25 years previous to the action of the movie, Iolanthe, a fairy, falls in love with the Lord Chancellor. Fairy law states that Iolanthe must die because of it but the Queen of the Faries com... Read all25 years previous to the action of the movie, Iolanthe, a fairy, falls in love with the Lord Chancellor. Fairy law states that Iolanthe must die because of it but the Queen of the Faries commutes her sentence to banishment. Iolanthe gives birth to a son, Strephon, who is half a f... Read all25 years previous to the action of the movie, Iolanthe, a fairy, falls in love with the Lord Chancellor. Fairy law states that Iolanthe must die because of it but the Queen of the Faries commutes her sentence to banishment. Iolanthe gives birth to a son, Strephon, who is half a fairy and half a mortal. He falls in love with Phyllis, a ward in chancery who has attracte... Read all
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But...I sometimes wasn't sure whether I was listening to Gilbert & Sullivan or Sullivan & someone else.
It's very common for Gilbert and Sullivan companies to pop in a few contemporary references now and then. But here they went overboard. The early moviemakers learned that what works OK on stage, such as gag references about the politicos of the day, doesn't always work in the more permanent form of film. Same for video. I might have gotten some of the jokes if it were still 1984 and I were Canadian, but they didn't survive time and national borders.
For instance, in here the Fairy Queen originally sang the praises of one "Captain Shaw." Gilbert didn't explain who that was, and a new viewer might be confused. But informed Gilbertians say it was the Savoy Theater's fire marshal. This could be left alone and explained in the liner notes. It's not a joke anymore, but it is Gilbertia. But nooooo. This production replaces it with what might have been a real thigh-slapper in 1984. She sings about the BBC and someone named "Nolte Nash."
Who?
My point precisely.
Having to explain something Gilbert wrote in the libretto may be worth it as history. Having to explain something a rewrite man wrote for one production surely isn't.
I was less bothered by the anachronistic tap-dancing numbers than the rearrangements of Sullivan's music as well as Gilbert's words. On the DVD, they were obliged to put in a glossary of the topical changed references and I, for one, miss dear old Captain Shaw and Ovidius Naso. ("O CBC" isn't funny unless you're Canadian.)
The harp is usually thought of as a celestial instrument but most of the time, the harp interpolations were not my idea of heaven. I enjoyed Maureen Forrester but she was really over the top a good part of the time and the business with the stagehands didn't do much for me either.
Again, a total lack of trust in the material is evident in this production.
Did you know
- TriviaFilmed version of the 1984 Stratford Festival of Canada stage production.
- ConnectionsVersion of Iolanthe (1972)
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- Runtime2 hours 17 minutes
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