Patience, or Bunthorne's Bride, is a comic opera in two acts, with music by Arthur Sullivan and libretto by W. S. Gilbert. First performed at the Opera Comique, London, on April 23 1881, it moved to the 1292-seat Savoy Theatre on October 10 1881, where it was the first theatrical production in the world to be lit entirely by electric light. Henceforth, the G&S comic operas would be known as the Savoy Operas, and both fans and performers of G&S would come to be known as "Savoyards." This was the sixth operatic collaboration of fourteen between Gilbert and Sullivan.
The opera is a satire on the aesthetic movement of the 1870's and '80s in England, when the output of poets, composers, painters and designers of all kinds was indeed prolific—but, some argued, empty and self-indulgent. This artistic movement was so popular, and also so easy to ridicule as a meaningless fad, that it made Patience a big hit. The topical nature of the story may make Patience somewhat less accessible to some modern audiences, and G&S fans tend to have strong feelings one way or the other about Patience. Modern productions have sometimes "updated" the setting of Patience to an analogous era, such as a hippie poet versus a beat poet.
A popular myth holds that the central character, Bunthorne, a "Fleshly Poet," was intended to satirize Oscar Wilde. However, this identification is retrospective: In fact, the authors hired Wilde, after the fact, to popularize the opera in America (see below). There is a good case to be made that Bunthorne is based on the poets Algernon Swinburne and Dante Gabriel Rossetti, who were considerably more famous than Wilde in 1881. Rossetti had been attacked for immorality by Robert Buchanan (under the pseudonym of Thomas Maitland) in an article called "The Fleshly School of Poetry", published in the Contemporary Review for October, 1871. The makeup and costume adopted by the first Bunthorne, George Grossmith, used the velvet jacket of Swinburne, the hair style and monocle of the painter James McNeill Whistler, and knee-breeches similar to those worn by Wilde and others.
Gilbert and Sullivan's partner, the impresario Richard D'Oyly Carte, was also the booking manager for Oscar Wilde. It was he who sent Wilde and his green carnation and knee-breeches to enlighten Americans on the English Aesthetic Movement and, incidentally, to build up the box office for Patience. Wilde even agreed to attend one of the early performances of Patience, with suitable publicity arranged by Helen Lenoir, who would become the second Mrs. D'Oyly Carte.
Gilbert originally conceived Patience as a tale of rivalry between two curates and of the groupies who attended upon them. The plot and even some of the dialogue was lifted straight out of Gilbert's Bab Ballad "The Rival Curates." During the course of writing the libretto, however, Gilbert took note of the criticism he had received for his very mild satirizing of a clergyman in The Sorcerer, and looked about for an alternate pair of rivals. The aesthetes proved to be a gift to topsy-turvydom.
Some remnants of the Bab Ballad version do survive in the final text of Patience. Bunthorne sings to Grosvenor, "Your style is much too sanctified—your cut is too canonical!" Later, Grosvenor agrees to change his lifestyle by saying, "I do it on compulsion!"—the very words used by the Reverend Hopley Porter in the Bab Ballad.
In the British provinces, Patience played — either by itself, or in repertory — continuously from summer 1880 through 1885, then again in 1888. It rejoined the touring repertory in 1892 and was included in every season until 1955–56. A new production debuted on January 28 1957. The opera returned to its regular place in the repertory, aside from a break in 1962–63. Late in the company's history, it toured a reduced set of operas to reduce costs. Patience had its final D'Oyly Carte performances in April 1979 and was left out of the company's last three seasons of touring.
In America, Richard D'Oyly Carte mounted a production at the Standard Theatre in September 1881, six months after the London premiere. Unlike H.M.S. Pinafore, there were no "pirated" productions before the official version opened, although there were several afterwards.
Patience entered the repertory of the English National Opera in 1969, in an acclaimed production with Derek Hammond-Stroud as Bunthorne. The production was later mounted in Australia and was preserved on video as part of the Brent Walker series. In 1984, ENO also took the production on tour to the Metropolitan Opera House, in New York City.
The following table shows the history of the D'Oyly Carte productions in Gilbert's lifetime:
| Theatre | Opening Date | Closing Date | Perfs. | Details |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Opera Comique | April 23 1881 | October 8 1881 | 170 | |
| Savoy Theatre | October 10 1881 | November 22 1882 | 408 | |
| Standard Theatre, New York | September 22 1881 | March 23 1882 | 177 | Authorised American production |
| Savoy Theatre | November 7 1900 | April 20 1901 | 150 | First London revival |
| Savoy Theatre | April 4 1907 | August 24 1907 | 51 | First Savoy repertory season; played with three other operas. Closing date shown is of the entire season. |
When Bunthorne is finally left alone, he confesses that his aestheticism is a complete sham, and mocks the field's pretensions ("If you're anxious for to shine"). Soon, Patience approaches and he confesses his love to her, yet she turns him down even after he reveals that he is a fraud. Later, Lady Angela, one of Bunthorne's lovelorn admirers, discusses Patience's inability to love since a childhood crush ("Long years ago"). Lady Angela rhapsodizes upon love as the one truly unselfish pursuit in the world. Impressed by this eloquence, Patience promises to fall in love at the earliest opportunity.
Said opportunity is provided by one Archibald Grosvenor, another aesthete who turns out to be Patience's childhood love. The two declare themselves determined to love one another ("Prithee, pretty maiden"), but are brought up short by the realization that as Grosvenor is perfect in all aspects, for Patience to love him would be a selfish act, and therefore impossible; thus, they must part. Patience goes forth, only to encounter Bunthorne in the act of raffling himself off among his lady followers ("Let the merry cymbal sound"), and proposes to unselfishly sacrifice herself by loving him. A delighted Bunthorne accepts immediately, and his followers, their idol lost, return to the Dragoons to whom they are engaged. All seems resolved, when Grosvenor enters and the ladies, finding him even more aesthetic than Bunthorne, become his partisans instead ("Oh, list while we a love confess"), much to Bunthorne's and Grosvenor's dismay.
The following tables show the casts of the principal original productions and D'Oyly Carte Opera Company touring repertory at various times through to the company's 1982 closure:
| Role | Opera Comique 1880 | Standard Theatre 1880 | Savoy Theatre 1900 | Savoy Theatre 1907 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Colonel | Richard Temple | W. T. Carleton | Jones Hewson | Frank Wilson |
| Major | Frank Thornton | Arthur Wilkinson | W. H. Leon | Richard Andean |
| Duke | Durward Lely | Lyn Cadwaladr | Robert Evett | Harold Wilde |
| Bunthorne | George Grossmith | J. H. Ryley | Walter Passmore | Charles H. Workman |
| Grosvenor | Rutland Barrington | James Barton | Henry Lytton | John Clulow |
| Solicitor | George Bowley | William White | H. Carlyle Pritchard | Ronald Greene |
| Angela | Jessie Bond | Alice Burville | Blanche Gaston-Murray | Jessie Rose |
| Saphir | Julia Gwynne | Rose Chapelle | Lulu Evans | Marie Wilson |
| Ella | May Fortescue | Alma Stuart Stanley | Agnes Fraser | Ruby Gray |
| Jane | Alice Barnett | Augusta Roche | Rosina Brandram | Louie Rene |
| Patience | Leonora Braham | Carrie Burton | Isabel Jay | Clara Dow |
| Role | D'Oyly Carte 1915 Tour | D'Oyly Carte 1925 Tour | D'Oyly Carte 1935 Tour | D'Oyly Carte 1945 Tour |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Colonel | Frederick Hobbs | Darrell Fancourt | Darrell Fancourt | Darrell Fancourt |
| Major | Allen Morris | Martyn Green | Frank Steward | C. William Morgan |
| Duke | Dewey Gibson | Charles Goulding | John Dean | Herbert Garry |
| Bunthorne | Henry Lytton | Henry Lytton | Martyn Green | Grahame Clifford |
| Grosvenor | Leicester Tunks | Henry Millidge | Leslie Rands | Leslie Rands |
| Solicitor | E. A. Cotton | Alex Sheahan | W. F. Hodgkins | Ernest Dale |
| Angela | Nellie Briercliffe | Aileen Davies | Marjorie Eyre | Marjorie Eyre |
| Saphir | Ella Milne | Beatrice Elburn | Elizabeth Nickell-Lean | Brenda Thompson |
| Ella | Phyllis Smith | Irene Hill | Margery Abbott | Rosalie Dyer |
| Jane | Bertha Lewis | Bertha Lewis | Dorothy Gill | Ella Halman |
| Patience | Elsie McDermid | Winifred Lawson | Sylvia Cecil | Margery Abbott |
| Role | D'Oyly Carte 1950 Tour | D'Oyly Carte 1956 Tour | D'Oyly Carte 1965 Tour | D'Oyly Carte 1975 Tour |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Colonel | Darrell Fancourt | Donald Adams | Donald Adams | John Ayldon |
| Major | Peter Pratt | John Reed | Alfred Oldridge | James Conroy-Ward |
| Duke | Leonard Osborn | Leonard Osborn | Philip Potter | Meston Reid |
| Bunthorne | Martyn Green | Peter Pratt | John Reed | John Reed |
| Grosvenor | Alan Styler | Arthur Richards | Kenneth Sandford | Kenneth Sandford |
| Solicitor | Brian Crossley | Wilfred Stelfox | Geoffrey Lloyd | Jon Ellison |
| Angela | Joan Gillingham | Beryl Dixon | Peggy Ann Jones | Judi Merri |
| Saphir | Joyce Wright | Elizabeth Howarth | Patricia Leonard | |
| Ella | Henrietta Steytler | Jean Hindmarsh | Valerie Masterson | Rosalind Griffiths |
| Jane | Ella Halman | Ann Drummond-Grant | Christene Palmer | Lyndsie Holland |
| Patience | Margaret Mitchell | Cynthia Morey | Ann Hood | Pamela Field |
Operas by Gilbert and Sullivan | English-language operas | Comic operas | Operas
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