The work, originally titled
Pirates! The Ballet, was created for the
Queensland Ballet. The
choreographer was Daryl Gray, with
orchestration by Henry Aronson and design by Christopher Smith. The world première took place at the
Suncorp Theatre in
Brisbane,
Queensland, Australia, on 12 April 1991. Between 1991 and 1995, Gray slightly restructured the ballet and added 4 singers with musical staging to its cast. The Queensland Ballet performed the revised work in 1996, following which the company took it on an extended tour to the United States presented by
Columbia Artists Management. Gray largely re-choreographed the work for
Ballet San Jose for a 2004 revival and retitled
Pirates of Penzance – The Ballet!. In 2008,
Orlando Ballet, under the direction of
Bruce Marks, toured the ballet in Florida. It was again revived in November 2009 at Ballet San Jose. The
San Francisco Chronicle reviewer wrote of the revival, "the show is a perpetual motion machine. ... Ebullient, athletic, bright as a picture book and blurrily overstuffed, Ballet San Jose's
Pirates of Penzance is a crowd pleaser by default. With all that's happening onstage, how can you not be entertained?" However, "the libretto, score and theatrical elements tend to combine without much mutual enrichment." Rita Felciano of
San Jose Mercury News called the production "delightfully wacky", writing: "this laugh-out-loud comedy is guaranteed to cure you of the vapors!" The
San Francisco Chronicle commented that the audience focus is split between the singers and the dancers, and that the ballet "proudly flies under the more-is-more flag. From the steps packed into each dancer's arsenal to dauntingly busy crowd scenes, the show is a perpetual motion machine. Now and then, as if they didn't have enough to do, the dancers break into tap, jazz, Broadway shimmies or moonwalk riffs, as if in tribute to the late
Michael Jackson." The review added, "In the famous
'Major General' patter song, for example, the singers offer some of the deliciously impacted wordplay while the character ... runs through a whirling dumb show. Eventually, as if the lyrics were superfluous, the singers leave off". ==References==