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A Sensation Novel (1871)
Libretto by W. S. Gilbert
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Wayne Ward, music director and pianist |
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| Gilbert's Gallery of Illustration Operas |
| Royal Victorian Opera Company |
| G&S Archive's Sensation Novel Page |
A Sensation Novel is probably the most unusual of Gilbert's topsy-turvy plots. The characters in a melodrama (a take-off on the novels of Wilkie Collins) have independent existences apart from their 'participation' in novels and have desires which are opposed to the stock treatment by the authors of 'sensation novels.'
The music publisher Joseph Williams bought the copyrights of Gilbert's "Gallery of Illustration" works in 1895 after the deaths in rapid succession of Mrs. Reed and the Reeds' son Alfred. While the original music had been by Reed, Williams rescored the work, not so much for performance as for the potential royalties attendant on Gilbert's name. The new music sounds like early Debussy. It serves to bring the work to the stage, but sounds quite out of period.
The video is a decent performance but one (early in the history of the 'Royal Vic') in which the timing in the dialog is not up to their later standard.
[Editor's Note: I saw this production of A Sensation Novel live at the Gilbert Sesquicentennial Conference in 1986. The play anticipates Pirandello's Six Characters in Search of an Author, one of Gilbert's most striking creations. I agree with Don Smith's assessment of the music.]
| Date | Label | Format | Number |
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| 1986 | [none] | VHS NTSC | [no number] |