SULLIVAN, ARTHUR BIOGRAPHY(1842 - 1900)
The name of Sir Arthur Sullivan is indissolubly wedded with
that of W.S Gilbert, with whom he wrote a succession of operettas that have
remained a popular part of English national repertoire, for long the sole
property of the company founded for their performance by Richard D'Oyly Carte,
who later built the Savoy Theatre in London for the performance of what became
the Savoy Operas. The national institution that Gilbert and Sullivan have
become has drawn attention away from Sullivan's more serious work.
Operettas
Operettas with words by Gilbert range from Trial by Jury in 1875 to The Gondoliers in 1889, followed in 1893 by Utopia Limited and, in 1896, by the lesser known The Grand Duke. HMS Pinafore, The Pirates of Penzance, Patience, with its satire on Oscar Wilde, the political satire Iolanthe, The Mikado, Ruddigore and The Yeomen of the Guard, continue to bear witness to the deft and witty music of Sullivan and the comic verbal talents of Gilbert.
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