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Trial by Jury

Trial by Jury is a comic opera in one act, with music by Arthur Sullivan and libretto by W. S. Gilbert. It was first produced on 25 March 1875, at London's Royalty Theatre, where it initially ran for 131 performances and was considered a hit, receiving critical praise and outrunning its popular companion piece, Jacques Offenbach's La Périchole. The story concerns a "breach of promise of marriage" lawsuit in which the judge and legal system are the objects of lighthearted satire. Gilbert based the libretto of Trial by Jury on an operetta parody that he had written in 1868.

A scene from Trial by Jury as illustrated in the magazine Illustrated Sporting and Dramatic News of 1 May 1875

The opera premiered more than three years after Gilbert and Sullivan's only previous collaboration, Thespis, an 1871–72 Christmas season entertainment. In the intervening years, both the author and the composer were busy with separate projects. Beginning in 1873, Gilbert tried several times to get the opera produced before the impresario Richard D'Oyly Carte suggested that he collaborate on it with Sullivan. Sullivan was pleased with the piece and promptly wrote the music.

As with most Gilbert and Sullivan operas, the plot of Trial by Jury is ludicrous, but the characters behave as if the events were perfectly reasonable. This narrative technique blunts some of the pointed barbs aimed at hypocrisy, especially of those in authority, and the sometimes base motives of supposedly respectable people and institutions. These themes became favourites of Gilbert through the rest of his collaborations with Sullivan. Critics and audiences praised how well Sullivan's witty and good-humoured music complemented Gilbert's satire.[1] The success of Trial by Jury launched the famous series of 13 collaborative works between Gilbert and Sullivan that came to be known as the Savoy Operas.

After its original production in 1875, Trial by Jury toured widely in Britain and elsewhere and was frequently revived and recorded. It also became popular for benefit performances. The work continues to be frequently played, especially as a companion piece to other short Gilbert and Sullivan operas or other works. According to the theatre scholar Kurt Gänzl, it is "probably the most successful British one-act operetta of all time".[2]

Background

Before Trial by Jury, W. S. Gilbert and Arthur Sullivan had collaborated on one previous opera, Thespis; or, The Gods Grown Old, in 1871. Although reasonably successful, it was a Christmas entertainment, and such works were not expected to endure.[3] Between Thespis and Trial by Jury, Gilbert and Sullivan did not collaborate on any further operas, and each man separately produced works that further built his reputation in his own field. Gilbert wrote several short stories, edited the second volume of his comic Bab Ballads, and created a dozen theatrical works, including Happy Arcadia in 1872; The Wicked World, The Happy Land and The Realm of Joy in 1873; Charity, Topsyturveydom and Sweethearts in 1874.[4] At the same time, Sullivan wrote various pieces of religious music, including the Festival Te Deum (1872) and an oratorio, The Light of the World (1873), and edited Church Hymns, with Tunes (1874), which included 45 of his own hymns and arrangements.[5] Two of his most famous hymn tunes from this period are settings of "Onward, Christian Soldiers" and "Nearer, my God, to Thee" (both in 1872). He also wrote a suite of incidental music to The Merry Wives of Windsor (1874) and many parlour ballads and other songs, including three in 1874–75 with words by Gilbert: "The Distant Shore", "Sweethearts" (inspired by Gilbert's play) and "The Love that Loves Me Not".[5]

Genesis of the opera

 
Gilbert's original sketch of Trial by Jury, published in Fun in 1868

The genesis of Trial by Jury was in 1868, when Gilbert wrote a single-page illustrated comic piece for the magazine Fun entitled Trial by Jury: An Operetta. Drawing on Gilbert's training and brief practice as a barrister, it detailed a "breach of promise" trial going awry, in the process spoofing the law, lawyers and the legal system. (In the Victorian era, a man could be required to pay compensation should he fail to marry a woman to whom he was engaged.)[6] The outline of this story was followed in the later opera, and two of its numbers appeared in nearly their final form in Fun. The skit, however, ended abruptly: the moment the attractive plaintiff stepped into the witness box, the judge leapt into her arms and vowed to marry her, whereas in the opera, the case is allowed to proceed further before this conclusion is reached.[7][8]

In 1873, the opera manager and composer Carl Rosa asked Gilbert for a piece to use as part of a season of English opera that Rosa planned to present at the Drury Lane Theatre; Rosa was to write or commission the music. Gilbert expanded Trial into a one-act libretto. Rosa's wife, Euphrosyne Parepa-Rosa, a childhood friend of Gilbert's, died after an illness in 1874, and Rosa dropped the project.[9][10] Later in the same year, Gilbert offered the libretto to the impresario Richard D'Oyly Carte, but Carte knew of no composer available to set it to music.[11]

Meanwhile, Sullivan may have been considering a return to light opera: Cox and Box, his first comic opera, had received a London revival (co-starring his brother, Fred Sullivan) in September 1874. In November, Sullivan travelled to Paris and contacted Albert Millaud, one of the librettists for Jacques Offenbach's operettas. However, he returned to London empty-handed and worked on incidental music for the Gaiety Theatre's production of The Merry Wives of Windsor.[12] By early 1875, Carte was managing Selina Dolaro's Royalty Theatre, and he needed a short opera to be played as an afterpiece to Offenbach's La Périchole, which was to open on 30 January (with Fred Sullivan in the cast), in which Dolaro starred. Carte had asked Sullivan to compose something for the theatre and advertised in The Times in late January: "In Preparation, a New Comic Opera composed expressly for this theatre by Mr. Arthur Sullivan in which Madame Dolaro and Nellie Bromley will appear."[13][a] But around the same time, Carte also remembered Gilbert's Trial by Jury and knew that Gilbert had worked with Sullivan to create Thespis. He suggested to Gilbert that Sullivan was the man to write the music for Trial.[13]

Gilbert finally called on Sullivan and read the libretto to him on 20 February 1875. Sullivan was enthusiastic, later recalling, "[Gilbert] read it through ... in the manner of a man considerably disappointed with what he had written. As soon as he had come to the last word, he closed up the manuscript violently, apparently unconscious of the fact that he had achieved his purpose so far as I was concerned, inasmuch as I was screaming with laughter the whole time."[16] Trial by Jury, described as "A Novel and Original Dramatic Cantata" in the original promotional material,[b] was composed and rehearsed in a matter of weeks.[16][19]

Production and aftermath

The result of Gilbert and Sullivan's collaboration was a witty, tuneful and very "English" piece, in contrast to the bawdy burlesques and adaptations of French operettas that dominated the London musical stage at that time.[1]

 
April 1875 programme for La Périchole and Trial by Jury. Sullivan and Gilbert are the cherubs.

Initially, Trial by Jury, which runs only 30 minutes or so, was played last on a triple bill, on which the main attraction, La Périchole (starring Dolaro as the title character, Fred Sullivan as Don Andres and Walter H. Fisher as Piquillo), was preceded by the one-act farce Cryptoconchoidsyphonostomata.[16] The latter was immediately replaced by a series of other curtain raisers.[20][c] The composer conducted the first night's performance, and the theatre's music director, B. Simmons, conducted thereafter.[22] The composer's brother, Fred Sullivan, starred as the Learned Judge, with Nellie Bromley as the Plaintiff. One of the choristers in Trial by Jury, W. S. Penley, was promoted in November 1875[23] to the small part of the Foreman of the Jury and made a strong impact on audiences with his amusing facial expressions and gestures.[24] In March 1876, he temporarily replaced Fred Sullivan as the Judge, when Fred's health declined from tuberculosis.[25] With this start, Penley went on to a successful career as comic actor, culminating with the lead role in the record-breaking original production of Charley's Aunt.[24] Fred Sullivan died in January 1877.[26]

Jacques Offenbach's works were then at the height of their popularity in Britain, but Trial by Jury proved even more popular than La Périchole,[27] becoming an unexpected hit.[1] Trial by Jury drew crowds and continued to run after La Périchole closed.[28] While the Royalty Theatre closed for the summer in 1875, Dolaro immediately took Trial on tour in England and Ireland.[29] The piece resumed at the Royalty later in 1875 and was revived for additional London seasons in 1876 at the Opera Comique and in 1877 at the Strand Theatre.[30]

Trial by Jury soon became the most desirable supporting piece for any London production, and, outside London, the major British theatrical touring companies had added it to their repertoire by about 1877.[31] The original production was given a world tour by the Opera Comique's assistant manager Emily Soldene, which travelled as far as Australia.[31] Unauthorised "pirate" productions quickly sprang up in America, taking advantage of the fact that American courts did not enforce foreign copyrights.[22][23] It also became popular as part of the Victorian tradition of "benefit concerts", where the theatrical community came together to raise money for actors and actresses down on their luck or retiring. The D'Oyly Carte Opera Company continued to play the work for a century, licensing the piece to amateur and foreign professional companies, such as the J. C. Williamson Gilbert and Sullivan Opera Company.[32] Since the copyrights to Gilbert and Sullivan works ran out in 1961,[33] the piece has been available to theatre companies around the world free of royalties. The work's enduring popularity since 1875 makes it, according to theatrical scholar Kurt Gänzl, "probably the most successful British one-act operetta of all time".[2]

The success of Trial by Jury spurred several attempts to reunite Gilbert and Sullivan, but difficulties arose. Plans for a collaboration for Carl Rosa in 1875 fell through because Gilbert was too busy with other projects,[34][35] and an attempted Christmas 1875 revival of Thespis by Richard D'Oyly Carte failed when the financiers backed out.[34][36] Gilbert and Sullivan continued their separate careers, though both continued writing light opera, among other projects: Sullivan's next light opera, The Zoo, opened while Trial by Jury was still playing, in June 1875; and Gilbert's Eyes and No Eyes premiered a month later,[37] followed by Princess Toto in 1876.[38] Gilbert and Sullivan were not reunited until The Sorcerer in 1877.[20]

Roles

  • The Learned Judge (comic baritone)
  • The Plaintiff (soprano)
  • The Defendant (tenor)
  • Counsel for the Plaintiff (lyric baritone)
  • Usher (bass-baritone)
  • Foreman of the Jury (bass)
  • Associate (silent)
  • First Bridesmaid
  • Chorus of Bridesmaids, Gentlemen of the Jury, Barristers, Attorneys and Public.

Synopsis

Excerpt from "The Judge's Song"[39]

JUDGE.
When I, good friends, was called to the bar,
    I'd an appetite fresh and hearty.
But I was, as many young barristers are,
    An impecunious party.
I'd a swallow-tail coat of a beautiful blue –
    A brief which I bought of a booby –
A couple of shirts, and a collar or two,
    And a ring that looked like a ruby!

CHORUS.
He'd a couple of shirts, and a collar or two,
And a ring that looked like a ruby.

JUDGE.
In Westminster Hall I danced a dance,
    Like a semi-despondent fury;
For I thought I never should hit on a chance
    Of addressing a British Jury –
But I soon got tired of third-class journeys,
    And dinners of bread and water;
So I fell in love with a rich attorney's
    Elderly, ugly daughter.

CHORUS.
So he fell in love, etc.

 

Drawing by W. S. Gilbert

It is 10 a.m. at the Court of the Exchequer,[40] where a jury and the public assemble to hear a case of breach of promise of marriage.

 
The Usher advises the jury. Drawing by W. S. Gilbert

The Usher advises the jury to listen to the broken-hearted Plaintiff's case, adding that they "needn't mind" what the "ruffianly defendant" has to say. He notes, for the record, that "From bias free of every kind, this trial must be tried!" The Defendant (Edwin)[d] arrives, and the jurymen greet him with hostility, even though, as he points out, they have as yet no idea of the merits of his case. He candidly tells them that he jilted the Plaintiff because she became a "bore intense" to him, and he then quickly took up with another woman. The jurymen recall their own wayward youth, but as they are now respectable gentlemen they have no sympathy for the Defendant.

The Judge enters with great pomp and describes how he rose to his position – by courting a rich attorney's "elderly, ugly daughter". The rich attorney then aided his prospective son-in-law's legal career until the Judge "became as rich as the Gurneys" and "threw over" the daughter. The jury and public are delighted with the Judge, although he has just admitted to the same wrong of which the Defendant is accused.[e]

The jury is sworn in, and the Plaintiff (Angelina)[d] is summoned. She is preceded into the courtroom by her bridesmaids, one of whom catches the eye of the Judge. However, when Angelina herself arrives in full wedding dress, she instantly captures the heart of both Judge and jury. The Counsel for the Plaintiff makes a moving speech detailing Edwin's betrayal. Angelina feigns distress and staggers, first into the arms of the Foreman of the Jury, and then of the Judge. Edwin counters, explaining that his change of heart is only natural:

Oh, gentlemen, listen, I pray,
    Though I own that my heart has been ranging,
Of nature the laws I obey,
    For nature is constantly changing.
The moon in her phases is found,
    The time and the wind and the weather,
The months in succession come round,
    And you don't find two Mondays together.

He offers to marry both the Plaintiff and his new love, if that would satisfy everyone. The Judge at first finds this "a reasonable proposition", but the Counsel argues that from the days of James II, it has been "a rather serious crime / To marry two wives at a time"; he labels the crime not "bigamy", but rather "burglary". Perplexed, everyone in court ponders the "nice dilemma" in a parody of Italian opera ensembles.[43]

Angelina desperately embraces Edwin, demonstrating the depth of her love, and bemoans her loss – all in evidence of the large amount of damages that the jury should require Edwin to pay. Edwin, in turn, says he is a smoker, a drunkard, and a bully (when tipsy), and that the Plaintiff could not have endured him even for a day; thus the damages should be small. The Judge suggests making Edwin tipsy to see if he would really "thrash and kick" Angelina, but everyone else (except Edwin) objects to this experiment. Impatient at the lack of progress, the Judge resolves the case by offering to marry Angelina himself. This is found quite satisfactory and the proceedings are concluded with "joy unbounded".[f]

Musical numbers

 
Third page of the 1875 programme
  • 1. "Hark, the hour of ten is sounding" (Chorus) and "Now, Jurymen, hear my advice" (Usher)
  • 1a. "Is this the Court of the Exchequer?" (Defendant)
  • 2. "When first my old, old love I knew" (Defendant and Chorus) and "Silence in Court!" (Usher)
  • 3. "All hail great Judge!" (Chorus and Judge)
  • 4. "When I, good friends, was call'd to the Bar" (Judge and Chorus)
  • 5. "Swear thou the Jury" (Counsel, Usher) and "Oh will you swear by yonder skies" (Usher and Chorus)
  • 6. "Where is the Plaintiff?" (Counsel, Usher) and "Comes the broken flower" (Chorus of Bridesmaids and Plaintiff)[g]
  • 7. "Oh, never, never, never, since I joined the human race" (Judge, Foreman, Chorus)
  • 8. "May it please you, my lud!" (Counsel for Plaintiff and Chorus)
  • 9. "That she is reeling is plain to see!" (Judge, Foreman, Plaintiff, Counsel, and Chorus)
  • 10. "Oh, gentlemen, listen, I pray" (Defendant and Chorus of Bridesmaids)
  • 11. "That seems a reasonable proposition" (Judge, Counsel, and Chorus)
  • 12. "A nice dilemma we have here" (Ensemble)
  • 13. "I love him, I love him, with fervour unceasing" (Plaintiff, Defendant and Chorus) and "The question, gentlemen, is one of liquor" (Judge and Ensemble)
  • 14. "Oh, joy unbounded, with wealth surrounded" (Ensemble)

For clarity, only characters with a major role in each particular song have been listed.[44]

Reception

Reviews of the first performance of Trial by Jury were uniformly glowing. Fun magazine declared the opera "extremely funny and admirably composed",[45] while the rival Punch magazine wrote that it "is the funniest bit of nonsense your representative has seen for a considerable time", only regretting that it was too short.[46] The Daily News praised the author: "In whimsical invention and eccentric humour Mr. W. S. Gilbert has no living rival among our dramatic writers, and never has his peculiar vein of drollery and satire been more conspicuous than in a little piece entitled Trial by Jury".[46] The Daily Telegraph concluded that the piece illustrated the composer's "great capacity for dramatic writing of the lighter class".[46] Many critics emphasised the happy combination of Gilbert's words and Sullivan's music. One noted that "so completely is each imbued with the same spirit, that it would be as difficult to conceive the existence of Mr. Gilbert's verses without Mr. Sullivan's music, as of Mr. Sullivan's music without Mr. Gilbert's verses. Each gives each a double charm."[47] Another agreed that "it seems, as in the great Wagnerian operas, as though poem and music had proceeded simultaneously from one and the same brain."[48]

In 1880, Punch magazine prematurely anticipated Sullivan's knighthood, publishing a cartoon accompanied by a parody version of "When I, good friends", from Trial by Jury, that summarised Sullivan's career to that date:
Excerpt from A Humorous Knight
["It is reported that after the Leeds Festival Dr. Sullivan will be knighted." Having read this in a column of gossip, a be-nighted Contributor, who has "the Judge's Song" on the brain, suggests the following verse....]

As a boy I had such a musical bump,
    And its size so struck Mr. HELMORE,
That he said, "Though you sing those songs like a trump,
    You shall write some yourself that will sell more."
So I packed off to Leipsic, without looking back,
    And returned in such classical fury,
That I sat down with HANDEL and HAYDN and BACH,—
    And turned out "Trial by Jury."

But W.S.G. he jumped for joy
    As he said, "Though the job dismay you,
Send Exeter Hall to the deuce, my boy;
    It's the haul with me that'll pay you."
And we hauled so well, mid jeers and taunts,
    That we've settled, spite all temptations,
To stick to our Sisters and our Cousins and our Aunts,—
    And continue our pleasant relations.

The opening night audience was also delighted by the piece, preferring it even to the Offenbach work: "To judge by the unceasing and almost boisterous hilarity which formed a sort of running commentary on the part of the audience, Trial by Jury suffered nothing whatever from so dangerous a juxtaposition [with a piece by the popular Offenbach]. On the contrary, it may fairly be said to have borne away the palm."[48] A reviewer noted that "Laughter more frequent or more hearty was never heard in any theatre than that which more than once brought the action ... to a temporary standstill."[49] Another paper summed up its popular appeal: "Trial by Jury is but a trifle – it pretends to be nothing more – but it is one of those merry bits of extravagance which a great many will go to see and hear, which they will laugh at, and which they will advise their friends to go and see, and therefore its success cannot be doubtful."[50]

Among the actors, special critical praise was reserved for the composer's brother, Fred Sullivan, in the role of the Learned Judge: "The greatest 'hit' was made by Mr. F. Sullivan, whose blending of official dignity, condescension, and, at the right moment, extravagant humour, made the character of the Judge stand out with all requisite prominence, and added much to the interest of the piece."[51] The Times concurred that his portrayal deserved "a special word of praise for its quiet and natural humour."[52] Nelly Bromley (the Plaintiff), Walter H. Fisher (the Defendant), John Hollingsworth (the Counsel) and others were also praised for their acting.[53]

Later assessments of the work have been no less positive. In 1907, Gilbert's first biographer, Edith A. Browne, concluded:[54] "In Trial by Jury we find author and composer looking at the humorous side of life from exactly the same point of view, and we at once realise how Gilbert and Sullivan have been able to do for Comic Opera what Wagner has done for Grand Opera by combining words and music so as to make them one." H. M. Walbrook similarly wrote in 1922:

Trial by Jury ... satirizes the procedure in an average breach of promise, and also the insincerity which may sometimes underlie the pose of "respectability." Everything done or sung is ludicrous, and yet beneath it all lies a recognisable substratum of truth. The piece is a riot of laughter. The Judge's ditty, "When first, my friends, I was called to the Bar," [sic] is the best-known comic song in the English language. In none of the operas is the genius of Gilbert as an inventor of "comic business" more daringly and irresistibly exhibited. One can see the piece again and again and discover fresh strokes of comicality. Its place in the Gilbert and Sullivan repertory is as secure as ever; and whatever reforms may be hereafter effected in this particular department of the King's Bench Division, Trial by Jury will probably long continue to be one of the English-speaking world's refreshments.[55]

The Gilbert and Sullivan biographer Michael Ainger, writing in 2002, 127 years after the premiere of the opera, explained its enduring appeal: "Nothing could be more serious than a court of law ... and now the world had been turned upside down. The court of law had become the scene of humor and frivolity; the learned judge had shown himself to be as fickle as the defendant, and the justice system turned out to be flawed by human frailty. And Sullivan had grasped the joke.... From the first chords ... Sullivan's music sets the scene of mock-seriousness and proceeds to dance its way through the whole piece."[56]

Impact and analysis

 
Sullivan's original thematic sketch of Trial by Jury

Impact

As the first Savoy opera, Trial by Jury marked an important moment in the history of the Gilbert and Sullivan collaboration, as well as in the careers of each of the two men and in Victorian drama in general. The historian Reginald Allen sums up the historical import of the opera:

Most scholars of the Victorian theatre date the birth of Gilbert & Sullivan opera with the first performance of Trial by Jury.... Some will maintain that there is no single date of comparable importance in the history of the modern lyric theatre than this occasion which first brought together the triumvirate of W. S. Gilbert, Arthur Sullivan, and their catalyst business genius, Richard D'Oyly Carte. The next twenty-five years witnessed the spectacular, worldwide success of this collaboration: the Gilbert & Sullivan operas, initiated by Trial by Jury. Without this spark, who can say that any of the instantaneous hits of G[ilbert] & S[ullivan] that followed would ever have been written?[57]

Sidney Dark and Rowland Grey also give a high value to the importance of Trial by Jury and the operas that followed: "There is not a little historical interest in the genesis of the Gilbert and Sullivan operas, the one English contribution of any value to dramatic literature for many generations."[58] In addition, references to the opera continue today in the popular media[h] and even in law cases.[i]

Pattern for later Savoy operas

Trial by Jury is the only Gilbert and Sullivan opera played in one act and the only theatrical work by W. S. Gilbert without spoken dialogue.[60] However, later Gilbert and Sullivan operas retained a number of patterns seen in Trial. For example, all except The Yeomen of the Guard begin with a chorus number.[61] Also, like Trial by Jury, the later operas generally end with a relatively short finale consisting of a chorus number interspersed with short solos by the principal characters. "Comes the broken flower" (part of No. 3) was the first in a string of meditative "Horatian" lyrics, "mingling happiness and sadness, an acceptance and a smiling resignation".[62] These would, from this point forward, allow the characters, in each of the Savoy operas, an introspective scene where they stop and consider life, in contrast to the foolishness of the surrounding scenes.[63] Like both of the tenor's arias in Trial by Jury, tenor arias in later Savoy operas were set in 6
8
time
so frequently that Anna Russell, in her 1953 parody, "How to Write Your Own Gilbert and Sullivan Opera",[64] exclaimed, "the tenor ... according to tradition, must sing an aria in 6
8
time, usually accompanying himself on a stringed instrument".[65] In Trial by Jury hypocrisy is revealed as the characters' motivations are held up to satire, and Gilbert mocks the underlying absurdity of the judicial procedures. As Gilbert scholar Andrew Crowther explains, Gilbert combines his criticisms with comic entertainment, which renders them more palatable, while at the same time underlining their truth: "By laughing at a joke you show that you accept its premise."[66] This too would become characteristic of Gilbert's work.[67]

 
Fred Sullivan as The Learned Judge

The judge's song, "When I, good friends, was called to the Bar" was followed by a string of similar patter songs that would come to epitomise Gilbert and Sullivan's collaboration.[68] In these, often, a "dignified personage [would, just like the Judge,] supply a humorous biography of himself."[69] Just as in Gilbert's earlier play, The Palace of Truth, in these songs, the characters "naïvely reveal their innermost thoughts, unconscious of their egotism, vanity, baseness, or cruelty".[70] Crowther points out that such revelations work particularly well in Trial by Jury, because people commonly expect "characters singing in opera/operetta will communicate at a deeper level of truth than they would in mere speech."[60] In "When I, good friends", the judge outlines the path of corruption that led to his becoming a judge, and this, too, would set the pattern for many of the patter songs in Gilbert and Sullivan operas to follow.[60]

One of Gilbert's most notable innovations, first found in Thespis and repeated in Trial by Jury and all of the later Savoy operas, is the use of the chorus as an essential part of the action. In most earlier operas, burlesques, and comedies, the chorus had very little impact on the plot and served mainly as "noise or ornament".[71] In the Gilbert and Sullivan operas, however, the chorus is essential, taking part in the action and often acting as an important character in its own right.[71] Sullivan recalled, "Until Gilbert took the matter in hand choruses were dummy concerns, and were practically nothing more than a part of the stage setting. It was in 'Thespis' that Gilbert began to carry out his expressed determination to get the chorus to play its proper part in the performance. At this moment it seems difficult to realise that the idea of the chorus being anything more than a sort of stage audience was, at that time, a tremendous novelty."[72] Another Gilbert innovation, following the example of his mentor, T. W. Robertson, was that the costumes and sets were made as realistic as possible:[73] Gilbert based the scenery for the production on the Clerkenwell Sessions House, where he had practised law in the 1860s.[74] The costumes were contemporary, and Angelina and her bridesmaids were dressed in real wedding attire.[73] This attention to detail and careful creation of realistic sets and scenes were typical of Gilbert's stage management and would be repeated in all of Gilbert's work.[75] For instance, when preparing the sets for H.M.S. Pinafore (1878), Gilbert and Sullivan visited Portsmouth to inspect ships. Gilbert made sketches of H.M.S. Victory and H.M.S. St Vincent and created a model set for the carpenters to work from.[76] This was far from standard procedure in Victorian drama, where naturalism was still a relatively new concept, and where most authors had very little influence on how their plays and libretti were staged.[77]

Analysis

Andrew Crowther places Trial by Jury at the centre of Gilbert's development as a librettist. He notes that in some of Gilbert's early libretti, such as Topsyturveydom (1874), the songs simply emphasise the dialogue. In others, such as Thespis (1871), some songs are relatively disconnected from both the story and characterisation, such as "I once knew a chap" or "Little maid of Arcadee", which simply convey a moral lesson.[78] In Trial by Jury, however, each song carries the plot forward and adds depth to the characters. In addition, unlike some of Gilbert's more fantastical early plots, "Aside from the ending, nothing essentially improbable happens."[60] Gänzl agrees, writing that "Gilbert's libretto was superior to any of his previous efforts. It was concise, modern and satirical without being impossibly whimsical. Having no spoken dialogue it was perforce tightly constructed and allowed of no interpolation or alteration."[79] Sullivan's development as a comic opera writer, too, would mature with Trial by Jury. Except for incidental music for productions of Shakespeare, he had not written any music for the stage since Thespis. Gänzl wrote that Trial by Jury "brought Sullivan firmly and finally into the world of the musical" stage[80] and confirmed, after his previous success with Cox and Box and Thespis, that "Sullivan was a composer of light lyric and comic music who could rival Offenbach, Lecocq and any English musician alive."[80]

 
Part of the vocal score of "A nice dilemma"

Sullivan used the opportunities suggested by Gilbert's satire of the pomp and ceremony of the law to provide a variety of musical jokes.[43] "From the first chords ... Sullivan's music sets the scene of mock-seriousness.... His ... humorous use of the orchestra runs throughout".[56] For example, counterpointing the plaintiff's calculated swooning in "That she is reeling is plain to see!" (No. 9) with a reeling, minor-key theme in the string accompaniment, heading up and down the octaves.[20] The instruments are also used to comically set the scene; for instance, he underlines the Counsel's misstatement in the line "To marry two at once is burglaree" with a comic bassoon "sting" in octaves[20] and has the Defendant tune his guitar on stage (simulated by a violin in the orchestra) in the opening to his song.[81]

The score also contains two parodies or pastiches of other composers: No. 3, "All hail great Judge" is an elaborate parody of Handel's fugues,[82] and No. 12, "A nice dilemma", parodies "dilemma" ensembles of Italian opera in the Bel canto era; in particular "D'un pensiero" from Act I of Bellini's La sonnambula.[83] "A nice dilemma" uses the dominant rhythm and key of "D'un pensiero" and divides up some of the choral lines between the basses and higher voices to create an oom-pa-pa effect common in Italian opera choruses.[84]

Productions

After the premiere of Trial by Jury in 1875, operetta companies in London, the British provinces and elsewhere picked it up rapidly, usually playing it as a forepiece or an afterpiece to a French operetta.[2] The first American showings were an unauthorized production by Alice Oates at the Arch Street Theatre in Philadelphia on 22 October 1875[85] and another at the Eagle Theatre in New York City on 15 November 1875.[22][86] The world tour of the original British production took it to America, Australia, and elsewhere.[87] It was even translated into German, and premièred as Im Schwurgericht, at the Carltheater on 14 September 1886, and as Das Brautpaar vor Gericht at Danzer's Orpheum on 5 October 1901.[88]

Richard D'Oyly Carte's opera companies (of which there were often several playing simultaneously) usually programmed Trial by Jury as a companion piece to The Sorcerer or H.M.S. Pinafore.[j] In the 1884–85 London production, a transformation scene was added at the end, in which the Judge and Plaintiff became the Harlequinade characters Harlequin and Columbine and the set was consumed by red fire and flames.[90] From 1894, the year when the D'Oyly Carte Opera Company established a year-round touring company that had most of the Gilbert and Sullivan works in its repertory, Trial by Jury was always included, except for 1901 to 1903, and then again from 1943 until 1946, when the company played a reduced repertory during World War II. From 1919, costumes were by Percy Anderson, and a new touring set was designed by Peter Goffin in 1957.[91]

During the company's 1975 centennial performances of all thirteen Gilbert and Sullivan Operas at the Savoy Theatre, Trial was given four times, as a curtain raiser to The Sorcerer, Pinafore and Pirates and as an afterpiece following The Grand Duke. Before the first of the four performances of Trial, a specially written curtain raiser by William Douglas-Home, called Dramatic Licence, was played by Peter Pratt as Carte, Kenneth Sandford as Gilbert and John Ayldon as Sullivan, in which Gilbert, Sullivan and Carte plan the birth of Trial in 1875.[92] Trial by Jury was eliminated from the D'Oyly Carte repertory in 1976 as a cost-saving measure.[93]

Production history

The following table summarises the main London productions of Trial by Jury up to the time of Sullivan's death in 1900:

Theatre Opening date Closing date Perfs. Details
Royalty Theatre[94] 25 March 1875 11 June 1875 131 This company also played matinées at the Gaiety Theatre on 10 April, 17 April, and 24 April 1875.[22] The theatre closed from 13 June through 10 October[95] while the company took Trial by Jury and other operas on a provincial tour.[80] Trial then continued as an afterpiece to French operettas at the Royalty, with Charles Morton as manager and Hamilton Clarke as musical director.[94][95]
11 October 1875 18 December 1875
Opera Comique[94] 14 January 1876 5 May 1876 96 Emily Soldene and Kate Santley brought Morton's production to the Opera Comique. Trial was not performed from 13 to 18 March while Fred Sullivan was ill, and the theatre was closed for Easter from 9 to 14 April. Soldene then toured with Trial and other operettas until 28 October.[2][95] Dolaro and Carte (as manager and musical director), also produced Trial in Dublin and Manchester from 24 July to 5 August 1876.[96]
Strand Theatre 3 March 1877 26 May 1877 73 Produced "under the immediate direction of the authors". Originally performed as an afterpiece to Tom Taylor's comedy Babes and Beetles.[97] A tour of this production followed from 27 May to 28 July, produced by Santley. At the same time, from May to September 1877, Santley toured Trial as an afterpiece to an Offenbach operetta.[98]
Opera Comique 23 March 1878 24 May 1878 56 Played as an afterpiece to The Sorcerer[99]
Savoy Theatre 11 October 1884 12 March 1885 150 Played as a forepiece to The Sorcerer[100]
Savoy Theatre 22 September 1898 31 December 1898 102 Played as a forepiece to The Sorcerer[101]
Savoy Theatre 6 June 1899 25 November 1899 174 Played as a forepiece to H.M.S. Pinafore[102][103]

The exclusive performing rights to Trial by Jury and the other Gilbert and Sullivan operas were held by the D'Oyly Carte Opera Company until their expiration in 1961, 50 years after Gilbert's death, and no other professional company was authorised to present the Savoy operas in Britain from 1877 until that date.[33] The following tables show the casts of the principal original D'Oyly Carte productions and touring companies at approximately 10-year intervals through to the 1975 centenary season.[104][k]

Role Royalty Theatre
1875[95]
Strand Theatre
1877[95]
Opera Comique
1878[99]
Savoy Theatre
1884[100]
Savoy Theatre
1898[101][103]
Learned Judge Frederic Sullivan J.G. Taylor George Grossmith Rutland Barrington Henry Lytton
Counsel John Hollingsworth[105] Charles Parry Rutland Barrington Eric Lewis Jones Hewson
Defendant Walter H. Fisher Claude Marius George Power Durward Lely Cory James
Foreman Charles Kelleher[106][107] W. S. Penley F. Talbot Arthur Kennett Leonard Russell
Usher Belville R. Pepper[106] Harry Cox Fred Clifton William Lugg Walter Passmore
Associate [106] J. Wilbraham Charles Childerstone
Plaintiff Nelly Bromley Lottie Venne Lisa Walton Florence Dysart Isabel Jay
1st Bridesmaid Linda Verner[108] Gwynne Williams Sybil Grey Mildred Baker
Role D'Oyly Carte
1905 Tour[109]
D'Oyly Carte
1915 Tour[110]
D'Oyly Carte
1925 Tour[111]
D'Oyly Carte
1935 Tour[112]
Learned Judge Charles H. Workman Leo Sheffield Leo Sheffield Sydney Granville
Counsel Albert Kavanagh Frederick Hobbs Henry Millidge Leslie Rands
Defendant Strafford Moss Dewey Gibson Sidney Pointer Robert Wilson
Foreman J. Lewis Campion Frank Steward T. Penry Hughes T. Penry Hughes
Usher Reginald White George Sinclair Joseph Griffin Richard Walker
Associate Allen Morris Martyn Green C. William Morgan
Plaintiff Bessie Mackenzie Marjorie Gordon Eleanor Evans Ann Drummond-Grant
1st Bridesmaid Mabel Burnege Ethel Armit Beatrice Elburn Nancy Ray
Role D'Oyly Carte
1949 Tour[113]
D'Oyly Carte
1955 Tour[114]
D'Oyly Carte
1965 Tour[115]
D'Oyly Carte
1975 Tour[116]
Learned Judge Richard Watson John Reed Jeffrey Skitch Jon Ellison[117]
Counsel Alan Styler Alan Styler Alan Styler Michael Rayner
Defendant Leonard Osborn John Fryatt Philip Potter Jeffrey Cresswell[118]
Foreman Donald Harris John Banks Anthony Raffell James Conroy-Ward
Usher L. Radley Flynn George Cook George Cook John Broad
Associate C. William Morgan Keith Bonnington Keith Bonnington William Palmerley
Plaintiff Enid Walsh Kathleen West Jennifer Toye Marjorie Williams[119]
1st Bridesmaid Joyce Wright Margaret Dobson Pauline Wales Rosalind Griffiths

Benefit performances

 
Rutland Barrington as the Learned Judge
 
Poster advertising operettas by Gilbert & Sullivan; includes Trial by Jury

Starting in 1877, Trial by Jury was often given at benefit performances, usually for an actor or actress who had fallen on hard times, but occasionally for other causes. These were glittering affairs, with various celebrities appearing in principal roles or as part of the chorus.[120] Gilbert himself played the silent role of the Associate on at least four occasions.[121]

Arthur Sullivan conducted the 1877 benefit for the actor Henry Compton.[122] At the Compton benefit, Penley and George Grossmith were members of the Jury, and a number of other famous actors and actresses were in the chorus.[123] Sullivan also conducted the 1889 benefit for Barrington.[124]

At the Nellie Farren benefit, many of the performers listed below sat in the jury or the gallery, and Trial by Jury was followed by a six-hour-long concert. Performances were given by Henry Irving, Ellaline Terriss, Marie Tempest, Hayden Coffin, Arthur Roberts, Letty Lind, Edmund Payne and many others.[125]

The Ellen Terry benefit in 1906 was also a particularly well-attended affair, with Sir Arthur Conan Doyle numbered among the jury and Enrico Caruso singing, among many star performances.[126]

Role Princess Christian's Homes of
Rest for Disabled Soldiers
Drury Lane, 15 May 1900[130]
William Rignold
Lyric Theatre
5 December 1902[131]
Ellen Terry
Drury Lane
12 June 1906[132]
Judge Rutland Barrington Rutland Barrington Rutland Barrington
Counsel Eric Lewis C. Hayden Coffin Henry Lytton
Defendant Courtice Pounds Charles Childerstone Courtice Pounds
Foreman W. H. Denny Fred Kaye Robert Marshall
Usher Walter Passmore George Grossmith Jr. Walter Passmore
Associate W. S. Gilbert Lionel Monckton W. S. Gilbert
Associate's Wife1 Effie Bancroft Fanny Brough
Plaintiff Florence St. John Evie Greene Ruth Vincent

1The role of the Associate's Wife was especially created for the disabled soldiers' benefit performance and does not appear in any standard performances.[133]

Recordings

Trial by Jury has been recorded many times. Of the recordings by the D'Oyly Carte Opera Company, those recorded in 1927 and 1964 are ranked the best, according to the "Gilbert and Sullivan Discography", edited by Marc Shepherd. The 1961 Sargent and especially the 1995 Mackerras recordings are also rated highly by the Discography.[134] The reviewer Michael Walters gives his highest praise to the 1927 recording, but he also likes the 1961 recording.[135]

The Discography recommends the 1982 Brent Walker video, which is paired with Cox and Box.[136] More recent professional productions have been recorded on video by the International Gilbert and Sullivan Festival.[137]

Selected recordings

Textual changes

 
The Plaintiff, in "distress", captures the sympathy of the judge and jury. Production with Sydney Granville, 1919

Before the first performance of Trial by Jury, some material was cut, including two songs and a recitative: a song for the foreman of the jury, "Oh, do not blush to shed a tear", which was to be sung just after "Oh, will you swear by yonder skies"; and a recitative for the Judge and song for the Usher, "We do not deal with artificial crime" and "His lordship's always quits", which came just before "A nice dilemma".[144] The melody for "His Lordship's always quits" is known, and it was reused in "I loved her fondly" in The Zoo and later modified into the main tune from "A wand'ring minstrel, I" in The Mikado.[145] A few changes were made to the end of "I love him, I love him!" after the first night.[146] A third verse for "Oh, gentlemen, listen I pray" was sung, at least on the first night, and part was quoted in a review in the Pictorial World.[147]

Trial by Jury underwent relatively minor textual changes after its first run, mainly consisting of insignificant amendments to wording.[148] The most significant changes involve the ending. The original stage directions set up a simple pantomime-style tableau:

Judge and Plaintiff dance back, hornpipe step, and get onto the Bench – the Bridesmaids take the eight garlands of roses from behind the Judge's desk and draw them across floor of court, so that they radiate from the desk. Two plaster Cupids in bar wigs descend from flies. Red fire.[149]

This became much more elaborate in the 1884 revival, with the entire set being transformed, and the plaintiff climbing onto the Judge's back "à la fairy". In the 1920s, the plaster cupids were evidently damaged on a tour, and the transformation scene was abandoned completely.[149]

Notes, references and sources

Notes

  1. ^ Apparently, this refers to another opera that Sullivan was working on for the Royalty: an advertisement in The Era on 14 March 1875 stated that "In consequence of the continued success of La Périchole, the production of Mr. Sullivan's two-act opera is postponed".[14] A gossip column in the Athenæum, dated 13 March 1875, stated that Sullivan was working on new music for a piece at the St James's Theatre. From this, McElroy speculates that Sullivan had already begun writing musical numbers for The Zoo before he shifted his energies to Trial by Jury and decided "to salvage them by telling [his librettist] to boil the libretto down to one act and [transfer] the project to another theatre."[15]
  2. ^ See First edition libretto cover on exhibition at the University of Rochester Libraries.[17] In 1871 Sullivan had composed his only other "dramatic cantata", On Shore and Sea.[18]
  3. ^ The fashion in the late Victorian era was to present long evenings in the theatre, and so Carte preceded his Savoy operas with curtain raisers.[21]
  4. ^ a b Edwin and Angelina were "a traditional pairing of names of faithful lovers" as far back in English literature as Oliver Goldsmith's The Hermit and The Vicar of Wakefield.[41]
  5. ^ Burgess comments, "The irony of the situation will not go unperceived by the reader."[42]
  6. ^ This synopsis is based on the libretto as printed in Bradley, pp. 7–39
  7. ^ "Where is the Plaintiff?" has a joke involving echoes of the Usher's "Oh, Angelina", echoing in the courtroom. In D'Oyly Carte productions, the echoes were performed by the defendant with his back to the audience.
  8. ^ For example, in the British television show Kavanagh QC, starring John Thaw, in the episode "Briefs Trooping Gaily", Kavanagh's colleague Jeremy Aldermarten (Nicholas Jones) plays the Judge in an amateur production of Trial by Jury.
  9. ^ For example, in the American law suit Askew v. Askew, 22 Cal.App.4th 942 (4th Dist. 1994), the decision includes an extensive reference to Trial by Jury as an introduction to its discussion of suits for breach of promise and "the potential for abuse inherent in such lawsuits".[59]
  10. ^ In addition to the London productions mentioned below and early tours mentioned above, Carte toured Trial with The Sorcerer in 1878.[89]
  11. ^ An examination of Rollins and Witts and Gänzl shows that a ten-year interval is sufficient to indicate the bulk of the notable performers who portrayed these roles in authorized productions during that period. Biographies of the persons named below can be found at Stone, David. Who Was Who in the D'Oyly Carte Opera Company, The Gilbert and Sullivan Archive, accessed 8 June 2014.
  12. ^ The chorus included leading stars such as W. S. Penley, George Grossmith, Kate Bishop and Marion Terry.[127]

References

  1. ^ a b c Stedman, pp. 129–130
  2. ^ a b c d Gänzl, p. 90
  3. ^ Rees, p. 78
  4. ^ Stedman, pp. 99–127
  5. ^ a b Ainger, p. 106
  6. ^ "The Law Relating to Breach of Promise of Marriage". www.lawreform.ie. Retrieved 23 February 2023.
  7. ^ "Trial by Jury by W. S. Gilbert". www.gsarchive.net. Retrieved 23 February 2023.
  8. ^ Bradley, pp. 6, 24, 36
  9. ^ Stedman, pp. 120–121
  10. ^ Ainger, pp. 99–100 and 105
  11. ^ Stedman, p. 125
  12. ^ Ainger, pp. 107–108
  13. ^ a b Ainger, p. 108
  14. ^ McElroy, p. 40
  15. ^ McElroy, pp. 51–52
  16. ^ a b c Ainger, p. 109
  17. ^ "Gilbert and Sullivan Online Exhibit: Item Details | RBSCP". rbscp.lib.rochester.edu. Retrieved 23 February 2023.
  18. ^ Young, p. 62
  19. ^ Stedman, pp. 128–129
  20. ^ a b c d Ainger, p. 110
  21. ^ Lee Bernard, "Swash-buckling Savoy curtain-raiser", 15 October 2008 at the Wayback Machine Sheffield Telegraph, 1 August 2008; and MacQueen-Pope, p. 23
  22. ^ a b c d Gänzl, p. 95
  23. ^ a b Ainger, p. 114
  24. ^ a b Walbrook, pp. 38–40
  25. ^ Ainger, pp. 113, 120
  26. ^ Ainger, p. 128
  27. ^ The Times, 29 March 1875, quoted and discussed in Ainger, p. 109
  28. ^ Ainger, p. 117
  29. ^ Ainger, p. 111
  30. ^ Ainger, pp. 118 and 130
  31. ^ a b Gänzl, pp. 89–90
  32. ^ "J.C. Williamson Opera Programs", (1906 programme), National Library of Australia, Retrieved on 23 June 2008
  33. ^ a b Stedman, p. 132
  34. ^ Ainger, p. 112
  35. ^ Ainger, pp. 113–114
  36. ^ Gänzl (1986), p. 90
  37. ^ Crowther, p. 211
  38. ^ ""The Judge's Song" from Trial By Jury (1875) by Sir William Schwenck Gilbert". victorianweb.org. Retrieved 23 February 2023.
  39. ^ The "Court of the Exchequer extended its jurisdiction, a breach of promise [could be] tried there by the legal fiction that the wrong done to the plaintiff by the conduct of the defendant made her unable to pay her taxes". See Burgess, p. 38
  40. ^ Bradley, p. 6, note to line 9
  41. ^ Burgess, p. 43
  42. ^ a b Bradley, p. 4
  43. ^ Gilbert and Sullivan, passim.
  44. ^ Allen (1958), p. 29
  45. ^ a b c Allen (1958), p. 30
  46. ^ The Daily News, 27 March 1875, p. 3
  47. ^ a b The Musical World. J. Alfredo Novello. 1875.
  48. ^ Allen (1958), p. 32
  49. ^ Quoted in Gänzl, p. 88
  50. ^ Allen (1958), p. 31, quoting the Daily Telegraph
  51. ^ Allen (1958), p. 31, quoting The Times
  52. ^ Allen (1958), pp. 31–32
  53. ^ Browne, p. 57
  54. ^ Walbrook, p. 40
  55. ^ a b Ainger, pp. 109–110
  56. ^ Allen (1975b), p. iii
  57. ^ Dark and Grey, p. 68
  58. ^ "Askew v. Askew (1994)". Justia Law. Retrieved 23 February 2023.
  59. ^ a b c d Crowther, p. 77
  60. ^ Bradley, p. 758
  61. ^ Stedman, p. 244
  62. ^ Stedman, pp. 129–130, 244; Crowther, pp. 133–135
  63. ^ "G&S Discography: Anna Russell's "How to Write Your Own Gilbert and Sullivan"". gasdisc.oakapplepress.com. Retrieved 23 February 2023.
  64. ^ Anna Russell Sings! Again? 1953 Columbia Masterworks Mono LP ML4594/ML4733
  65. ^ Crowther, p. 78
  66. ^ Crowther, pp. 78–79
  67. ^ Bradley, p. 14
  68. ^ Fitzgerald, pp. 25–26
  69. ^ Crowther, p. 77, quoting Archer, p. 161
  70. ^ a b Dark and Grey, pp. 67–68
  71. ^ Lawrence, pp. 85–86
  72. ^ a b Stedman, p. 129
  73. ^ Dark and Grey, p. 65
  74. ^ Crowther, p. 90
  75. ^ Stedman, pp. 157–158; Crowther, p. 90
  76. ^ Crowther, pp. 87–89
  77. ^ Crowther, pp. 76–77
  78. ^ Gänzl, p. 88
  79. ^ a b c Gänzl, p. 89
  80. ^ Bradley, p. 10
  81. ^ Bradley, pp. 4 and 12; Burgess, pp. 38–39
  82. ^ Bradley, p. 4; Burgess, p. 47
  83. ^ Jacobs, p. 91
  84. ^ Gänzl, Kurt. The Encyclopedia of the Musical Theatre, Schirmer Books; 2nd edition (May 2001)
  85. ^ Prestige, Colin. "D'Oyly Carte and the Pirates", in Papers Presented at the International Conference Held at the University of Kansas in May 1970", James Helyar (ed.), 1971, University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas, p. 143
  86. ^ "Gilbert and Sullivan Online Exhibit: Item Details | RBSCP". rbscp.lib.rochester.edu. Retrieved 23 February 2023.
  87. ^ Gänzl, pp. 96–97
  88. ^ Howarth, Paul (ed.) "Comedy Opera Company Ltd., (Under the management of Mr. Richard D'Oyly Carte) Touring Trial by Jury and The Sorcerer", The Gilbert and Sullivan Archive, accessed 15 December 2013
  89. ^ Wilson and Lloyd, p. 35
  90. ^ Rollins and Witts, Appendix, p. VII
  91. ^ "Kenneth Sandford". The Independent. 22 September 2004. Retrieved 23 February 2023.
  92. ^ Bradley, p. 5
  93. ^ a b c Rollins and Witts, p. 1
  94. ^ a b c d e Rollins and Witts, p. 4
  95. ^ Rollins and Witts, 3rd supplement, p. 24
  96. ^ "Royal Strand Theatre", Illustrated Sporting and Dramatic News, 3 March 1877, p. 2
  97. ^ Rollins and Witts, 3rd supplement, p. 32
  98. ^ a b Rollins and Witts, p. 5
  99. ^ a b Rollins and Witts, p. 9
  100. ^ a b Rollins and Witts, p. 17
  101. ^ Rollins and Witts, p. 18
  102. ^ a b 1899 cast: As 1898, except: Counsel – Leonard Russell; Defendant – Charles Childerstone; Foreman – Iago Lewys; Associate – Albert Gater; 1st Bridesmaid – Madge Moyse. (From Rollins and Witts, p. 18)
  103. ^ Rollins and Witts (and supplements).
  104. ^ "John Hollingsworth". www.gsarchive.net. Retrieved 23 February 2023.
  105. ^ a b c Early in April 1875, as shown by the programme pictured above, Mr. C Campbell became the Foreman, Mr. Charles Kelleher became the Usher, and Mr. Pepper became the Associate
  106. ^ "Charles Kelleher". www.gsarchive.net. Retrieved 23 February 2023.
  107. ^ "Linda Verner". www.gsarchive.net. Retrieved 23 February 2023.
  108. ^ Rollins and Witts, p. 121
  109. ^ Rollins and Witts, p. 132
  110. ^ Rollins and Witts, p. 148
  111. ^ Rollins and Witts, p. 160
  112. ^ Rollins and Witts, p. 174
  113. ^ Rollins and Witts, p. 180
  114. ^ Rollins and Witts, 1st Supplement, p. 7
  115. ^ Rollins and Witts, 3rd Supplement, p. 28
  116. ^ John Reed played the Judge for the two-week Savoy season.
  117. ^ Colin Wright played the Defendant for the two-week Savoy season.
  118. ^ Julia Goss played the Plaintiff for the two-week Savoy season.
  119. ^ Burgess, pp. 52–54
  120. ^ Burgess, pp. 52–53; Gänzl, pp. 96–98
  121. ^ a b c d e Gänzl, p. 96.
  122. ^ Ainger, p. 130
  123. ^ The Era, 1 June 1889, p. 9
  124. ^ Davis (1995), Chapter X, letter of 20 March 1898.
  125. ^ Burgess, pp. 56–61 reproduces the programmes for several of these benefits in facsimile. Others are listed in Gänzl, pp. 95–98.
  126. ^ The Era, 4 March 1877, p. 6
  127. ^ The Era, 1 June 1889 (reporting that Denny, not Lugg was Usher and that the piece was played together with Locked In by Walter Frith (libretto) and James Caldicott (music), starring Jessie Bond, Eric Lewis and Rose Hervey, directed by Barrington)
  128. ^ The Era, 18 June 1887, p. 8
  129. ^ Burgess, p. 57
  130. ^ "The William Rignold Benefit", The Era, 13 December 1902, p. 17
  131. ^ Gänzl, pp. 97–98
  132. ^ Ainger, pp. 380–381
  133. ^ "Recordings of Trial By Jury". gasdisc.oakapplepress.com. Retrieved 23 February 2023.
  134. ^ Walters, Michael. "Recordings of Trial by Jury (part 2)", W. S. Gilbert Society Journal, Vol. 4, part 3, Issue 29. Summer 2011.
  135. ^ a b "The Brent Walker Trial By Jury". gasdisc.oakapplepress.com. Retrieved 23 February 2023.
  136. ^ "Professional Shows from the Festival" 26 June 2012 at the Wayback Machine, Musical Collectibles catalogue website, accessed 15 October 2012
  137. ^ "The 1927 D'Oyly Carte Trial By Jury". gasdisc.oakapplepress.com. Retrieved 23 February 2023.
  138. ^ "The Sargent/EMI Trial By Jury". gasdisc.oakapplepress.com. Retrieved 23 February 2023.
  139. ^ "The 1964 D'Oyly Carte Trial By Jury". gasdisc.oakapplepress.com. Retrieved 23 February 2023.
  140. ^ "The 1975 Trial By Jury". gasdisc.oakapplepress.com. Retrieved 23 February 2023.
  141. ^ "The Mackerras/Telarc Trial By Jury". gasdisc.oakapplepress.com. Retrieved 23 February 2023.
  142. ^ "The Opera Australia Trial By Jury". gasdisc.oakapplepress.com. Retrieved 23 February 2023.
  143. ^ Bradley, pp. 20, 32
  144. ^ Tillett, Selwyn; Roderick Spencer (2002). (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 19 June 2007. Retrieved 25 May 2006. p. 11
  145. ^ Bradley, p. 34
  146. ^ Allen (1975a), p. 42
  147. ^ Bradley, pp. 6–38
  148. ^ a b Bradley, pp. 36, 38

Sources

  • Ainger, Michael (2002). Gilbert and Sullivan – A Dual Biography. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-514769-8.
  • Allen, Reginald (1958). The First Night Gilbert and Sullivan. London: Chappell. OCLC 3156011.
  • Allen, Reginald (1975a). The First Night Gilbert and Sullivan [Centennial Edition]. London: Chappell. OCLC 550681465.
  • Allen, Reginald (1975b). Sir Arthur Sullivan: Composer and Personage. New York: The Pierpont Morgan Library. ISBN 978-0-87598-049-2.
  • Archer, William (1882). "Mr. W. S. Gilbert". English Dramatists of To-Day. London: Low, Marston, Searle and Rivington. OCLC 963632829.
  • Bradley, Ian (1996). The Complete Annotated Gilbert and Sullivan. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-816503-3.
  • Browne, Edith A. (1907). Stars of the Stage: W. S. Gilbert. London: John Lane, The Bodley Head. OCLC 5866733.
  • Burgess, A. J. (1997). The Notary and other Lawyers in Gilbert & Sullivan. Hadleigh, Suffolk: Jardine Press. ISBN 978-0-9525594-1-2.
  • Crowther, Andrew (2000). Contradiction Contradicted – The Plays of W. S. Gilbert. London: Associated University Presses. ISBN 978-0-8386-3839-2.
  • Davis, Richard Harding (ed. Charles Belmont Davis) (1995). Adventures and Letters of Richard Harding Davis. Project Gutenberg. ISBN 978-0-8386-3839-2. Retrieved 1 June 2008.
  • Dark, Sidney and Rowland Grey (1923). W. S. Gilbert: His Life and Letters. Ayer Publishing. ISBN 978-0-405-08430-0.
  • Fitzgerald, Percy Hetherington (1899). The Savoy Opera and the Savoyards. London: Chatto & Windus. OCLC 4635323. Trial by Jury Fisher Sullivan Bromley Pepper.
  • Gänzl, Kurt (1986). The British Musical Theatre—Volume I, 1865–1914. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-333-39839-5.
  • Gilbert, W. S. & Sullivan, Arthur (1912). Trial by Jury (Vocal Score). London: Chappell. OCLC 48594935.
  • Goldberg, Isaac (1929). The Story of Gilbert and Sullivan, or The 'Compleat' Savoyard. London: John Murray. OCLC 758343552.
  • Jacobs, Arthur (1986). Arthur Sullivan: A Victorian Musician. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-282033-4.
  • Lawrence, Arthur (1899). Sir Arthur Sullivan: Life-Story, Letters, and Reminiscences. London: James Bowden. OCLC 253726207.
  • McElroy, George C. (1984). "Whose Zoo; or, When Did The Trial Begin?". Nineteenth Century Theatre Research. 12: 39–54.
  • MacQueen-Pope, W. J. (1947). Carriages at Eleven. London: Hutchinson. OCLC 155797891.
  • 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. Also, four supplements, privately printed.
  • Stedman, Jane W. (1996). W. S. Gilbert, A Classic Victorian & His Theatre. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-816174-3.
  • Walbrook, H. M. (1922). Gilbert & Sullivan Opera: A History and A Comment. London: F. V. White. OCLC 3303311.
  • Wilson, Robin; Frederic Lloyd (1984). Gilbert & Sullivan – The Official D'Oyly Carte Picture History. New York: Alfred A. Knopf. ISBN 978-0-394-54113-6.
  • Young, Percy M. (1971). Sir Arthur Sullivan. London: J. M. Dent. ISBN 0-460-03934-2.

External links

  • Trial by Jury at The Gilbert & Sullivan Archive
  • Trial by Jury at The Gilbert & Sullivan Discography
  • Opening night review in The Times, published 29 March 1875
  • Video of Trial by Jury (23 minutes) on YouTube, with Martyn Green, Omnibus (1953)

Trial by Jury
trial, jury, this, article, about, comic, opera, legal, institution, jury, trial, other, uses, disambiguation, comic, opera, with, music, arthur, sullivan, libretto, gilbert, first, produced, march, 1875, london, royalty, theatre, where, initially, performance. This article is about the comic opera For the legal institution see jury trial For other uses see Trial by Jury disambiguation Trial by Jury is a comic opera in one act with music by Arthur Sullivan and libretto by W S Gilbert It was first produced on 25 March 1875 at London s Royalty Theatre where it initially ran for 131 performances and was considered a hit receiving critical praise and outrunning its popular companion piece Jacques Offenbach s La Perichole The story concerns a breach of promise of marriage lawsuit in which the judge and legal system are the objects of lighthearted satire Gilbert based the libretto of Trial by Jury on an operetta parody that he had written in 1868 A scene from Trial by Jury as illustrated in the magazine Illustrated Sporting and Dramatic News of 1 May 1875 The opera premiered more than three years after Gilbert and Sullivan s only previous collaboration Thespis an 1871 72 Christmas season entertainment In the intervening years both the author and the composer were busy with separate projects Beginning in 1873 Gilbert tried several times to get the opera produced before the impresario Richard D Oyly Carte suggested that he collaborate on it with Sullivan Sullivan was pleased with the piece and promptly wrote the music As with most Gilbert and Sullivan operas the plot of Trial by Jury is ludicrous but the characters behave as if the events were perfectly reasonable This narrative technique blunts some of the pointed barbs aimed at hypocrisy especially of those in authority and the sometimes base motives of supposedly respectable people and institutions These themes became favourites of Gilbert through the rest of his collaborations with Sullivan Critics and audiences praised how well Sullivan s witty and good humoured music complemented Gilbert s satire 1 The success of Trial by Jury launched the famous series of 13 collaborative works between Gilbert and Sullivan that came to be known as the Savoy Operas After its original production in 1875 Trial by Jury toured widely in Britain and elsewhere and was frequently revived and recorded It also became popular for benefit performances The work continues to be frequently played especially as a companion piece to other short Gilbert and Sullivan operas or other works According to the theatre scholar Kurt Ganzl it is probably the most successful British one act operetta of all time 2 Contents 1 Background 1 1 Genesis of the opera 1 2 Production and aftermath 2 Roles 3 Synopsis 4 Musical numbers 5 Reception 6 Impact and analysis 6 1 Impact 6 2 Pattern for later Savoy operas 6 3 Analysis 7 Productions 7 1 Production history 8 Benefit performances 9 Recordings 10 Textual changes 11 Notes references and sources 11 1 Notes 11 2 References 11 3 Sources 12 External linksBackground EditBefore Trial by Jury W S Gilbert and Arthur Sullivan had collaborated on one previous opera Thespis or The Gods Grown Old in 1871 Although reasonably successful it was a Christmas entertainment and such works were not expected to endure 3 Between Thespis and Trial by Jury Gilbert and Sullivan did not collaborate on any further operas and each man separately produced works that further built his reputation in his own field Gilbert wrote several short stories edited the second volume of his comic Bab Ballads and created a dozen theatrical works including Happy Arcadia in 1872 The Wicked World The Happy Land and The Realm of Joy in 1873 Charity Topsyturveydom and Sweethearts in 1874 4 At the same time Sullivan wrote various pieces of religious music including the Festival Te Deum 1872 and an oratorio The Light of the World 1873 and edited Church Hymns with Tunes 1874 which included 45 of his own hymns and arrangements 5 Two of his most famous hymn tunes from this period are settings of Onward Christian Soldiers and Nearer my God to Thee both in 1872 He also wrote a suite of incidental music to The Merry Wives of Windsor 1874 and many parlour ballads and other songs including three in 1874 75 with words by Gilbert The Distant Shore Sweethearts inspired by Gilbert s play and The Love that Loves Me Not 5 Genesis of the opera Edit Gilbert s original sketch of Trial by Jury published in Fun in 1868 The genesis of Trial by Jury was in 1868 when Gilbert wrote a single page illustrated comic piece for the magazine Fun entitled Trial by Jury An Operetta Drawing on Gilbert s training and brief practice as a barrister it detailed a breach of promise trial going awry in the process spoofing the law lawyers and the legal system In the Victorian era a man could be required to pay compensation should he fail to marry a woman to whom he was engaged 6 The outline of this story was followed in the later opera and two of its numbers appeared in nearly their final form in Fun The skit however ended abruptly the moment the attractive plaintiff stepped into the witness box the judge leapt into her arms and vowed to marry her whereas in the opera the case is allowed to proceed further before this conclusion is reached 7 8 In 1873 the opera manager and composer Carl Rosa asked Gilbert for a piece to use as part of a season of English opera that Rosa planned to present at the Drury Lane Theatre Rosa was to write or commission the music Gilbert expanded Trial into a one act libretto Rosa s wife Euphrosyne Parepa Rosa a childhood friend of Gilbert s died after an illness in 1874 and Rosa dropped the project 9 10 Later in the same year Gilbert offered the libretto to the impresario Richard D Oyly Carte but Carte knew of no composer available to set it to music 11 Meanwhile Sullivan may have been considering a return to light opera Cox and Box his first comic opera had received a London revival co starring his brother Fred Sullivan in September 1874 In November Sullivan travelled to Paris and contacted Albert Millaud one of the librettists for Jacques Offenbach s operettas However he returned to London empty handed and worked on incidental music for the Gaiety Theatre s production of The Merry Wives of Windsor 12 By early 1875 Carte was managing Selina Dolaro s Royalty Theatre and he needed a short opera to be played as an afterpiece to Offenbach s La Perichole which was to open on 30 January with Fred Sullivan in the cast in which Dolaro starred Carte had asked Sullivan to compose something for the theatre and advertised in The Times in late January In Preparation a New Comic Opera composed expressly for this theatre by Mr Arthur Sullivan in which Madame Dolaro and Nellie Bromley will appear 13 a But around the same time Carte also remembered Gilbert s Trial by Jury and knew that Gilbert had worked with Sullivan to create Thespis He suggested to Gilbert that Sullivan was the man to write the music for Trial 13 Gilbert finally called on Sullivan and read the libretto to him on 20 February 1875 Sullivan was enthusiastic later recalling Gilbert read it through in the manner of a man considerably disappointed with what he had written As soon as he had come to the last word he closed up the manuscript violently apparently unconscious of the fact that he had achieved his purpose so far as I was concerned inasmuch as I was screaming with laughter the whole time 16 Trial by Jury described as A Novel and Original Dramatic Cantata in the original promotional material b was composed and rehearsed in a matter of weeks 16 19 Production and aftermath Edit The result of Gilbert and Sullivan s collaboration was a witty tuneful and very English piece in contrast to the bawdy burlesques and adaptations of French operettas that dominated the London musical stage at that time 1 April 1875 programme for La Perichole and Trial by Jury Sullivan and Gilbert are the cherubs Initially Trial by Jury which runs only 30 minutes or so was played last on a triple bill on which the main attraction La Perichole starring Dolaro as the title character Fred Sullivan as Don Andres and Walter H Fisher as Piquillo was preceded by the one act farce Cryptoconchoidsyphonostomata 16 The latter was immediately replaced by a series of other curtain raisers 20 c The composer conducted the first night s performance and the theatre s music director B Simmons conducted thereafter 22 The composer s brother Fred Sullivan starred as the Learned Judge with Nellie Bromley as the Plaintiff One of the choristers in Trial by Jury W S Penley was promoted in November 1875 23 to the small part of the Foreman of the Jury and made a strong impact on audiences with his amusing facial expressions and gestures 24 In March 1876 he temporarily replaced Fred Sullivan as the Judge when Fred s health declined from tuberculosis 25 With this start Penley went on to a successful career as comic actor culminating with the lead role in the record breaking original production of Charley s Aunt 24 Fred Sullivan died in January 1877 26 Jacques Offenbach s works were then at the height of their popularity in Britain but Trial by Jury proved even more popular than La Perichole 27 becoming an unexpected hit 1 Trial by Jury drew crowds and continued to run after La Perichole closed 28 While the Royalty Theatre closed for the summer in 1875 Dolaro immediately took Trial on tour in England and Ireland 29 The piece resumed at the Royalty later in 1875 and was revived for additional London seasons in 1876 at the Opera Comique and in 1877 at the Strand Theatre 30 Trial by Jury soon became the most desirable supporting piece for any London production and outside London the major British theatrical touring companies had added it to their repertoire by about 1877 31 The original production was given a world tour by the Opera Comique s assistant manager Emily Soldene which travelled as far as Australia 31 Unauthorised pirate productions quickly sprang up in America taking advantage of the fact that American courts did not enforce foreign copyrights 22 23 It also became popular as part of the Victorian tradition of benefit concerts where the theatrical community came together to raise money for actors and actresses down on their luck or retiring The D Oyly Carte Opera Company continued to play the work for a century licensing the piece to amateur and foreign professional companies such as the J C Williamson Gilbert and Sullivan Opera Company 32 Since the copyrights to Gilbert and Sullivan works ran out in 1961 33 the piece has been available to theatre companies around the world free of royalties The work s enduring popularity since 1875 makes it according to theatrical scholar Kurt Ganzl probably the most successful British one act operetta of all time 2 The success of Trial by Jury spurred several attempts to reunite Gilbert and Sullivan but difficulties arose Plans for a collaboration for Carl Rosa in 1875 fell through because Gilbert was too busy with other projects 34 35 and an attempted Christmas 1875 revival of Thespis by Richard D Oyly Carte failed when the financiers backed out 34 36 Gilbert and Sullivan continued their separate careers though both continued writing light opera among other projects Sullivan s next light opera The Zoo opened while Trial by Jury was still playing in June 1875 and Gilbert s Eyes and No Eyes premiered a month later 37 followed by Princess Toto in 1876 38 Gilbert and Sullivan were not reunited until The Sorcerer in 1877 20 Roles EditThe Learned Judge comic baritone The Plaintiff soprano The Defendant tenor Counsel for the Plaintiff lyric baritone Usher bass baritone Foreman of the Jury bass Associate silent First Bridesmaid Chorus of Bridesmaids Gentlemen of the Jury Barristers Attorneys and Public Synopsis EditExcerpt from The Judge s Song 39 JUDGE When I good friends was called to the bar I d an appetite fresh and hearty But I was as many young barristers are An impecunious party I d a swallow tail coat of a beautiful blue A brief which I bought of a booby A couple of shirts and a collar or two And a ring that looked like a ruby CHORUS He d a couple of shirts and a collar or two And a ring that looked like a ruby JUDGE In Westminster Hall I danced a dance Like a semi despondent fury For I thought I never should hit on a chance Of addressing a British Jury But I soon got tired of third class journeys And dinners of bread and water So I fell in love with a rich attorney s Elderly ugly daughter CHORUS So he fell in love etc Drawing by W S GilbertIt is 10 a m at the Court of the Exchequer 40 where a jury and the public assemble to hear a case of breach of promise of marriage The Usher advises the jury Drawing by W S Gilbert The Usher advises the jury to listen to the broken hearted Plaintiff s case adding that they needn t mind what the ruffianly defendant has to say He notes for the record that From bias free of every kind this trial must be tried The Defendant Edwin d arrives and the jurymen greet him with hostility even though as he points out they have as yet no idea of the merits of his case He candidly tells them that he jilted the Plaintiff because she became a bore intense to him and he then quickly took up with another woman The jurymen recall their own wayward youth but as they are now respectable gentlemen they have no sympathy for the Defendant The Judge enters with great pomp and describes how he rose to his position by courting a rich attorney s elderly ugly daughter The rich attorney then aided his prospective son in law s legal career until the Judge became as rich as the Gurneys and threw over the daughter The jury and public are delighted with the Judge although he has just admitted to the same wrong of which the Defendant is accused e The jury is sworn in and the Plaintiff Angelina d is summoned She is preceded into the courtroom by her bridesmaids one of whom catches the eye of the Judge However when Angelina herself arrives in full wedding dress she instantly captures the heart of both Judge and jury The Counsel for the Plaintiff makes a moving speech detailing Edwin s betrayal Angelina feigns distress and staggers first into the arms of the Foreman of the Jury and then of the Judge Edwin counters explaining that his change of heart is only natural Oh gentlemen listen I pray Though I own that my heart has been ranging Of nature the laws I obey For nature is constantly changing The moon in her phases is found The time and the wind and the weather The months in succession come round And you don t find two Mondays together He offers to marry both the Plaintiff and his new love if that would satisfy everyone The Judge at first finds this a reasonable proposition but the Counsel argues that from the days of James II it has been a rather serious crime To marry two wives at a time he labels the crime not bigamy but rather burglary Perplexed everyone in court ponders the nice dilemma in a parody of Italian opera ensembles 43 Angelina desperately embraces Edwin demonstrating the depth of her love and bemoans her loss all in evidence of the large amount of damages that the jury should require Edwin to pay Edwin in turn says he is a smoker a drunkard and a bully when tipsy and that the Plaintiff could not have endured him even for a day thus the damages should be small The Judge suggests making Edwin tipsy to see if he would really thrash and kick Angelina but everyone else except Edwin objects to this experiment Impatient at the lack of progress the Judge resolves the case by offering to marry Angelina himself This is found quite satisfactory and the proceedings are concluded with joy unbounded f Musical numbers Edit Third page of the 1875 programme 1 Hark the hour of ten is sounding Chorus and Now Jurymen hear my advice Usher 1a Is this the Court of the Exchequer Defendant 2 When first my old old love I knew Defendant and Chorus and Silence in Court Usher 3 All hail great Judge Chorus and Judge 4 When I good friends was call d to the Bar Judge and Chorus 5 Swear thou the Jury Counsel Usher and Oh will you swear by yonder skies Usher and Chorus 6 Where is the Plaintiff Counsel Usher and Comes the broken flower Chorus of Bridesmaids and Plaintiff g 7 Oh never never never since I joined the human race Judge Foreman Chorus 8 May it please you my lud Counsel for Plaintiff and Chorus 9 That she is reeling is plain to see Judge Foreman Plaintiff Counsel and Chorus 10 Oh gentlemen listen I pray Defendant and Chorus of Bridesmaids 11 That seems a reasonable proposition Judge Counsel and Chorus 12 A nice dilemma we have here Ensemble 13 I love him I love him with fervour unceasing Plaintiff Defendant and Chorus and The question gentlemen is one of liquor Judge and Ensemble 14 Oh joy unbounded with wealth surrounded Ensemble For clarity only characters with a major role in each particular song have been listed 44 Reception EditReviews of the first performance of Trial by Jury were uniformly glowing Fun magazine declared the opera extremely funny and admirably composed 45 while the rival Punch magazine wrote that it is the funniest bit of nonsense your representative has seen for a considerable time only regretting that it was too short 46 The Daily News praised the author In whimsical invention and eccentric humour Mr W S Gilbert has no living rival among our dramatic writers and never has his peculiar vein of drollery and satire been more conspicuous than in a little piece entitled Trial by Jury 46 The Daily Telegraph concluded that the piece illustrated the composer s great capacity for dramatic writing of the lighter class 46 Many critics emphasised the happy combination of Gilbert s words and Sullivan s music One noted that so completely is each imbued with the same spirit that it would be as difficult to conceive the existence of Mr Gilbert s verses without Mr Sullivan s music as of Mr Sullivan s music without Mr Gilbert s verses Each gives each a double charm 47 Another agreed that it seems as in the great Wagnerian operas as though poem and music had proceeded simultaneously from one and the same brain 48 In 1880 Punch magazine prematurely anticipated Sullivan s knighthood publishing a cartoon accompanied by a parody version of When I good friends from Trial by Jury that summarised Sullivan s career to that date Excerpt from A Humorous Knight It is reported that after the Leeds Festival Dr Sullivan will be knighted Having read this in a column of gossip a be nighted Contributor who has the Judge s Song on the brain suggests the following verse As a boy I had such a musical bump And its size so struck Mr HELMORE That he said Though you sing those songs like a trump You shall write some yourself that will sell more So I packed off to Leipsic without looking back And returned in such classical fury That I sat down with HANDEL and HAYDN and BACH And turned out Trial by Jury But W S G he jumped for joy As he said Though the job dismay you Send Exeter Hall to the deuce my boy It s the haul with me that ll pay you And we hauled so well mid jeers and taunts That we ve settled spite all temptations To stick to our Sisters and our Cousins and our Aunts And continue our pleasant relations The opening night audience was also delighted by the piece preferring it even to the Offenbach work To judge by the unceasing and almost boisterous hilarity which formed a sort of running commentary on the part of the audience Trial by Jury suffered nothing whatever from so dangerous a juxtaposition with a piece by the popular Offenbach On the contrary it may fairly be said to have borne away the palm 48 A reviewer noted that Laughter more frequent or more hearty was never heard in any theatre than that which more than once brought the action to a temporary standstill 49 Another paper summed up its popular appeal Trial by Jury is but a trifle it pretends to be nothing more but it is one of those merry bits of extravagance which a great many will go to see and hear which they will laugh at and which they will advise their friends to go and see and therefore its success cannot be doubtful 50 Among the actors special critical praise was reserved for the composer s brother Fred Sullivan in the role of the Learned Judge The greatest hit was made by Mr F Sullivan whose blending of official dignity condescension and at the right moment extravagant humour made the character of the Judge stand out with all requisite prominence and added much to the interest of the piece 51 The Times concurred that his portrayal deserved a special word of praise for its quiet and natural humour 52 Nelly Bromley the Plaintiff Walter H Fisher the Defendant John Hollingsworth the Counsel and others were also praised for their acting 53 Later assessments of the work have been no less positive In 1907 Gilbert s first biographer Edith A Browne concluded 54 In Trial by Jury we find author and composer looking at the humorous side of life from exactly the same point of view and we at once realise how Gilbert and Sullivan have been able to do for Comic Opera what Wagner has done for Grand Opera by combining words and music so as to make them one H M Walbrook similarly wrote in 1922 Trial by Jury satirizes the procedure in an average breach of promise and also the insincerity which may sometimes underlie the pose of respectability Everything done or sung is ludicrous and yet beneath it all lies a recognisable substratum of truth The piece is a riot of laughter The Judge s ditty When first my friends I was called to the Bar sic is the best known comic song in the English language In none of the operas is the genius of Gilbert as an inventor of comic business more daringly and irresistibly exhibited One can see the piece again and again and discover fresh strokes of comicality Its place in the Gilbert and Sullivan repertory is as secure as ever and whatever reforms may be hereafter effected in this particular department of the King s Bench Division Trial by Jury will probably long continue to be one of the English speaking world s refreshments 55 The Gilbert and Sullivan biographer Michael Ainger writing in 2002 127 years after the premiere of the opera explained its enduring appeal Nothing could be more serious than a court of law and now the world had been turned upside down The court of law had become the scene of humor and frivolity the learned judge had shown himself to be as fickle as the defendant and the justice system turned out to be flawed by human frailty And Sullivan had grasped the joke From the first chords Sullivan s music sets the scene of mock seriousness and proceeds to dance its way through the whole piece 56 Impact and analysis Edit Sullivan s original thematic sketch of Trial by Jury Impact Edit As the first Savoy opera Trial by Jury marked an important moment in the history of the Gilbert and Sullivan collaboration as well as in the careers of each of the two men and in Victorian drama in general The historian Reginald Allen sums up the historical import of the opera Most scholars of the Victorian theatre date the birth of Gilbert amp Sullivan opera with the first performance of Trial by Jury Some will maintain that there is no single date of comparable importance in the history of the modern lyric theatre than this occasion which first brought together the triumvirate of W S Gilbert Arthur Sullivan and their catalyst business genius Richard D Oyly Carte The next twenty five years witnessed the spectacular worldwide success of this collaboration the Gilbert amp Sullivan operas initiated by Trial by Jury Without this spark who can say that any of the instantaneous hits of G ilbert amp S ullivan that followed would ever have been written 57 Sidney Dark and Rowland Grey also give a high value to the importance of Trial by Jury and the operas that followed There is not a little historical interest in the genesis of the Gilbert and Sullivan operas the one English contribution of any value to dramatic literature for many generations 58 In addition references to the opera continue today in the popular media h and even in law cases i Pattern for later Savoy operas Edit Trial by Jury is the only Gilbert and Sullivan opera played in one act and the only theatrical work by W S Gilbert without spoken dialogue 60 However later Gilbert and Sullivan operas retained a number of patterns seen in Trial For example all except The Yeomen of the Guard begin with a chorus number 61 Also like Trial by Jury the later operas generally end with a relatively short finale consisting of a chorus number interspersed with short solos by the principal characters Comes the broken flower part of No 3 was the first in a string of meditative Horatian lyrics mingling happiness and sadness an acceptance and a smiling resignation 62 These would from this point forward allow the characters in each of the Savoy operas an introspective scene where they stop and consider life in contrast to the foolishness of the surrounding scenes 63 Like both of the tenor s arias in Trial by Jury tenor arias in later Savoy operas were set in 68 time so frequently that Anna Russell in her 1953 parody How to Write Your Own Gilbert and Sullivan Opera 64 exclaimed the tenor according to tradition must sing an aria in 68 time usually accompanying himself on a stringed instrument 65 In Trial by Jury hypocrisy is revealed as the characters motivations are held up to satire and Gilbert mocks the underlying absurdity of the judicial procedures As Gilbert scholar Andrew Crowther explains Gilbert combines his criticisms with comic entertainment which renders them more palatable while at the same time underlining their truth By laughing at a joke you show that you accept its premise 66 This too would become characteristic of Gilbert s work 67 Fred Sullivan as The Learned Judge The judge s song When I good friends was called to the Bar was followed by a string of similar patter songs that would come to epitomise Gilbert and Sullivan s collaboration 68 In these often a dignified personage would just like the Judge supply a humorous biography of himself 69 Just as in Gilbert s earlier play The Palace of Truth in these songs the characters naively reveal their innermost thoughts unconscious of their egotism vanity baseness or cruelty 70 Crowther points out that such revelations work particularly well in Trial by Jury because people commonly expect characters singing in opera operetta will communicate at a deeper level of truth than they would in mere speech 60 In When I good friends the judge outlines the path of corruption that led to his becoming a judge and this too would set the pattern for many of the patter songs in Gilbert and Sullivan operas to follow 60 One of Gilbert s most notable innovations first found in Thespis and repeated in Trial by Jury and all of the later Savoy operas is the use of the chorus as an essential part of the action In most earlier operas burlesques and comedies the chorus had very little impact on the plot and served mainly as noise or ornament 71 In the Gilbert and Sullivan operas however the chorus is essential taking part in the action and often acting as an important character in its own right 71 Sullivan recalled Until Gilbert took the matter in hand choruses were dummy concerns and were practically nothing more than a part of the stage setting It was in Thespis that Gilbert began to carry out his expressed determination to get the chorus to play its proper part in the performance At this moment it seems difficult to realise that the idea of the chorus being anything more than a sort of stage audience was at that time a tremendous novelty 72 Another Gilbert innovation following the example of his mentor T W Robertson was that the costumes and sets were made as realistic as possible 73 Gilbert based the scenery for the production on the Clerkenwell Sessions House where he had practised law in the 1860s 74 The costumes were contemporary and Angelina and her bridesmaids were dressed in real wedding attire 73 This attention to detail and careful creation of realistic sets and scenes were typical of Gilbert s stage management and would be repeated in all of Gilbert s work 75 For instance when preparing the sets for H M S Pinafore 1878 Gilbert and Sullivan visited Portsmouth to inspect ships Gilbert made sketches of H M S Victory and H M S St Vincent and created a model set for the carpenters to work from 76 This was far from standard procedure in Victorian drama where naturalism was still a relatively new concept and where most authors had very little influence on how their plays and libretti were staged 77 Analysis Edit Andrew Crowther places Trial by Jury at the centre of Gilbert s development as a librettist He notes that in some of Gilbert s early libretti such as Topsyturveydom 1874 the songs simply emphasise the dialogue In others such as Thespis 1871 some songs are relatively disconnected from both the story and characterisation such as I once knew a chap or Little maid of Arcadee which simply convey a moral lesson 78 In Trial by Jury however each song carries the plot forward and adds depth to the characters In addition unlike some of Gilbert s more fantastical early plots Aside from the ending nothing essentially improbable happens 60 Ganzl agrees writing that Gilbert s libretto was superior to any of his previous efforts It was concise modern and satirical without being impossibly whimsical Having no spoken dialogue it was perforce tightly constructed and allowed of no interpolation or alteration 79 Sullivan s development as a comic opera writer too would mature with Trial by Jury Except for incidental music for productions of Shakespeare he had not written any music for the stage since Thespis Ganzl wrote that Trial by Jury brought Sullivan firmly and finally into the world of the musical stage 80 and confirmed after his previous success with Cox and Box and Thespis that Sullivan was a composer of light lyric and comic music who could rival Offenbach Lecocq and any English musician alive 80 Part of the vocal score of A nice dilemma Sullivan used the opportunities suggested by Gilbert s satire of the pomp and ceremony of the law to provide a variety of musical jokes 43 From the first chords Sullivan s music sets the scene of mock seriousness His humorous use of the orchestra runs throughout 56 For example counterpointing the plaintiff s calculated swooning in That she is reeling is plain to see No 9 with a reeling minor key theme in the string accompaniment heading up and down the octaves 20 The instruments are also used to comically set the scene for instance he underlines the Counsel s misstatement in the line To marry two at once is burglaree with a comic bassoon sting in octaves 20 and has the Defendant tune his guitar on stage simulated by a violin in the orchestra in the opening to his song 81 The score also contains two parodies or pastiches of other composers No 3 All hail great Judge is an elaborate parody of Handel s fugues 82 and No 12 A nice dilemma parodies dilemma ensembles of Italian opera in the Bel canto era in particular D un pensiero from Act I of Bellini s La sonnambula 83 A nice dilemma uses the dominant rhythm and key of D un pensiero and divides up some of the choral lines between the basses and higher voices to create an oom pa pa effect common in Italian opera choruses 84 Productions EditAfter the premiere of Trial by Jury in 1875 operetta companies in London the British provinces and elsewhere picked it up rapidly usually playing it as a forepiece or an afterpiece to a French operetta 2 The first American showings were an unauthorized production by Alice Oates at the Arch Street Theatre in Philadelphia on 22 October 1875 85 and another at the Eagle Theatre in New York City on 15 November 1875 22 86 The world tour of the original British production took it to America Australia and elsewhere 87 It was even translated into German and premiered as Im Schwurgericht at the Carltheater on 14 September 1886 and as Das Brautpaar vor Gericht at Danzer s Orpheum on 5 October 1901 88 Richard D Oyly Carte s opera companies of which there were often several playing simultaneously usually programmed Trial by Jury as a companion piece to The Sorcerer or H M S Pinafore j In the 1884 85 London production a transformation scene was added at the end in which the Judge and Plaintiff became the Harlequinade characters Harlequin and Columbine and the set was consumed by red fire and flames 90 From 1894 the year when the D Oyly Carte Opera Company established a year round touring company that had most of the Gilbert and Sullivan works in its repertory Trial by Jury was always included except for 1901 to 1903 and then again from 1943 until 1946 when the company played a reduced repertory during World War II From 1919 costumes were by Percy Anderson and a new touring set was designed by Peter Goffin in 1957 91 During the company s 1975 centennial performances of all thirteen Gilbert and Sullivan Operas at the Savoy Theatre Trial was given four times as a curtain raiser to The Sorcerer Pinafore and Pirates and as an afterpiece following The Grand Duke Before the first of the four performances of Trial a specially written curtain raiser by William Douglas Home called Dramatic Licence was played by Peter Pratt as Carte Kenneth Sandford as Gilbert and John Ayldon as Sullivan in which Gilbert Sullivan and Carte plan the birth of Trial in 1875 92 Trial by Jury was eliminated from the D Oyly Carte repertory in 1976 as a cost saving measure 93 Production history Edit The following table summarises the main London productions of Trial by Jury up to the time of Sullivan s death in 1900 Theatre Opening date Closing date Perfs DetailsRoyalty Theatre 94 25 March 1875 11 June 1875 131 This company also played matinees at the Gaiety Theatre on 10 April 17 April and 24 April 1875 22 The theatre closed from 13 June through 10 October 95 while the company took Trial by Jury and other operas on a provincial tour 80 Trial then continued as an afterpiece to French operettas at the Royalty with Charles Morton as manager and Hamilton Clarke as musical director 94 95 11 October 1875 18 December 1875Opera Comique 94 14 January 1876 5 May 1876 96 Emily Soldene and Kate Santley brought Morton s production to the Opera Comique Trial was not performed from 13 to 18 March while Fred Sullivan was ill and the theatre was closed for Easter from 9 to 14 April Soldene then toured with Trial and other operettas until 28 October 2 95 Dolaro and Carte as manager and musical director also produced Trial in Dublin and Manchester from 24 July to 5 August 1876 96 Strand Theatre 3 March 1877 26 May 1877 73 Produced under the immediate direction of the authors Originally performed as an afterpiece to Tom Taylor s comedy Babes and Beetles 97 A tour of this production followed from 27 May to 28 July produced by Santley At the same time from May to September 1877 Santley toured Trial as an afterpiece to an Offenbach operetta 98 Opera Comique 23 March 1878 24 May 1878 56 Played as an afterpiece to The Sorcerer 99 Savoy Theatre 11 October 1884 12 March 1885 150 Played as a forepiece to The Sorcerer 100 Savoy Theatre 22 September 1898 31 December 1898 102 Played as a forepiece to The Sorcerer 101 Savoy Theatre 6 June 1899 25 November 1899 174 Played as a forepiece to H M S Pinafore 102 103 The exclusive performing rights to Trial by Jury and the other Gilbert and Sullivan operas were held by the D Oyly Carte Opera Company until their expiration in 1961 50 years after Gilbert s death and no other professional company was authorised to present the Savoy operas in Britain from 1877 until that date 33 The following tables show the casts of the principal original D Oyly Carte productions and touring companies at approximately 10 year intervals through to the 1975 centenary season 104 k Role Royalty Theatre1875 95 Strand Theatre1877 95 Opera Comique1878 99 Savoy Theatre1884 100 Savoy Theatre1898 101 103 Learned Judge Frederic Sullivan J G Taylor George Grossmith Rutland Barrington Henry LyttonCounsel John Hollingsworth 105 Charles Parry Rutland Barrington Eric Lewis Jones HewsonDefendant Walter H Fisher Claude Marius George Power Durward Lely Cory JamesForeman Charles Kelleher 106 107 W S Penley F Talbot Arthur Kennett Leonard RussellUsher Belville R Pepper 106 Harry Cox Fred Clifton William Lugg Walter PassmoreAssociate 106 J Wilbraham Charles ChilderstonePlaintiff Nelly Bromley Lottie Venne Lisa Walton Florence Dysart Isabel Jay1st Bridesmaid Linda Verner 108 Gwynne Williams Sybil Grey Mildred BakerRole D Oyly Carte1905 Tour 109 D Oyly Carte1915 Tour 110 D Oyly Carte1925 Tour 111 D Oyly Carte1935 Tour 112 Learned Judge Charles H Workman Leo Sheffield Leo Sheffield Sydney GranvilleCounsel Albert Kavanagh Frederick Hobbs Henry Millidge Leslie RandsDefendant Strafford Moss Dewey Gibson Sidney Pointer Robert WilsonForeman J Lewis Campion Frank Steward T Penry Hughes T Penry HughesUsher Reginald White George Sinclair Joseph Griffin Richard WalkerAssociate Allen Morris Martyn Green C William MorganPlaintiff Bessie Mackenzie Marjorie Gordon Eleanor Evans Ann Drummond Grant1st Bridesmaid Mabel Burnege Ethel Armit Beatrice Elburn Nancy RayRole D Oyly Carte1949 Tour 113 D Oyly Carte1955 Tour 114 D Oyly Carte1965 Tour 115 D Oyly Carte1975 Tour 116 Learned Judge Richard Watson John Reed Jeffrey Skitch Jon Ellison 117 Counsel Alan Styler Alan Styler Alan Styler Michael RaynerDefendant Leonard Osborn John Fryatt Philip Potter Jeffrey Cresswell 118 Foreman Donald Harris John Banks Anthony Raffell James Conroy WardUsher L Radley Flynn George Cook George Cook John BroadAssociate C William Morgan Keith Bonnington Keith Bonnington William PalmerleyPlaintiff Enid Walsh Kathleen West Jennifer Toye Marjorie Williams 119 1st Bridesmaid Joyce Wright Margaret Dobson Pauline Wales Rosalind GriffithsBenefit performances Edit Rutland Barrington as the Learned Judge Poster advertising operettas by Gilbert amp Sullivan includes Trial by Jury Starting in 1877 Trial by Jury was often given at benefit performances usually for an actor or actress who had fallen on hard times but occasionally for other causes These were glittering affairs with various celebrities appearing in principal roles or as part of the chorus 120 Gilbert himself played the silent role of the Associate on at least four occasions 121 Arthur Sullivan conducted the 1877 benefit for the actor Henry Compton 122 At the Compton benefit Penley and George Grossmith were members of the Jury and a number of other famous actors and actresses were in the chorus 123 Sullivan also conducted the 1889 benefit for Barrington 124 At the Nellie Farren benefit many of the performers listed below sat in the jury or the gallery and Trial by Jury was followed by a six hour long concert Performances were given by Henry Irving Ellaline Terriss Marie Tempest Hayden Coffin Arthur Roberts Letty Lind Edmund Payne and many others 125 The Ellen Terry benefit in 1906 was also a particularly well attended affair with Sir Arthur Conan Doyle numbered among the jury and Enrico Caruso singing among many star performances 126 Role Henry ComptonDrury Lane1 March 1877 122 l Amy RoselleLyceum16 June 1887 122 Rutland BarringtonSavoy28 May 1889 122 Nellie FarrenDrury Lane17 March 1898 122 Judge George Honey Rutland Barrington Rutland Barrington Rutland BarringtonCounsel George Fox Richard Temple Alec Marsh Eric LewisDefendant W H Cummings Henry Bracy Courtice Pounds Courtice PoundsForeman Mr Burbank Henry LyttonUsher Arthur Cecil Rudolph Lewis W H Denny 128 Walter PassmoreAssociate W S Gilbert Arthur Roberts 129 W S GilbertPlaintiff Pauline Rita Geraldine Ulmar Lottie Venne Florence PerryRole Princess Christian s Homes ofRest for Disabled SoldiersDrury Lane 15 May 1900 130 William RignoldLyric Theatre5 December 1902 131 Ellen TerryDrury Lane12 June 1906 132 Judge Rutland Barrington Rutland Barrington Rutland BarringtonCounsel Eric Lewis C Hayden Coffin Henry LyttonDefendant Courtice Pounds Charles Childerstone Courtice PoundsForeman W H Denny Fred Kaye Robert MarshallUsher Walter Passmore George Grossmith Jr Walter PassmoreAssociate W S Gilbert Lionel Monckton W S GilbertAssociate s Wife1 Effie Bancroft Fanny BroughPlaintiff Florence St John Evie Greene Ruth Vincent1The role of the Associate s Wife was especially created for the disabled soldiers benefit performance and does not appear in any standard performances 133 Recordings EditTrial by Jury has been recorded many times Of the recordings by the D Oyly Carte Opera Company those recorded in 1927 and 1964 are ranked the best according to the Gilbert and Sullivan Discography edited by Marc Shepherd The 1961 Sargent and especially the 1995 Mackerras recordings are also rated highly by the Discography 134 The reviewer Michael Walters gives his highest praise to the 1927 recording but he also likes the 1961 recording 135 The Discography recommends the 1982 Brent Walker video which is paired with Cox and Box 136 More recent professional productions have been recorded on video by the International Gilbert and Sullivan Festival 137 Selected recordings1927 D Oyly Carte Conductor Harry Norris 138 1961 Sargent Glyndebourne Pro Arte Orchestra Glyndebourne Festival Chorus Conductor Sir Malcolm Sargent 139 1964 D Oyly Carte Conductor Isidore Godfrey 140 1975 D Oyly Carte Conductor Royston Nash 141 1982 Brent Walker Productions video Ambrosian Opera Chorus London Symphony Orchestra Conductor Alexander Faris 136 1995 Mackerras Telarc Orchestra and Chorus of the Welsh National Opera Conductor Sir Charles Mackerras 142 2005 Opera Australia video modern dress Stage Director Stuart Maunder conductor Andrew Greene 143 Textual changes Edit The Plaintiff in distress captures the sympathy of the judge and jury Production with Sydney Granville 1919 Before the first performance of Trial by Jury some material was cut including two songs and a recitative a song for the foreman of the jury Oh do not blush to shed a tear which was to be sung just after Oh will you swear by yonder skies and a recitative for the Judge and song for the Usher We do not deal with artificial crime and His lordship s always quits which came just before A nice dilemma 144 The melody for His Lordship s always quits is known and it was reused in I loved her fondly in The Zoo and later modified into the main tune from A wand ring minstrel I in The Mikado 145 A few changes were made to the end of I love him I love him after the first night 146 A third verse for Oh gentlemen listen I pray was sung at least on the first night and part was quoted in a review in the Pictorial World 147 Trial by Jury underwent relatively minor textual changes after its first run mainly consisting of insignificant amendments to wording 148 The most significant changes involve the ending The original stage directions set up a simple pantomime style tableau Judge and Plaintiff dance back hornpipe step and get onto the Bench the Bridesmaids take the eight garlands of roses from behind the Judge s desk and draw them across floor of court so that they radiate from the desk Two plaster Cupids in bar wigs descend from flies Red fire 149 This became much more elaborate in the 1884 revival with the entire set being transformed and the plaintiff climbing onto the Judge s back a la fairy In the 1920s the plaster cupids were evidently damaged on a tour and the transformation scene was abandoned completely 149 Notes references and sources EditNotes Edit Apparently this refers to another opera that Sullivan was working on for the Royalty an advertisement in The Era on 14 March 1875 stated that In consequence of the continued success of La Perichole the production of Mr Sullivan s two act opera is postponed 14 A gossip column in the Athenaeum dated 13 March 1875 stated that Sullivan was working on new music for a piece at the St James s Theatre From this McElroy speculates that Sullivan had already begun writing musical numbers for The Zoo before he shifted his energies to Trial by Jury and decided to salvage them by telling his librettist to boil the libretto down to one act and transfer the project to another theatre 15 See First edition libretto cover on exhibition at the University of Rochester Libraries 17 In 1871 Sullivan had composed his only other dramatic cantata On Shore and Sea 18 The fashion in the late Victorian era was to present long evenings in the theatre and so Carte preceded his Savoy operas with curtain raisers 21 a b Edwin and Angelina were a traditional pairing of names of faithful lovers as far back in English literature as Oliver Goldsmith s The Hermit and The Vicar of Wakefield 41 Burgess comments The irony of the situation will not go unperceived by the reader 42 This synopsis is based on the libretto as printed in Bradley pp 7 39 Where is the Plaintiff has a joke involving echoes of the Usher s Oh Angelina echoing in the courtroom In D Oyly Carte productions the echoes were performed by the defendant with his back to the audience For example in the British television show Kavanagh QC starring John Thaw in the episode Briefs Trooping Gaily Kavanagh s colleague Jeremy Aldermarten Nicholas Jones plays the Judge in an amateur production of Trial by Jury For example in the American law suit Askew v Askew 22 Cal App 4th 942 4th Dist 1994 the decision includes an extensive reference to Trial by Jury as an introduction to its discussion of suits for breach of promise and the potential for abuse inherent in such lawsuits 59 In addition to the London productions mentioned below and early tours mentioned above Carte toured Trial with The Sorcerer in 1878 89 An examination of Rollins and Witts and Ganzl shows that a ten year interval is sufficient to indicate the bulk of the notable performers who portrayed these roles in authorized productions during that period Biographies of the persons named below can be found at Stone David Who Was Who in the D Oyly Carte Opera Company The Gilbert and Sullivan Archive accessed 8 June 2014 The chorus included leading stars such as W S Penley George Grossmith Kate Bishop and Marion Terry 127 References Edit a b c Stedman pp 129 130 a b c d Ganzl p 90 Rees p 78 Stedman pp 99 127 a b Ainger p 106 The Law Relating to Breach of Promise of Marriage www lawreform ie Retrieved 23 February 2023 Trial by Jury by W S Gilbert www gsarchive net Retrieved 23 February 2023 Bradley pp 6 24 36 Stedman pp 120 121 Ainger pp 99 100 and 105 Stedman p 125 Ainger pp 107 108 a b Ainger p 108 McElroy p 40 McElroy pp 51 52 a b c Ainger p 109 Gilbert and Sullivan Online Exhibit Item Details RBSCP rbscp lib rochester edu Retrieved 23 February 2023 Young p 62 Stedman pp 128 129 a b c d Ainger p 110 Lee Bernard Swash buckling Savoy curtain raiser Archived 15 October 2008 at the Wayback Machine Sheffield Telegraph 1 August 2008 and MacQueen Pope p 23 a b c d Ganzl p 95 a b Ainger p 114 a b Walbrook pp 38 40 Ainger pp 113 120 Ainger p 128 The Times 29 March 1875 quoted and discussed in Ainger p 109 Ainger p 117 Ainger p 111 Ainger pp 118 and 130 a b Ganzl pp 89 90 J C Williamson Opera Programs 1906 programme National Library of Australia Retrieved on 23 June 2008 a b 1968 D Oyly Carte Production of The Gondoliers gsarchive net Retrieved 23 February 2023 a b Stedman p 132 Ainger p 112 Ainger pp 113 114 Ganzl 1986 p 90 Crowther p 211 The Judge s Song from Trial By Jury 1875 by Sir William Schwenck Gilbert victorianweb org Retrieved 23 February 2023 The Court of the Exchequer extended its jurisdiction a breach of promise could be tried there by the legal fiction that the wrong done to the plaintiff by the conduct of the defendant made her unable to pay her taxes See Burgess p 38 Bradley p 6 note to line 9 Burgess p 43 a b Bradley p 4 Gilbert and Sullivan passim Allen 1958 p 29 a b c Allen 1958 p 30 The Daily News 27 March 1875 p 3 a b The Musical World J Alfredo Novello 1875 Allen 1958 p 32 Quoted in Ganzl p 88 Allen 1958 p 31 quoting the Daily Telegraph Allen 1958 p 31 quoting The Times Allen 1958 pp 31 32 Browne p 57 Walbrook p 40 a b Ainger pp 109 110 Allen 1975b p iii Dark and Grey p 68 Askew v Askew 1994 Justia Law Retrieved 23 February 2023 a b c d Crowther p 77 Bradley p 758 Stedman p 244 Stedman pp 129 130 244 Crowther pp 133 135 G amp S Discography Anna Russell s How to Write Your Own Gilbert and Sullivan gasdisc oakapplepress com Retrieved 23 February 2023 Anna Russell Sings Again 1953 Columbia Masterworks Mono LP ML4594 ML4733 Crowther p 78 Crowther pp 78 79 Bradley p 14 Fitzgerald pp 25 26 Crowther p 77 quoting Archer p 161 a b Dark and Grey pp 67 68 Lawrence pp 85 86 a b Stedman p 129 Dark and Grey p 65 Crowther p 90 Stedman pp 157 158 Crowther p 90 Crowther pp 87 89 Crowther pp 76 77 Ganzl p 88 a b c Ganzl p 89 Bradley p 10 Bradley pp 4 and 12 Burgess pp 38 39 Bradley p 4 Burgess p 47 Jacobs p 91 Ganzl Kurt The Encyclopedia of the Musical Theatre Schirmer Books 2nd edition May 2001 Prestige Colin D Oyly Carte and the Pirates in Papers Presented at the International Conference Held at the University of Kansas in May 1970 James Helyar ed 1971 University of Kansas Lawrence Kansas p 143 Gilbert and Sullivan Online Exhibit Item Details RBSCP rbscp lib rochester edu Retrieved 23 February 2023 Ganzl pp 96 97 Howarth Paul ed Comedy Opera Company Ltd Under the management of Mr Richard D Oyly Carte Touring Trial by Jury and The Sorcerer The Gilbert and Sullivan Archive accessed 15 December 2013 Wilson and Lloyd p 35 Rollins and Witts Appendix p VII Kenneth Sandford The Independent 22 September 2004 Retrieved 23 February 2023 Bradley p 5 a b c Rollins and Witts p 1 a b c d e Rollins and Witts p 4 Rollins and Witts 3rd supplement p 24 Royal Strand Theatre Illustrated Sporting and Dramatic News 3 March 1877 p 2 Rollins and Witts 3rd supplement p 32 a b Rollins and Witts p 5 a b Rollins and Witts p 9 a b Rollins and Witts p 17 Rollins and Witts p 18 a b 1899 cast As 1898 except Counsel Leonard Russell Defendant Charles Childerstone Foreman Iago Lewys Associate Albert Gater 1st Bridesmaid Madge Moyse From Rollins and Witts p 18 Rollins and Witts and supplements John Hollingsworth www gsarchive net Retrieved 23 February 2023 a b c Early in April 1875 as shown by the programme pictured above Mr C Campbell became the Foreman Mr Charles Kelleher became the Usher and Mr Pepper became the Associate Charles Kelleher www gsarchive net Retrieved 23 February 2023 Linda Verner www gsarchive net Retrieved 23 February 2023 Rollins and Witts p 121 Rollins and Witts p 132 Rollins and Witts p 148 Rollins and Witts p 160 Rollins and Witts p 174 Rollins and Witts p 180 Rollins and Witts 1st Supplement p 7 Rollins and Witts 3rd Supplement p 28 John Reed played the Judge for the two week Savoy season Colin Wright played the Defendant for the two week Savoy season Julia Goss played the Plaintiff for the two week Savoy season Burgess pp 52 54 Burgess pp 52 53 Ganzl pp 96 98 a b c d e Ganzl p 96 Ainger p 130 The Era 1 June 1889 p 9 Davis 1995 Chapter X letter of 20 March 1898 Burgess pp 56 61 reproduces the programmes for several of these benefits in facsimile Others are listed in Ganzl pp 95 98 The Era 4 March 1877 p 6 The Era 1 June 1889 reporting that Denny not Lugg was Usher and that the piece was played together with Locked In by Walter Frith libretto and James Caldicott music starring Jessie Bond Eric Lewis and Rose Hervey directed by Barrington The Era 18 June 1887 p 8 Burgess p 57 The William Rignold Benefit The Era 13 December 1902 p 17 Ganzl pp 97 98 Ainger pp 380 381 Recordings of Trial By Jury gasdisc oakapplepress com Retrieved 23 February 2023 Walters Michael Recordings of Trial by Jury part 2 W S Gilbert Society Journal Vol 4 part 3 Issue 29 Summer 2011 a b The Brent Walker Trial By Jury gasdisc oakapplepress com Retrieved 23 February 2023 Professional Shows from the Festival Archived 26 June 2012 at the Wayback Machine Musical Collectibles catalogue website accessed 15 October 2012 The 1927 D Oyly Carte Trial By Jury gasdisc oakapplepress com Retrieved 23 February 2023 The Sargent EMI Trial By Jury gasdisc oakapplepress com Retrieved 23 February 2023 The 1964 D Oyly Carte Trial By Jury gasdisc oakapplepress com Retrieved 23 February 2023 The 1975 Trial By Jury gasdisc oakapplepress com Retrieved 23 February 2023 The Mackerras Telarc Trial By Jury gasdisc oakapplepress com Retrieved 23 February 2023 The Opera Australia Trial By Jury gasdisc oakapplepress com Retrieved 23 February 2023 Bradley pp 20 32 Tillett Selwyn Roderick Spencer 2002 Forty Years of Thespis Scholarship PDF Archived from the original PDF on 19 June 2007 Retrieved 25 May 2006 p 11 Bradley p 34 Allen 1975a p 42 Bradley pp 6 38 a b Bradley pp 36 38 Sources Edit Ainger Michael 2002 Gilbert and Sullivan A Dual Biography Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 514769 8 Allen Reginald 1958 The First Night Gilbert and Sullivan London Chappell OCLC 3156011 Allen Reginald 1975a The First Night Gilbert and Sullivan Centennial Edition London Chappell OCLC 550681465 Allen Reginald 1975b Sir Arthur Sullivan Composer and Personage New York The Pierpont Morgan Library ISBN 978 0 87598 049 2 Archer William 1882 Mr W S Gilbert English Dramatists of To Day London Low Marston Searle and Rivington OCLC 963632829 Bradley Ian 1996 The Complete Annotated Gilbert and Sullivan Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 816503 3 Browne Edith A 1907 Stars of the Stage W S Gilbert London John Lane The Bodley Head OCLC 5866733 Burgess A J 1997 The Notary and other Lawyers in Gilbert amp Sullivan Hadleigh Suffolk Jardine Press ISBN 978 0 9525594 1 2 Crowther Andrew 2000 Contradiction Contradicted The Plays of W S Gilbert London Associated University Presses ISBN 978 0 8386 3839 2 Davis Richard Harding ed Charles Belmont Davis 1995 Adventures and Letters of Richard Harding Davis Project Gutenberg ISBN 978 0 8386 3839 2 Retrieved 1 June 2008 Dark Sidney and Rowland Grey 1923 W S Gilbert His Life and Letters Ayer Publishing ISBN 978 0 405 08430 0 Fitzgerald Percy Hetherington 1899 The Savoy Opera and the Savoyards London Chatto amp Windus OCLC 4635323 Trial by Jury Fisher Sullivan Bromley Pepper Ganzl Kurt 1986 The British Musical Theatre Volume I 1865 1914 Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 333 39839 5 Gilbert W S amp Sullivan Arthur 1912 Trial by Jury Vocal Score London Chappell OCLC 48594935 Goldberg Isaac 1929 The Story of Gilbert and Sullivan orThe Compleat Savoyard London John Murray OCLC 758343552 Jacobs Arthur 1986 Arthur Sullivan A Victorian Musician Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 282033 4 Lawrence Arthur 1899 Sir Arthur Sullivan Life Story Letters and Reminiscences London James Bowden OCLC 253726207 McElroy George C 1984 Whose Zoo or When Did The Trial Begin Nineteenth Century Theatre Research 12 39 54 MacQueen Pope W J 1947 Carriages at Eleven London Hutchinson OCLC 155797891 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 Also four supplements privately printed Stedman Jane W 1996 W S Gilbert A Classic Victorian amp His Theatre Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 816174 3 Walbrook H M 1922 Gilbert amp Sullivan Opera A History and A Comment London F V White OCLC 3303311 Wilson Robin Frederic Lloyd 1984 Gilbert amp Sullivan The Official D Oyly Carte Picture History New York Alfred A Knopf ISBN 978 0 394 54113 6 Young Percy M 1971 Sir Arthur Sullivan London J M Dent ISBN 0 460 03934 2 External links Edit Wikisource has original text related to this article Trial by Jury Wikiquote has quotations related to Trial by Jury Wikimedia Commons has media related to Trial by Jury Trial by Jury at The Gilbert amp Sullivan Archive Trial by Jury at The Gilbert amp Sullivan Discography Opening night review in The Times published 29 March 1875 Video of Trial by Jury 23 minutes on YouTube with Martyn Green Omnibus 1953 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Trial by Jury amp oldid 1145118168, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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