I absolutely love this version of the Pirate King! Combining all the bling and opulence of Captain Hook with swashbucklery and mannierisms of Captain Jack Sparrow is fantastic!
Even D’Oyly Crafts production changed their cultural references over the years. The original production of Iolanthe costumed the Queen of the Fairies as a Wagnerian Valkyrie, but by the 1960s, her costume looked more like Glinda from Wizard of Oz. 1:09:30
An absolute joy. Ive seen many productions of The Pirates and it's always good but this is the best Ive ever seen. Great nod to Jack Sparrow from the Pirate King...Johnny would approve ❤
An excellent production. Only surpassed by the first production which I saw: the 1980 NY Shakespeare Festival one starring Linda Ronstadt and Rex Smith, in NYC's Central Park.. Ronstadt had told producer Joseph Papp that she wanted to do the show, and he told her she didn't have thole voice. To her credit, she took 2 years to study voice, and she aced Mable, the most difficult G&S part. It was in this production that the wonderful patter Trio, "It Really Doesn't Matter" was pirates from Ruddigore. The Police Sargent of that production seemed to be made of rubber, doing a wonderful dance while swinging his night stick . The theater is outdoors, and next to a lake, which was visible when the pirate ship slid into place. It was magical. So is this production.
Robbie Hagberg I think you we are going to go to the store for a bit of a sunroom and get it tomorrow to the store and doing that come to my house and get a new one for you was it tomorrow and I can go to the you and I can go
I first heard their trial by jury which is sooooo good and this one absolutely surpasses it which i didn't think was possible! Incredible!!!! Way to throw in really doesn't matter 🤩🎶🎉🎊
This is the perfect balance. It avoids being boring, unfunny and stale (like many of the D'Oyle Carte performances), while also avoiding being dumbed-down, slapstick, and bowdlerized (like the 1983 movie).
This production is as fine and fun as the Joseph Papp film of the Broadway musical whence it derives. My word! That’s a sentence worthy as any G&S circumlocution in song!
I live in North Carolina. Blackbeard was taken out by the Navy in Ocracoke. But it's true that there was a lot of give-and-take between the pirates and the royalty. He had been given a pardon from the queen but continued to regroup his pirates. Lieutenant Robert Maynard sent his Navy troops to finish off Blackbeard.
3:55 ruth song 9:16 ruth who you loved so much ? 14:45 take me with you Fred and Ruth duet 20:30 sister song/scene 30:56 Mabel Entrance 34:57 Mabel and sister song 55:55 sister sleep song 56:38 Mabel solo moment 1:07:00 Ruth sing (plan) 1:17:45 Mabel (Frederick stay) 1L42:36 Ruth 1:45:11 Poor wandering
I heard my first G & S at 14 on old pre-electric 78's which my school-mate's father gave him when he "updated". to electric recordings. So what I heard was recorded before 1928 by some of the D'Oyley-Carte cast who had been actually been directed. There are of course variations in this performance, but it is pedantic to insist on a pure Victorian production. I enjoyed it immensely. Some of the previous Opera Australia productions were too gimmicky - Was it the Lord High Executioner who popped up out of a barrell? And if so, why? Remember Gilbert's notice to cast "There will be a further rehearsal on Sunday to delete the improvements." The part is never greater than the whole
An excellent and original presentation - I could be wrong but most of the sets looked lacklustre and unimaginatative compared to other productions - but as I said I could be wrong.,
@@zelalife2559 your privated them, that's what you mean, right? Besides, there are other ways to make a YT video not publicly visible aside from privating, such as unlisting the video or even deleting it.
I"m assuming the higher keys in the 2 opening men's numbers is because the chorus is all baritenors and so is the PK. Don't they have any bass baritones in Australia?
I know I'm going to enjoy this production, but did no one notice that the ship's pennant is flying the wrong way? If they were on a speeding boat, it would trail behind them as shown; but since they are on a ship with sails, the pennant would be pointing forward, since that's the way the wind is blowing. Pedantic of me, I know, but it gives me something to do.
I agree, Jon English lent his own rock star aura to the character. This one is very good, but why be Captain Jack Sparrow? Put your stamp on it, like Jon English did.
@@lois3444 Exactly. Making the Pirate King look like Jack Sparrow distracts from the main show. It'd be like doing a performance of The Mikado and having Nanki-Pu dressed in a yellow tracksuit like Bruce Lee
Robbie Hagberg Osman called the person enzymes I was dating a parrot they called me when I was in the play room and pause it and I can go to bed early and then go back to sleep now and then go back and sleep in the bed if you want
The concept for the pirates have changed periodically often based on current cultural references, Earlier 20th century productions often had the “Captain Hook” look. Joseph Papp’s production in the late 70s emulated a yiunger and more dashing Errol Flynn type (as played by Kevin Kline and others). For the early 21st century, the main “pirate” reference in popular culture is the Pirates of the Caribbean movies, so it makes sense to use that reference.