Writer and composer , c. 1870 From the mid-1860s to the early 1870s,
W. S. Gilbert was extremely productive, writing a large quantity of comic verse, theatre reviews and other journalistic pieces, short stories, and dozens of plays and
comic operas. His output in 1870 included dozens of his popular comic
Bab Ballads; two blank verse comedies,
The Princess and
The Palace of Truth; two comic operas,
Our Island Home and
The Gentleman in Black; and various other short stories, comic pieces, and reviews appearing in various periodicals and newspapers. In 1871 he was even busier, producing seven plays and operas. Gilbert's dramatic writing during this time was evolving from his early
musical burlesques to a more restrained style, as exemplified in his string of blank-verse fairy comedies. The first of these was
The Palace of Truth, which opened in 1870 to widespread acclaim. The story and play
Creatures of Impulse date from the middle of this period, when Gilbert was trying different styles and working towards the mature style of his later work, including the famous series of
Gilbert and Sullivan operas. Gilbert described the play as a "musical fairytale". Italian-born
Alberto Randegger was better known as a conductor and professor of singing than as a composer, although he composed several full-length works and numerous vocal pieces in England in the 1860s and 1870s. He is also remembered for his important 1879 textbook entitled
Singing. His music for
Creatures of Impulse was criticised as "extremely undramatic",
Genesis of story and play Gilbert first published
Creatures of Impulse as a short story, under the title "A Strange Old Lady", in the 1870 Christmas number of
The Graphic, an illustrated weekly newspaper. He later selected it for inclusion in the only collection of his short stories published during his lifetime, ''
Foggerty's Fairy and Other Tales'' (1890), at which point he renamed it to match the theatrical adaptation. Gilbert did not originally intend for the story to be turned into a play; nonetheless, a few months later it was on stage. He adapted the story into a play for
Marie Litton's
Royal Court Theatre. Litton took over the proprietorship of the New Chelsea Theatre in 1871 and renamed it the Royal Court. Its opening attraction was the première of Gilbert's ''
Randall's Thumb, and when that play proved successful, it was no surprise, as the London Echo'' pointed out, that she followed it with another work by Gilbert.
Subsequent productions and publications The play was revived in 1872 at the Court Theatre, in 1873 at the
Queen's Theatre, and in 1874 at the
Vaudeville Theatre (running for over 100 performances), all in London. It appears to have gone through several changes during these revivals, the first of which was described on its playbill as a "shortened version", and the last as an "altered" one. as well as occasional professional groups, such as
Ben Greet's
Elizabethan Stage Society of England. An acting edition was published by T. H. Lacy around 1871. T. H. Lacy's company was acquired by
Samuel French, It was presented by Gilbert and Sullivan Opera Victoria in Australia in 2024. Substantial cuts were made in the text by the time the play was collected for
Original Plays, Fourth Series (1911), the last volume of the only large-scale collection of Gilbert's stage work. Victorian plays had to be approved by the
Lord Chamberlain for decency before they were performed, and the version submitted was then archived, providing a more-or-less complete collection of Victorian theatrical output, now part of the
British Library. Comparison of the "licensing copy" of
Creatures of Impulse from this archive with that printed in
Original Plays reveals lyrics for three additional songs and a second verse to the opening chorus and finale. ==Synopsis==