Gilbert & Sullivan at their best headed to Central Coast

Tobias Page as Strephon in the production of Iolanthe coming to The Art House

Iolanthe is Gilbert & Sullivan at their awesome, uproarious best and Gilbert & Sullivan Opera Sydney is bringing its sparkling, re-imagined production to The Art House Wyong on October 1.

When the eternally young fairy, Iolanthe, falls in love with a mortal, not even her friend the Fairy Queen can prevent her banishment for breaking fairy law.

Her secret, half-fairy son, Strephon, fights against identity, class, politics and the law itself to be with his love Phyllis – an effort made harder by her legal guardian and suitor, the Lord Chancellor, himself on a downhill spiral ever since his beloved Iolanthe disappeared.

Against a backdrop of amorous Lords and flirty Fae, and with farcical Fate lurking around the corner, a fairytale for our times takes wing.
 
Iolanthe – with just a touch of Beethoven and Shakespeare – is performed by a 30-strong cast, featuring top emerging young Australian talent plus a full orchestra.

Directed and choreographed by exciting young talent Sarah Pearce, with musical director Tim Doubinski
and stunning new costume designs by Joshua Carter, this is a production not to be missed.

W.S. Gilbert & Arthur Sullivan’s Iolanthe opened in 1882 to simultaneous Broadway and London West End audiences.

Released with the strapline ‘an entirely original fairy opera’ or ‘fairy opera’ in 1885, the show could also be justly described as a ‘protest opera’ for its scathing satire of legislature and ideologies that feed it.

Written specifically to premiere at the Savoy Theatre, the world’s first fully electric public building, the show was ahead of its time in more than just its message.

The original production featured battery powered lights for the fairy costumes – unheard of at the time – bringing us the modern term ‘fairy lights’.

Director Sarah Pearce said she had always been intrigued by the words of Private Willis’s song – that everyone is born either a little bit conservative or a little bit liberal.

“We are so strong in our beliefs, but what if we were born into completely different circumstances? Would we think, act, and believe the same things?” she said.

“Fate too always has a hand.

“And what of the age-old question of ‘nature or nurture’?

“Each character in Iolanthe charts their own journey and the struggle between doing their ‘duty’ and following their own impulses.”

The show will be performed Sunday, October 1, at 2pm at The Art House, Wyong.

Bookings: www.thearthousewyong.com.au 

Source:
The Art House