Beginnings By 1874,
Richard D'Oyly Carte, a musician and ambitious young
impresario, had begun producing operettas in London. He announced his ambitions on the front of the programme for one of his productions that year: "It is my desire to establish in London a permanent abode for light opera."
The Observer reported, "Mr D'Oyly Carte is not only a skilful manager, but a trained musician, and he appears to have grasped the fact that the public are beginning to become weary of what is known as a genuine
opera bouffe, and are ready to welcome a musical entertainment of a higher order, such as a musician might produce with satisfaction". He wanted to establish a body of tasteful English
comic opera that would appeal to families, in contrast to the
bawdy burlesques and adaptations of French operettas and opera bouffes that dominated the London musical stage at that time. In early 1875 Carte was managing London's
Royalty Theatre. Needing a short piece to round out an evening's entertainment featuring the popular
Offenbach operetta
La Périchole he brought
W. S. Gilbert and
Arthur Sullivan together. On tour in 1871, Carte had conducted Sullivan's one-act comic opera
Cox and Box, which received an 1874 London revival. In 1873 Gilbert had offered a libretto to Carte about an English courtroom, but at the time Carte knew of no composer available to set it to music. Carte remembered Gilbert's libretto and suggested to Gilbert that Sullivan write the music for a one-act comic opera,
Trial by Jury, which was quickly composed and added to the Royalty's bill in March 1875. The witty and "very English" little piece proved even more popular than
La Périchole and became the first great success of Carte's scheme to found his school of English comic opera, playing for 300 performances from 1875 to 1877, as well as touring and enjoying many revivals. At the Theatre Royal, in
Dublin, Ireland in September 1875, while managing the first tour of
Trial by Jury, Carte met an owner of the theatre,
Michael Gunn, who was fascinated by Carte's vision for establishing a company to promote English comic opera. Gunn later joined Carte's management team. Still, Carte continued to produce continental operetta, touring in the summer of 1876 with a repertoire consisting of three English adaptations of French opera bouffe and two one-act English curtain raisers (
Happy Hampstead and
Trial by Jury). Carte himself was the musical director of this travelling company, which disbanded after the tour. , later Helen Carte Carte found four
financial backers and formed the Comedy Opera Company in 1876 to produce more works by
Gilbert and Sullivan, along with the works of other British lyricist/composer teams. With this theatre company, Carte finally had the financial resources, after many failed attempts, to produce a new full-length Gilbert and Sullivan opera. Carte leased the Opera Comique, a small theatre off
The Strand. In February 1877 Carte engaged a novice Scottish actress,
Helen Lenoir, for a small role in a touring production. She soon left the tour and obtained a position in Carte's entertainment agency. Lenoir was well-educated, and her grasp of detail and diplomacy, as well as her organisational ability and business acumen, surpassed even Carte's.
Frank Desprez, the editor of
The Era, wrote: "Her character exactly compensated for the deficiencies in his." She became intensely involved in all of his business affairs and soon managed many of the company's responsibilities, especially concerning touring. She travelled to America numerous times over the years to arrange the details of the company's New York engagements and American tours. The first comic opera produced by the Comedy Opera Company was Gilbert and Sullivan's
The Sorcerer, about a tradesmanlike London sorcerer. It opened in November 1877 together with ''
Dora's Dream'', a curtain-raiser with music by Sullivan's assistant
Alfred Cellier and words by
Arthur Cecil, a friend of both Gilbert and Sullivan. Instead of writing a piece for production by a theatre proprietor, as was usual in
Victorian theatres, Gilbert, Sullivan and Carte produced the show with their own financial support. They were therefore able to select their own cast of performers, rather than being obliged to use the actors already engaged at the theatre. They chose talented actors, most of whom were not well-known stars and did not command high fees, and to whom they could teach a more
naturalistic style of performance than was commonly used at the time. Carte's talent agency provided many of the artists to perform in the new work. They then tailored their work to the particular abilities of these performers. Some of the cast members, including principal comedian
George Grossmith,
Richard Temple and
Rutland Barrington, stayed with the company for almost 15 years. Two other longstanding members of the company were
Rosina Brandram, who started in D'Oyly Carte touring companies with
The Sorcerer, and
Jessie Bond who joined the group for
Pinafore at the Opera Comique in 1878. As Grossmith wrote in 1888, "We are all a very happy family." Knowing that Gilbert and Sullivan shared his vision of broadening the audience for British light opera by increasing its quality and respectability, Carte gave Gilbert wider authority as a director than was customary among Victorian producers, and Gilbert tightly controlled all aspects of production, including staging, design and movement. Gilbert hired the
Gaiety Theatre's ballet-master
John D'Auban to choreograph most of the Savoy operas. The skill with which Gilbert and Sullivan used their performers had an effect on the audience; as the critic
Herman Klein wrote: "we secretly marvelled at the naturalness and ease with which [the Gilbertian quips and absurdities] were said and done. For until then no living soul had seen upon the stage such weird, eccentric, yet intensely human beings .... [They] conjured into existence a hitherto unknown comic world of sheer delight."
The Sorcerer ran for 178 performances, a healthy run at the time, making a profit, and Carte sent out a touring company in March 1878. The success of
The Sorcerer showed Carte, Gilbert and Sullivan that there was a future in family-friendly English comic opera.
Pinafore to Patience souvenir programme The next Gilbert and Sullivan collaboration,
H.M.S. Pinafore, opened in May 1878. The opera's initial slow business was generally ascribed to a heat wave that made the stuffy Opera Comique particularly uncomfortable. Carte's partners in the Comedy Opera Company lost confidence in the show and posted closing notices. After Carte made promotional efforts and Sullivan included some of the
Pinafore music in several promenade concerts that he conducted at
Covent Garden,
Pinafore became a hit. The Opera Comique was required to close at Christmas 1878 for repairs to drainage and sewage under the
Public Health Act 1875. Carte used the enforced closure of the theatre to invoke a contract clause reverting the rights of
Pinafore and
Sorcerer to Gilbert and Sullivan after the initial run of
H.M.S. Pinafore. Carte then took a six-month personal lease on the theatre beginning on 1 February 1879. Carte persuaded Gilbert and Sullivan that when their original agreement with the Comedy Opera Company expired in July 1879, a business partnership among the three of them would be to their advantage. The three each put up £1,000 and formed a new partnership under the name "Mr Richard D'Oyly Carte's Opera Company". Under the partnership agreement, once the expenses of mounting the productions had been deducted, each of the three men was entitled to one third of the profits. Carte's stagehands managed to ward off their backstage attackers and protect the scenery. The Comedy Opera Company opened a rival production of
H.M.S. Pinafore in London, but it was not as popular as the D'Oyly Carte production, and soon closed. Legal action over the ownership of the rights ended in victory for Carte, Gilbert and Sullivan. From 1 August 1879, the company, later called the D'Oyly Carte Opera Company, became the sole authorised producer of the works of Gilbert and Sullivan. and Carte soon sent two additional companies out to tour in the provinces. The opera ran for 571 performances in London, the second longest run in musical theatre history up to that time. More than 150 unauthorised productions sprang up in America alone, but because American law then offered no
copyright protection to foreigners, Gilbert, Sullivan and Carte had no way to prevent them. To try to make some money from the popularity of their opera in America, Carte travelled to New York with Gilbert, Sullivan and the company to present an "authentic" production of
Pinafore on Broadway, beginning in December 1879, also mounting American tours. Beginning with
Pinafore, Carte licensed the
J. C. Williamson company to produce the works in Australia and New Zealand. In an effort to head off unauthorised American productions of their next opera,
The Pirates of Penzance, Carte and his partners opened it in New York on 31 December 1879, prior to its 1880 London premiere.
Pirates was an immediate hit in New York, and later London, becoming one of the most popular Gilbert and Sullivan operas. To secure the British copyright, there was a perfunctory performance the afternoon before the New York premiere, at the Royal Bijou Theatre,
Paignton,
Devon, organised by Helen Lenoir. The next Gilbert and Sullivan opera,
Patience, opened at the Opera Comique in April 1881 and was another big success, becoming the second longest-running piece in the series and enjoying numerous foreign productions. Patience satirised the self-indulgent
Aesthetic movement of the 1870s and '80s in England, part of the 19th-century European movement that emphasised
aesthetic values over moral or social themes in literature,
fine art, the
decorative arts, and interior design. From the beginning, the D'Oyly Carte Opera Company established strict rules for its actors and actresses, to avoid any hint of scandal such as performers were accused of in other companies. As Jessie Bond described in her autobiography: No lingering about was allowed, no gossiping with the other actors; the women’s dressing-rooms were on one side of the stage, the men's on the other, and when we were not actually playing we had to mount at once our respective narrow staircases – sheep rigorously separated from the goats! Once, when my mother came to see me in London, expecting to find me dwelling in haunts of gilded luxury, and far down the road to perdition, I took her behind the scenes and showed her the arrangements for the actors and actresses, conventual in their austerity. ... I think there never was a theatre run on lines of such strict propriety; no breath of scandal ever touched it in all the twenty years of my experience. Gilbert would suffer no loose word or gesture either behind the stage or on it, and watched over us young women like a dragon. , c. 1881 With profits from the success of the Gilbert and Sullivan operas and his concert and lecture agency (his talent roster included
Adelina Patti,
Clara Schumann, Offenbach,
Oscar Wilde and
Charles Gounod), He chose the name in honour of the
Savoy Palace. The Savoy Theatre was a state-of-the-art facility, setting a new standard for technology, comfort and decor. It was the first public building in the world to be lit entirely by electric lights
Patience was the first production at the new theatre, transferring there on 10 October 1881. The first generator proved too small to power the whole building, and though the entire front-of-house was electrically lit, the stage was lit by gas until 28 December 1881. At that performance, Carte stepped on stage and broke a glowing lightbulb before the audience to demonstrate the safety of the new technology.
The Times concluded that the theatre "is admirably adapted for its purpose, its acoustic qualities are excellent, and all reasonable demands of comfort and taste are complied with." Carte and his manager,
George Edwardes (later famous as manager of the Gaiety Theatre), introduced several innovations at the theatre, including numbered seating, free programme booklets, the "queue" system for the pit and gallery (an American idea) and a policy of no tipping for cloakroom or other services. The last eight of Gilbert and Sullivan's comic operas were premièred at the Savoy. During the years when the Gilbert and Sullivan operas were being written, the company also produced
operas by other composer–librettist teams, either as curtain-raisers to the Gilbert and Sullivan pieces, or as touring productions, as well as other works to fill the Savoy Theatre in between Savoy operas, and Carte also toured the Gilbert and Sullivan operas extensively. For example, a souvenir programme commemorating the 250th performance of
Patience in London and its 100th performance in New York shows that, aside from these two productions of
Patience, Carte was simultaneously producing two companies touring with
Patience, two companies touring with other Gilbert and Sullivan operas, a company touring with
Olivette (co-produced with
Charles Wyndham) a company touring
Claude Duval in America, a production of
Youth running at a New York theatre, a lecture tour by Archibald Forbes (a war correspondent) and productions of
Patience,
Pirates,
Claude Duval and
Billee Taylor in association with J. C. Williamson in Australia, among other things. In the 1880s Carte also introduced the practice of licensing amateur theatrical societies to present works for which he held the rights, increasing their popularity and the sales of scores and libretti, as well as the rental of band parts. This had an important influence on amateur theatre in general. Cellier and Bridgeman wrote in 1914 that, prior to the creation of the
Savoy operas, amateur actors were treated with contempt by professionals. After the formation of amateur Gilbert and Sullivan companies licensed to perform the operas, professionals recognised that the amateur societies "support the culture of music and the drama. They are now accepted as useful training schools for the legitimate stage, and from the volunteer ranks have sprung many present-day favourites." Cellier and Bridgeman attributed the rise in quality and reputation of the amateur groups largely to "the popularity of, and infectious craze for performing, the Gilbert and Sullivan operas". The
National Operatic and Dramatic Association was founded in 1899. It reported, in 1914, that nearly 200 British societies were producing Gilbert and Sullivan operas that year.
Iolanthe to The Gondoliers '' After
Patience, the company produced
Iolanthe, which opened in 1882. During its run, in February 1883, Carte signed a five-year partnership agreement with Gilbert and Sullivan, obligating them to create new operas for the company upon six months' notice. Sullivan had not intended immediately to write a new work with Gilbert, but he suffered a serious financial loss when his broker went bankrupt in November 1882 and must have felt the long-term contract necessary for his security. But he soon felt trapped. The Gilbert scholar Andrew Crowther comments, regarding the agreement: "Effectively, it made [Gilbert and Sullivan] Carte's employees – a situation which created its own resentments." The partnership's next opera,
Princess Ida, opened in January 1884. Carte soon saw that
Ida was running weakly at the box office and invoked the agreement to call upon his partners for a new opera to be written. Almost from the beginning of the partnership, the musical establishment put pressure on Sullivan to abandon comic opera, and he soon regretted having signed the five-year contract. Sullivan asked to be released from the partnership on several occasions. Nevertheless, they coaxed eight comic operas out of Gilbert and Sullivan in the 1880s. When
Princess Ida closed after a comparatively short run of nine months, for the first time in the partnership's history, the next opera was not ready. To make matters worse, Gilbert suggested a plot in which people fell in love against their wills after taking a magic lozenge – a scenario that Sullivan had previously rejected, and he now rejected the "lozenge plot" again. Gilbert eventually came up with a new idea and began work in May 1884. The company produced the first revival of
The Sorcerer, together with
Trial by Jury, and matinees of
The Pirates of Penzance played by a cast of children, while waiting for the new work to be completed. This became the partnership's most successful opera,
The Mikado, which opened in March 1885. The piece satirised British institutions by setting them in a fictional Japan. At the same time, it took advantage of the Victorian craze for the exotic Far East using the "picturesque" scenery and costumes of Japan.
The Mikado became the partnership's longest-running hit, enjoying 672 performances at the Savoy Theatre, the second longest run for any work of musical theatre up to that time, and it was extraordinarily popular in the U.S. and worldwide. Beginning with
The Mikado,
Hawes Craven, the designer of the sets for
Henry Irving's spectacular
Shakespeare productions at the
Lyceum Theatre, designed all the D'Oyly Carte sets until 1893. The piece, though profitable, was a relative disappointment after the extraordinary success of
The Mikado. When
Ruddigore closed after a run of only nine months, the company mounted revivals of earlier Gilbert and Sullivan operas for almost a year. After another attempt by Gilbert to persuade Sullivan to set a "lozenge plot", Gilbert met his collaborator half way by writing a serio-comic plot for
The Yeomen of the Guard, which premiered in October 1888. The opera was a success, running for over a year, with strong New York and touring productions. During the run, in March 1889, Sullivan again expressed reluctance to write another comic opera, asking if Gilbert would write a "dramatic work on a larger musical scale". Gilbert declined, but offered a compromise that Sullivan ultimately accepted: The two would write a light opera for the Savoy, and at the same time, Sullivan could work on a grand opera (
Ivanhoe) for a new theatre that Carte was constructing to present British grand opera. The new comic opera was
The Gondoliers, which opened in December 1889 and became one of the partnership's greatest successes. After Carte's first wife died in 1885, Carte married Helen Lenoir in 1888, who was, by this time, nearly as important in managing the company as Carte himself.
The Carpet Quarrel and the end of the partnership On 22 April 1890, during the run of
The Gondoliers, Gilbert discovered that maintenance expenses for the theatre, including a new £500 carpet for the front lobby of the theatre, were being charged to the partnership instead of borne by Carte. Gilbert confronted Carte, and Carte refused to reconsider the accounts: Even though the amount of the charge was not great, Gilbert felt it was a moral issue involving Carte's integrity, and he could not look past it. Gilbert wrote in a letter to Sullivan that "I left him with the remark that it was a mistake to kick down the ladder by which he had risen". Gilbert brought a lawsuit, but Sullivan sided with Carte, who was building the
Royal English Opera House, the inaugural production of which was to be Sullivan's forthcoming grand opera. Sullivan's opera,
Ivanhoe, had a successful run, but Carte did not find suitable successors for the theatre, and it soon failed. After
The Gondoliers closed in 1891, Gilbert withdrew the performance rights to his libretti and vowed to write no more operas for the Savoy. While the company presented new pieces and revivals at the Savoy, Carte's touring companies continued to play throughout Britain and in America. In 1894, for example, Carte had four companies touring Britain and one playing in America. comforts
Carte after failure of
The Grand Duke. Gilbert's aggressive, though successful, legal action had embittered Sullivan and Carte, but the partnership had been so profitable that the Cartes eventually sought to reunite Gilbert and Sullivan. The reconciliation finally came through the efforts of
Tom Chappell, who published the sheet music to the Savoy operas. In 1893 the company produced the penultimate Gilbert and Sullivan collaboration,
Utopia, Limited. While
Utopia was being prepared, the company produced
Jane Annie, by
J. M. Barrie and
Arthur Conan Doyle, with music by
Ernest Ford. Despite the popularity of Barrie and Conan Doyle, the show was a flop, closing in July 1893 after only 51 performances.
Utopia was the Savoy's most expensive production to date, but it ran for a comparatively disappointing 245 performances, until June 1894, turning a very modest profit. After
The Chieftain closed, the company toured the London suburbs, while Carte leased the Savoy Theatre to the
Carl Rosa Opera Company. The theatre was dark during the summer of 1895, reopening in November for a revival of
The Mikado. This was followed by
The Grand Duke, in 1896, which ran for 123 performances and was Gilbert and Sullivan's only financial failure.
The Gondoliers turned out to be Gilbert and Sullivan's last big hit, and after
The Grand Duke, the two men never collaborated again. Throughout the later 1890s, Carte's health was declining, and Mrs. Carte assumed more and more of the responsibilities of running the opera company. She profitably managed the theatre and the provincial touring companies. In 1899 the Savoy finally had a new success, with Sullivan and
Basil Hood's
The Rose of Persia, which ran for 213 performances. Neither Carte nor Sullivan lived to see the production of Sullivan and Hood's
The Emerald Isle (1901), for which
Edward German completed the score.
Early 20th century Carte left his theatre, opera company and hotels to his wife, who assumed full control of the family businesses. Her London and touring companies continued to present the Savoy operas in Britain and overseas. She leased the Savoy Theatre to
William Greet in 1901 and oversaw his management of the company's revival of
Iolanthe and the production of several new comic operas, including
The Emerald Isle (1901),
Merrie England (1902) and
A Princess of Kensington (with music by German, libretto by Hood), which ran for four months in early 1903 and then toured. When
A Princess of Kensington closed at the Savoy, Mrs. Carte leased the theatre to other managements until 8 December 1906. The company's fortunes declined for a time, and by 1904 there was only a single touring company wending its way through the British provinces, when it took a seven-month South African tour. The season, which included
Yeomen,
The Gondoliers,
Patience and
Iolanthe, was a sensation Afterwards, however, Mrs. Carte's health prevented her from staging more London seasons. She retired and leased the theatre to
C. H. Workman, and the company did not perform in London again until 1919, although it continued to tour throughout Britain. After Gilbert's death in 1911, the company continued to produce productions of the operas in repertory until 1982. In 1911, Helen Carte hired
J. M. Gordon as stage manager. Gordon, who was promoted to stage director in 1922, had been a member of the company and a stage manager under Gilbert's direction, and he fiercely preserved the company's performing traditions in exacting detail for 28 years. Except for
Ruddigore, which underwent some cuts and received a new overture, very few changes were made to the text and music of the operas as Gilbert and Sullivan had produced them, and the company stayed true to Gilbert's period settings. Even after Gordon's death, many of Gilbert's directorial concepts survived, both in the stage directions printed in the libretti and as preserved in company prompt books. Original choreography was also maintained. Some of the company's staging became accepted as traditional by Gilbert and Sullivan fans, and many of these traditional stagings are still imitated today in productions by both amateur and professional companies.
Helen Carte died in 1913, and Carte's son Rupert inherited the company. During World War I, he was away serving in the
Royal Navy. The company also toured in North America several times, beginning with a Canadian tour in 1927.
Charles Ricketts redesigned sets and costumes for
The Mikado (1926) and
The Gondoliers (1929). His costumes for
The Mikado were retained by all subsequent designers until 1982. In an interview in
The Observer in August 1919, Carte set out his policy for staging the operas: "They will be played precisely in their original form, without any alteration to the words, or any attempt to bring them up to date." This uncompromising declaration was modified in a later interview in which he said, "the plays are all being restaged. ... Gilbert's words will be unaltered, though there will be some freshness in the method of rendering them. Artists must have scope for their individuality, and new singers cannot be tied down to imitate slavishly those who made successes in the old days." The success of this season led to additional London seasons in 1921–22, 1924, and 1926; the company toured the rest of the year. Carte's first London season stimulated renewed interest in the operas, and by 1920 he had established a second, smaller company to tour smaller towns. It was disbanded in 1927, although the company often ran multiple tours simultaneously. Carte also hired
Harry Norris, who started with the touring company, then was Toye's assistant before becoming musical director. In 1917 the company made the first complete recording of a Gilbert and Sullivan opera,
The Mikado, for the
Gramophone Company. Rupert D'Oyly Carte supervised the company's recordings, including eight more acoustic recordings by 1924, and a series of electrical recordings (without dialogue) in the late 1920s and early 1930s. There were additional recordings, in high fidelity, for
Decca Records, in the late 1940s and early 1950s and stereo recordings in the late 1950s and early 1960s, all supervised after Rupert's death by his daughter,
Bridget D'Oyly Carte.
The new Savoy Theatre Rupert D'Oyly Carte also redesigned the Savoy Theatre. On 3 June 1929 the Savoy closed, and it was completely rebuilt to designs by Frank A. Tugwell with décor by
Basil Ionides. The old house had three tiers; the new one had two. The seating capacity was increased from 986 to 1,158. The theatre reopened 135 days later on 21 October 1929, with
The Gondoliers, designed by Ricketts and conducted by Sargent. Sheringham designed new productions that season for
H.M.S. Pinafore,
The Pirates of Penzance and
Patience (1929, with other designs contributed by Rumbold), and he later designed costumes for
Trial by Jury and
Iolanthe. The Savoy also hosted London seasons for the company in 1930–31, 1933, 1941, 1951, 1954, 1961, 1963–64, and 1975. London seasons at other theatres, mostly
Sadler's Wells, included summer seasons from 1935 to 1939, 1942, 1947 to 1950, 1953, 1971, 1975, 1977 and 1980; and winter seasons in 1956–57, 1958–59, 1960–61, 1963–64, 1965–66, 1967–68, and then every winter between 1969–70 and 1981–82. The company continued to tour the British provinces and abroad when it was not in London, and these tours also often included London suburbs. The company's musical director from 1929 (having been assistant musical director from 1925) was
Isidore Godfrey, who retained the position until 1968 and guest conducted the company in 1975, as part of the centenary season at the Savoy Theatre. Guest conductors during Godfrey's tenure were Sargent and
Boyd Neel.
Henry Lytton retired in 1934 after a quarter century as the principal comedian, and the company made a highly successful eight-month North American tour with its new principal comedian,
Martyn Green. In 1938 many company members participated in the Technicolor film of
The Mikado produced and conducted by Geoffrey Toye. On 3 September 1939, at the outbreak of World War II, the British government ordered the immediate and indefinite closure of all theatres. Carte cancelled the autumn tour and disbanded the company. Theatres were permitted to reopen from 9 September, but it took some weeks to reestablish the company. Some performers, including Martyn Green, were already committed elsewhere, and
Grahame Clifford was engaged to play his roles. The company resumed touring, in Edinburgh, on Christmas Day 1939. The company continued to perform throughout the war, both on tour and in London, but in 1940 German bombing destroyed the sets and costumes for five of its shows:
Cox and Box,
The Sorcerer,
H.M.S. Pinafore,
Princess Ida and
Ruddigore. The old productions of
Pinafore and
Cox and Box were recreated shortly after the war, and
Ruddigore received a new production, planned by Carte but not seen until after his death. The other two operas took longer to rejoin the company's repertory. On the other hand, for the first wartime season,
Peter Goffin, a protégé of Carte's daughter, Bridget, had designed a new production of
The Yeomen of the Guard first seen in January 1940, and his new
Ruddigore debuted in 1948. A return to the U.S. in 1947 was very successful, and the company resumed frequent visits to America. She soon hired
Frederic Lloyd as general manager. Bridget and Lloyd also took steps to keep the productions fresh, engaging designers to redesign the costumes and scenery. Peter Goffin, who had redesigned
Yeomen (1939) and
Ruddigore (1948) for the company, created new settings and costumes for Bridget for half a dozen more productions:
The Mikado (1952; settings only, most of the celebrated Ricketts costumes being retained),
Patience (1957),
The Gondoliers (1958),
Trial by Jury (1959),
H.M.S. Pinafore (1961; ladies' costumes) and
Iolanthe (1961). A new production of
Princess Ida in 1954 was designed by James Wade.
Eleanor Evans, however, was an example of the company's stage directors from 1949 to 1953 who were said to be reluctant to update and freshen stagings. In 1957 Goffin designed a unit set for the company to facilitate touring, reducing the number of vans required to carry the scenery from twenty to nine. In 1949 the company began a new series of recordings with Decca, featuring Green, who had returned to the company after the war, and continued the series with his successor,
Peter Pratt. The company cooperated with the production of the 1953 film
The Story of Gilbert and Sullivan, which used some former members of the company in the cast. In 1955 the company gave a seven-month tour to the U.S. to celebrate the 75th anniversary of its first American productions. In 1959 the company began the tradition of holding a zany "last night" on the last evening of each London season. She endowed the trust with the company's scenery, costumes, band parts and other assets, together with a cash endowment, and supervised the production of operas on behalf of the trust until economic necessity forced the closure of the company in 1982. As it turned out, competing professional productions of Gilbert and Sullivan did not harm the company. Beginning in 1959, the company re-recorded most of the operas with Pratt's successor,
John Reed, and also recorded a number of other Sullivan pieces. It made a
cinema film of The Mikado in 1966, and recorded for television broadcast its productions of
Patience (1965) and
H.M.S. Pinafore (1973). It also supplied the soundtrack for a cartoon film of
Ruddigore (1967). During the 1960s, the company gave five North American tours. A new stage director,
Michael Heyland, was hired in 1969, staying until 1978. Among his new productions were
The Sorcerer in 1971,
Utopia, Limited in 1975 and
Iolanthe in 1977. In March and April 1975, after the regular London season at Sadler's Wells, the company moved to the Savoy Theatre for a fortnight's centennial performances, beginning on 25 March, the 100th anniversary of the first performance of
Trial by Jury. All thirteen surviving Gilbert and Sullivan operas were performed in chronological order.
Trial by Jury was given four times, as a curtain raiser to
The Sorcerer,
Pinafore and
Pirates and as an afterpiece following
The Grand Duke. A highlight of the season was a new staging of
Utopia Limited (later given again at the
Royal Festival Hall), its first revival by the company.
The Grand Duke was given as a concert performance, with narration by the
BBC presenter
Richard Baker.
Royston Nash, who was at the company's musical helm from 1971 to 1979, conducted most of the performances, with Isidore Godfrey (
Pinafore) and
Sir Charles Mackerras (
Pirates and
Mikado) as guest conductors. Princes Philip and Andrew saw
The Gondoliers. In the final performance of
Trial by Jury, the regular D'Oyly Carte chorus was augmented by fourteen former stars of the company:
Sylvia Cecil,
Elsie Griffin,
Ivan Menzies,
John Dean,
Radley Flynn,
Elizabeth Nickell-Lean,
Ella Halman,
Leonard Osborn, Cynthia Morey,
Jeffrey Skitch, Alan Barrett,
Mary Sansom,
Philip Potter and Gillian Humphreys. In 1977, during
Queen Elizabeth II's Jubilee Year, the company gave a Royal Command Performance of
Pinafore at Windsor Castle. The principal soprano
Valerie Masterson married the company's principal flautist, Andrew March. She explained, "people didn't have flats or houses ... touring was your life." Throughout its history, the company maintained strict moral standards, and it was sometimes referred to as the "Savoy boarding school", enforcing policies regarding behaviour on and off stage, and even a dress code. Soprano Cynthia Morey ascribed the strong affection that artists had for the company to "the unique family atmosphere engendered by the company's direct descent from its creators, Gilbert, Sullivan ... Richard D'Oyly Carte, followed by his widow, Helen, his son Rupert, and finally his granddaughter Bridget." The company also preserved, for over a century, what
The Times called a "unique performance style, which may be summarised as a combination of good taste and good fun". In 1980 the
English Arts Council's Music Panel and Touring Committee recommended that the Arts Council make a grant to the company, but this idea was rejected. The company's fans made an effort to raise private funds, but these were insufficient to make up the accelerating losses. In 1981 the producer George Walker proposed to film the company performing all of the Gilbert and Sullivan operas but backed out. Bridget D'Oyly Carte was forced to close the company in 1982, after a final London season in which Reed and Masterson returned as guest artists. It gave its last performance on 27 February 1982, at the
Adelphi Theatre. A three-LP recording of this performance was released, which included songs from all of the Gilbert and Sullivan operas. Richard D'Oyly Carte and his opera companies had presented Gilbert and Sullivan works nearly continuously for 107 years since the opening of
Trial by Jury in 1875. Even after it closed, the company's productions continued to influence the productions of other Gilbert and Sullivan companies. ==Revival of the company==