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NYGASP company performs "The Mikado" photo credit : Noah
Strone

LtoR: Louis Dall’Ava and Michael Scott Harris
in "The Yeomen of the Guard" photo credit : Carol Rosegg
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Laurelyn Watson Chase and Stephen Quint in "Trial by Jury"
credit: Carol Rosegg

Laurelyn Watson Chase as Yum-Yum in"The Mikado" credit: Michael A. Nemeth

Albert Bergeret (R) directs company
members
credit: Carol
Rosegg
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e-Release sm
For Immediate Release:
America’s Preeminent Gilbert & Sullivan Repertory Ensemble
New York Gilbert & Sullivan Players
Announces its 36th Season
kicks off with “Utopia, Limited” on November 21st
followed by productions of
“The Yeomen of the Guard,” “The Mikado,” “Trial by Jury”
with
“G&S a la Carte”
and a new
“G&S Sing-Along”
at Symphony Space
America’s foremost Gilbert & Sullivan repertory ensemble, the New York
Gilbert & Sullivan Players (NYGASP), is happy to announce that its new
fall, winter and spring season will kick off with a production of
Utopia, Limited on Sunday, November 21st (5PM) at
Peter Norton Symphony Space (2535 Broadway at 95th Street).
Its 36th annual season is spread
throughout the year as an alternative to its annual January program at New
York’s City Center, due to City Center’s planned winter construction and
renovations. The schedule
will also include Sunday afternoon presentations of: The Yeomen of
the Guard (December 5th), Trial by Jury
with the revue G&S a la Carte (March 20th)
and a special G&S Sing-Along – a NYGASP first—(May 22nd)
as well as a week-long engagement of The Mikado (December
29-January 2nd which includes a gala New Year’s Eve
performance). All performances will feature the full score and dialogue
with NYGASP’s cast and orchestra, ranging from partially staged
productions (Utopia, Limited; The Yeomen of the Guard) to
full productions (The Mikado; Trial by Jury) and the unique G&S
Sing-Along.
Under
the artistic and music direction of Albert Bergeret, the company
has presented over 2,600 performances throughout the United States,
Canada, and England. Incorporating a 25-piece orchestra, its productions
feature contemporary energy while retaining a traditional respect for each
of the G&S masterpieces. New York Gilbert & Sullivan Players is
considered by many to be the nation’s “leading custodian of the G&S
classics.”
Utopia, Limited,
or
The Flowers of Progress is a rarely performed G&S satire
concerning the attempts of an island paradise to clone the ways of
Victorian England. The score is full of arching melodies, sprightly tunes,
and rousing choruses while timely objects of Gilbert's wit include
political correctness and governmental gridlock. Not bad for a neglected
100 year old work! Gilbert's humor is a bit more vindictive than in his
previous works and Sullivan's score reflects the intricacies of a composer
striving for a new level of composition, but both are delightful in their
own way. Although Gilbert's lampooning of the 1862 invention of the
principle of "limited liability" (here in America it is called
"incorporation") seems a bit flat, the premise of an island paradise named
"Utopia" desiring to "improve" its lot by adopting all things British, the
privatization of government functions, the problems of the "tabloid
press", satire on the difficulty of singing tenor, and other references in
the show are uncannily up to date - typical of Gilbert's unerring insight
into human foibles. King Paramount of Utopia has sent his oldest daughter
to an English boarding school while importing an English lady to tutor his
younger girls. When the elder student returns to her south sea island
paradise home from the United Kingdom with seven idealistic "flowers of
progress" representing various British institutions (amongst them a
dashing young dragoon guard with whom she is in love) the locals adopt
their white washed versions of Victorian ways, with catastrophic results.
The Yeomen of the
Guard,
or
The Merryman and His Maid is the most operatic of the Gilbert
& Sullivan masterpieces. The score is full of grand and intimate moments -
delicate, dramatic, and sincerely moving by degrees. The only G&S
collaboration which takes place in an actual historic time and location,
it nevertheless contains the wit and satire of human nature which define
their art. Set in the Tower of London during the turbulent reign of King
Henry the Eighth, The Yeomen of the Guard is the story of a gallant
prisoner falsely accused, two girls who love him, and an out of work
itinerant jester. A comic jailer and a busy body old lady provide comic
relief from the multiple tales of intrigue as the heroic prisoner narrowly
escapes execution, woos the woman to whom he is already secretly wed, and
dashes the hopes of the jilted jester in the process.
The
Mikado
or The Town of Titipu, is set in a fictitious Japanese town full of
colorful characters - 3 little maids from school, a wandering minstrel, a
hilariously corrupt public official, and a Lord High Executioner who may
have a list of potential victims but is too tenderhearted to actually
perform his duties. Beautiful school girl Yum-Yum loves the romantic
minstrel Nanki-Poo but is engaged to Ko-Ko the executioner. This romantic
triangle takes the usual course of thwarted romance, until the arrival
first of the fearsome Katisha, claiming Nanki-Poo as her "perjured lover,"
and later of the emperor, or Mikado, himself - with his own list of
punishments to fit the crime. In order to resolve the ensuing
complications, Ko-Ko must use his wits to convince the most unattractive
Katisha to marry him - in record time. That done, all other potentially
dangerous circumstances are settled by the Mikado's all encompassing
pronouncement "nothing could possibly be more satisfactory." A timeless
story still as fresh as “The flowers that bloom in the spring”.
Trial by Jury
is an over the top send up of the legal system. A lecherous judge and all
male jury, a gold digging plaintiff, a self professed cad of a defendant,
and a sleazy lawyer turn the courtroom proceedings upside down with self
serving arguments and musical merriment. This 45 minute farce is the
perfect remedy for the boredom induced by long, drawn out trials on TV.
Beautiful Angelina is suing dashing Edwin for "breech of promise of
marriage". The courtroom buzzes with anticipation as Edwin enters and
introduces himself as a lover of variety, especially in women. The Jurymen
admit similar instincts, but condemn his lack of fidelity. The Court Usher
advises impartiality, as long as it favors the pretty girl, and introduces
the Judge who tells how he obtained his appointment to the position by
pretending to fall in love with, then ditching, a rich attorney's
"elderly, ugly daughter". All of the men drool over Angelina as she admits
to not being quite so unhappy about having been jilted as the law suit
would make it appear. Angelina's lawyer paints a melodramatic picture of
his client's mental anguish, so Edwin proposes to marry her on the spot
while marrying someone else the next day. When the idiotic lawyer points
out that this amounts to "burglary", (it should be bigamy), the courtroom
breaks into a great operatic parody to express the "nice dilemma". All is
resolved to everyone's satisfaction when the wealthy Judge agrees to marry
Angelina himself and pays off Edwin for his trouble.
G&S à
la Carte
is an
original revue developed by NYGASP to showcase its many talented artists
and the incredible range of work by the incomparable team of Gilbert &
Sullivan. From their most popular tongue-twisting “patter songs” to their
dramatic double choruses and their pyrotechnics of vocal virtuosity
----this revue is a new found favorite of seasoned G&S devotees as well as
new fans of the legendary team! Written to play as a follow up to the one
act Trial by Jury, the cast from the opening night of this first
G&S success in 1875 is invited to a party by producer Richard D’Oyly Carte
where material from the G&S canon not yet created at the time is performed
- in typical Gilbertian topsy-turvy fashion. When audience member and G&S
fan Walter interrupts the proceedings to point out these historical
inaccuracies, his intrusions are not
welcomed by the illustrious collaborators and their associates on stage,
until Walter demonstrates his own prowess at performing the G&S canon.
G&S
Sing-Along
is an opportunity for G&S lovers to join the NYGASP cast and orchestra in
singing and celebrating the most familiar and memorable songs and choruses
from the G&S repertory – all under the witty supervision of Artistic
Director/Conductor Albert Bergeret. Audience members are invited to bring
their own scores, purchase a compilation of the numbers to be presented at
the performance, or just read the lyrics printed in the program.
The
NYGASP 2010-11 season is made possible with public funds from the New York
State Council on the Arts, celebrating 50 years of building strong,
creative communities in New York State’s 62 counties.
Performance times are as follows: Utopia – Sunday, November
21st – 5PM; The Yeomen of the Guard – Sunday,
December 5th – 5PM; The Mikado – Wednesday,
December 29th - 3PM; Thursday, December 30th - 8PM;
Friday, December 31st - 7PM (ticket price for this performance
includes complimentary champagne toast!); Saturday, January 1st
– 3PM; Sunday, January 2nd - 3PM; Trial By Jury
with G&S a la Carte – March 20th - 5pm; G&S
Sing-Along – May 22nd – 5pm
Gilbert
& Sullivan tickets are generally priced from $80 to $60, with half price
tickets for children 12 and under. More detailed pricing information will
be available closer to performances dates. Information and tickets can be
obtained by phoning (212) 864-5400 or by visiting
www.nygasp.org
# # #
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