The Duchess of Dantzic

Evie Greene, Lawrence Rea and Courtice Pounds, Act I

The Duchess of Dantzic is a comic opera in three acts, set in Paris, with music by Ivan Caryll and a book and lyrics by Henry Hamilton, based on the play Madame Sans-Gêne by Victorien Sardou and Émile Moreau. Additional lyrics by Adrian Ross. The story concerns Napoleon I and a laundress, Catherine Üpscher, who marries Marshal Lefebvre and becomes a Duchess.

The opera was first produced in London at the Lyric Theatre in 1903 and ran for 236 performances. Subsequently, it enjoyed a successful New York production and other productions around the world, and was revived in London and performed regularly by amateur theatre groups, particularly in Britain, until the 1950s.[1]

Background

Ivan Caryll

After composing a few comic operas early in his career, Caryll became extraordinarily successful in the 1890s, writing the music to hit musical comedies produced by George Edwardes, including The Shop Girl (1894), The Gay Parisienne (1896), The Circus Girl (1896) and A Runaway Girl (1898). After the turn of the century, he continued to write some of the most successful musical comedy scores of the era, including The Messenger Boy (1900), The Toreador (1901), The Girl From Kays (1902), The Earl and the Girl (1903) and The Orchid (1903). With The Duchess of Dantzic, he turned back to comic opera. Although the piece met with success, it was not the kind of blockbuster hit that the above-mentioned musical comedies were.[2]

The musical adaptation followed a celebrated production of an English version of the original French play, translated by J. Comyns Carr and starring Henry Irving and Ellen Terry.[3] The original production of The Duchess of Dantzic, produced by Edwardes, opened at the Lyric Theatre in London on 17 October 1903 and ran for 236 performances. It was directed by Robert Courtneidge, choreographed by Willie Warde and had scenery by Joseph Harker and costumes by Percy Anderson. The score was generally admired, although called old-fashioned.[4]

The original New York production at Daly's Theatre ran from 16 January 1905 to 15 April 1905 for a total of 93 performances. The production was directed by Holbrook Blinn and choreographed by Warde with the Anderson costumes. The cast consisted mostly of the London players, including Adrienne Augarde as Renée, Holbrook Blinn as Napoleon I, Evie Greene as Catherine, and Courtice Pounds as Papillon.[4]

J.C. Williamson produced the piece in Australia. A 1932 London revival starring Frank Cellier ran from 26 April to 20 May.[5]

Roles and original cast

Courtice Pounds as Papillon
Act I (1792)
Acts II And III - (1807)

Billie Burke was a replacement player.[6]

Synopsis

Act I

At the height of the French revolution, Catherine, nicknamed Madame Sans-Gêne ("without embarrassment"), a laundress, pursues her job, unimpressed by the revolutionary comings and goings. Her fiancé, Lefebvre, is absent, taking part in the storming of the royal palace. She concentrates on her job, in the course of which she is visited by Lieutenant Napoleon Bonaparte. He is too short of money to pay his laundry bill, and touched by his description of the calls on his modest income in supporting his family she lets him off his debts and even offers him some money to help him. However, she holds on to his unpaid bill.

As soon as Bonaparte has left, a young aristocrat, Philippe de Béthune, dashes in, to seek sanctuary from a pursuing revolutionary mob. Catherine takes pity on him, and, aided by the sympathetic pedlar Papillon, she hides Béthune in her bedroom. Her fiancé, Lefebvre, searches the place on behalf of the mob and publicly declares that she is not concealing anyone. Left alone he accuses her of hiding a lover. Béthune emerges from hiding to defend Catherine's honour, and Lefebvre is won over. He and Catherine help Béthune make his escape, leaving his young son and heir under their protection. Lefebvre gains a commission in the army and is appointed a lieutenant. Catherine is appointed vivandière (supplier of goods and victuals) to the regiment.

Act II
Holbrook Blinn as Napoleon, Act II

Fifteen years elapse. Bonaparte is now Emperor of the French, and all his old colleagues have been rewarded with titles and places at court. Lefebvre is now a Marshal of France, but his free-minded wife, Catherine, despite her new title of Duchess of Dantzic, not to mention her adopted son Adhèmar (Béthune's son), does not fit in with court etiquette, and Napoleon indicates to Lefebvre that he should divorce her and marry Mademoiselle Renée, whom the emperor considers more suitable. As Adhèmar is in love with Renée, he rebels against the emperor's cruel command and is arrested.

Act III

Adhèmar is liable to execution for rebellion. His pardon is dependent on his adopted parents' obeying Napoleon's orders and divorcing. Catherine confronts the emperor with the unpaid laundry bill from the days of his youthful poverty, and, reminded of her unselfish kindness to him, he relents, allows Catherine and Lefebvre to stay together, and blesses the marriage of Adhèmar and Renée.

Musical numbers

Billie Burke as a servant girl
Act 1
Act 2
Denis O'Sullivan as Lefebvre, Act II
Act 3

Critical reception

Punch magazine found the musical "well-balanced", although the action was "somewhat hindered" by the interpolated numbers.[7] Everybody's magazine declared that the music of Ivan Caryll has dignity and value and real melody with breadth and colour."[8] The New York Times wrote that "From start to finish the whole piece went with a swing which delighted and held the audience."[9]

References

  1. Bond, Ian. "Rarely Produced Shows". St. David's Players, accessed 22 July 2010
  2. Gänzl, Kurt (2001), "Ivan Caryll", The Encyclopedia of the Musical Theatre, Second Edition, Schirmer Books, p. 327, ISBN 0-02-864970-2
  3. The Times, 13 April 1897, p. 12
  4. 1 2 Traubner, Richard. Operetta: a theatrical history, Routledge, 2003 ISBN 0-415-96641-8
  5. The Times, 27 April 1932, p. 12 and 19 May 1932, p. 12
  6. "Billy Burke in The Dutchess of Dantzic. Wisconsin Historical Society, accessed 5 December 2013
  7. "Her Grace of Dance-it-an'-Sing-it", Punch, Volume 125, p. 323, Punch Publications Ltd., 4 November 1903
  8. Everybody's magazine, Volume 12, p. 532, North American Company, 1905
  9. "King Edward Sees New Play", The New York Times, 18 October 1903, p. 9

External links


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