company and there were some funny tales But he had that company on its toes It is sometimes said that the vintage years of the company were from 1919 and the six years following Well they were all due to old man Gordon Later as he became older and tired it showed itself in the fact that he was not so flexible He became a martinet in tiny little things of business and tradition and would not allow the individuality of the actor to colour a part as he used to in my time making for a dull uniformity But what a producer when at his best Gordon gave me diction much solid stage technique and nursed the passion and sincerity for my job 24 Viola Wilson who was a soprano with the company near the end of Gordon s career wrote this description in her memoir He worshipped Gilbert and this was reflected in his own productions Although a stickler for tradition he believed first and foremost in building up an intelligent performance Short and slight James Gordon kept a small step ladder to see over the heads of the chorus near the prompt corner so he could stand on it peer through his pince nez spectacles at us and not miss a single movement He knew the exact spot where we should stand and no one dared be half an inch out of place From the stage we could see his luminous pen jotting down notes which he later handed to us Some of these I still have You took three steps too close to Strephon during the duet Keep your arms steady during song and sing with more feeling and so on 11 Notes references and sources editNotes edit Gags approved by Gilbert and retained by Gordon included Pooh Bah s No money no grovel and Nanki Poo s Modified rapture in The Mikado Examples of Gordon s removal of Gilbert s own updatings included reverting from a tuppenny tube young man to the original a threepenny bus young man in Patience 17 References edit Gordon pp 1 and 10 Obituary The Glasgow Herald 25 February 1944 Gordon Introduction p ii Gordon pp 5 and 7 Gordon pp 10 and 13 Gordon Introduction and p 13 Olivette at West Hartlepool The North Eastern Daily Gazette 4 January 1904 p 3 Gordon pp 21 and 27 Gordon p 33 Gordon p 36 a b c d e f Stone David J M Gordon Who Was Who in the D Oyly Carte Opera Company 17 July 2014 accessed 21 April 2015 The Era 14 August 1897 p 12 and Local Topics Shoreditch Observer 11 December 1897 p 3 Gordon pp 59 60 and 62 Rollins and Witts p 123 Rollins and Witts p 21 and Bullough John Malcolm Deeside Man Carries On Gilbert Traditions Aberdeen Press and Journal 13 December 1937 p 6 Gordon p 71 a b Joseph p 165 Rollins and Witts Appendix pp I IV Bullough John Malcolm Deeside Man Carries On Gilbert Traditions Aberdeen Press and Journal 13 December 1937 p 6 Joseph p 260 Reid pp 142 43 a b Gordon Introduction Gordon passim Taylor Roy ed Derek Oldham Remembers at the Memories of the D Oyly Carte website accessed 21 December 2009 Sources edit Gordon J M 2014 The Memoirs of J M Gordon 1856 1944 Stage Director D Oyly Carte Opera Company Elizabeth Benney ed Tunbridge Wells Richard Pitcairn Knowles ISBN 978 0 9558591 4 4 Green Martyn 1961 Martyn Green s Treasury of Gilbert amp Sullivan London Michael Joseph OCLC 974331284 Joseph Tony 1994 The D Oyly Carte Opera Company 1875 1982 An Unofficial History London Bunthorne Books ISBN 978 0 9507992 1 6 Reid Charles 1968 Malcolm Sargent a biography London Hamish Hamilton Ltd ISBN 978 0 241 91316 1 Rollins Cyril R John Witts 1962 The D Oyly Carte Opera Company in Gilbert and Sullivan Operas A Record of Productions 1875 1961 London Michael Joseph OCLC 504581419 External links editRecollections of Harry Norris Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title J M Gordon amp oldid 1206403058, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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