Ivanhoe
(Arthur Sullivan and Julian Sturgis, 1891)
Background

Contemporary Drawing of the Original Production |
For most of his professional career, Sir Arthur Sullivan was exhorted by his contemporaries
to turn his attentions to Grand Opera. This he finally did only in 1890, when his collaboration
with Gilbert and his most creative years were all but behind him. Richard D'Oyly Carte took
the unprecedented step of building a brand new theater to give Sullivan's opera a home.
Ivanhoe opened at the Royal English Opera House on 31 January 1891. It enjoyed a
run of 155 nights an unqualified success for a work of this type.
Carte's plans evidently were to create a new school of English opera,
much as the Gilbert and Sullivan partnership had created a new school of English operetta,
but he was unable to find a worthy successor to Ivanhoe. Soon after, the Royal English
Opera House was in liquidation.
There is no consensus among Sullivan scholars about where Ivanhoe stands in
the composer's output. Some consider it an unjustly neglected masterpiece, while others find the
work tedious and uninspired. Julian Sturgis's prosaic libretto must certainly bear some of the blame,
but in agreeing to set it Sullivan must have thought it worthy of his time and his talents. Regardless
of what the scholars think, posterity has practically ignored Ivanhoe. The work has not
had a fully-staged production in living memory, and neither of the recordings is fully satisfactory.
A fair day in court for Ivanhoe is probably many years away.
Recordings
The 1989 Prince Consort recording is still
available. Two selections from the opera, "O moon art thou clad" and
"Ho! Jolly Jenkin," are included on the 1998 CD
Sullivan & Co.: The Operas that Got Away.
The G&S Archive's Ivanhoe Page
Marc Shepherd, oakapple@cris.com
Copyright ©1995-2005. All Rights Reserved.
Last Modified: 7-Jul-05
URL: http://www.cris.com/~oakapple/gasdisc/iva.htm
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