J. W. Raynor and Earl Pierce formed a new troupe, using many of the former Christy Minstrel members. It opened in London, England, as "Raynor & Pierce's Christy Minstrels" at the
St. James's Theatre on 3 August 1857. They then performed at the
Surrey Theatre and later the "Polygraphic Hall" on King William Street, where they appeared for ten months. "Nellie Grey" by
Michael Balfe, as sung by Raynor, became popular. In 1859, the troupe moved to the St. James's Hall (Liverpool), performing for another four months and then touring the British provinces. It then returned to Polygraphic Hall, disbanding in August 1860. The success of this troupe led to the phrase "Christy Minstrels" coming to mean any blackface minstrel show. Soon, four new companies were formed, each claiming to be the "original" Christy Minstrels, because they each boasted one or two former members of the old troupe. One group played in
Dublin at the Chester Theatre in 1864, moving to London at the Standard Theatre in
Shoreditch in 1865. The Dublin performances were evidently popular enough that James Joyce mentions them in his short story collection
Dubliners and alludes to them on the opening page of
Finnegans Wake. Three months later, it moved to
St. James's Hall, where it began a run of 35 years until 1904. Eventually, the original members of that troupe retired or died, leaving only
"Pony" Moore and Frederic Burgess surviving into the 1870s. Therefore, the troupe changed its name to the '''"Moore & Burgess's Minstrels"'''. Other groups continued to use the title "Christy", but historian Frank Andrews describes their quality as poor. Some of them continued to perform into the twentieth century. George Orwell, in
The Road to Wigan Pier (published 1937), describes a coal miner's "Christy-minstrel face, completely black except for very red lips." ==Performance style==