“The Grand Duke, or The
Statutory Duel”
William
S. Gilbert (Lyrics) and Arthur Sullivan (Music)
Little
wonder that Gilbert and Sullivan’s The
Grand Duke, or the Statutory Duel has been rarely produced since its premiere in 1896 at the
Savory Opera. This final and least
successful collaboration by the famed duo pushes three hours in length; has an
extremely complicated and silly plot (even in G&S standards); has a higher
dialogue-to-music ratio than most of their other, hit successes; and is a
mixture of many disparate music types and genres. But as currently produced by Lamplighters, after six-plus
decades of avoiding this mostly unknown piece, The Grand Duke rises
to a wonderful evening of great musical performances, funny skits and
skirmishes, and a panorama of color and style.
To
summarize exactly, or even approximately, what happens in this operetta is next
to impossible, unless the reader has another half hour to work through scores
of details. As curtain rises, we
enter the market square of the Grand Duchy of Pfennig-Halbpfennig, where Germans
speak with perfect English accent and the one English actress pronounces all
her “W’s” as “V’s” with a tongue matching any Berliner. The world of this little kingdom is
about to be turned upside down as a theatre company, ready to premiere Troilus and Cressida, gathers to celebrate the marriage of two of its
company, Ludwig and Lisa, and to plot the takeover of Rudolph, the detested (at
least by them) Grand Duke.
Complications galore ensue, and the plot twists include such fantastic
tidbits as
- Secrets shared among the actors/conspirators only after
first eating sausage rolls, which by now all detest and most refuse to eat.
- Bloodless Statutory Duels occurring for control of the
kingdom, where guns are substituted with a deck of cards (including those ‘up
the sleeve’) to see who draws the highest card and losers who “die,” but not
really.
- Our to-be-married actor Ludwig (who actually is now the
new Grand Duke via above-mentioned “duel”) marrying four brides in twenty-four
hours as maidens of various nationalities and ages keep showing up claiming
(actually usurping) the ‘role’ (after all this is an acting group’s coup d’état).
- The entire duchy becoming a set for the acting company’s Shakespeare
tragedy since something has to be done with the costumes of the play that was
to have premiered but was interrupted by the takeover of the kingdom by the troupe.
Throw in
a visiting Prince of Monte Carlo quite ready to demonstrate (in song and full
Can-Can) his newly discovered ‘roulette,’ and then imagine that these are only
a few of the elements of this rambling tale.
What is truly commendable is that the Lamplighters troupe, as directed spectacularly by Barbara Heroux, has been able to recreate this troubled G&S rambling rarity in a version that is actually easy to follow. That may not mean that every line of the rapid-fire lyrics and sometimes heavily accented dialogue is completely understood. (I found I often kept my eyes more on the projected superscript than I did on the stage action.) The crazy rhymes, repeat choruses, and funny word juxtapositions of every Gilbert and Sullivan show are all here; but the Duo’s final creative venture seems to have been written on steroids. Speed of complicated words is often at Mach One, and the very talented Chorus and Principals do a magnificent job trying to keep up with the pace.
What is truly commendable is that the Lamplighters troupe, as directed spectacularly by Barbara Heroux, has been able to recreate this troubled G&S rambling rarity in a version that is actually easy to follow. That may not mean that every line of the rapid-fire lyrics and sometimes heavily accented dialogue is completely understood. (I found I often kept my eyes more on the projected superscript than I did on the stage action.) The crazy rhymes, repeat choruses, and funny word juxtapositions of every Gilbert and Sullivan show are all here; but the Duo’s final creative venture seems to have been written on steroids. Speed of complicated words is often at Mach One, and the very talented Chorus and Principals do a magnificent job trying to keep up with the pace.
If there
are questions about this silly theatrical product and its overall worth among
its Gilbert and Sullivan peers, there are no questions about the performance of
the cast. To a person, each sings
with great aplomb, beauty, and fun (as appropriate). As the foppish Grand Duke Randolph, Chris Uzelac excels
every moment he is tittering and tripping on the stage. He is hilarious as he portrays a ruler
who is supposedly a despot but who comes off as actually adorably silly (and a
bit of a cowardly lion). As the
actress Julia Jellicoe who demands the role of Grand Duchess (since in the new
order, positions in the duchy are to go in order of playbill prominence), Jennifer
Ashworth sings glorious arias, plays slapstick scenes with ease, and really
dominates many moments in ways wonderful to watch and hear. Robby Stafford’s Ludwig sings with
admirable baritone finesse and is also the bumbling fool needed for the role of
actor who wants to be king and dresses in ancient Greek attire and a
Parthenon-columned crown. As his
initial intended (and his final bride in the every-thing-set-aright happy
ending), Michele Schroeder sometimes over does her pouting and pounding about
the stage, but she absolutely hits all the right notes when she sings with
clear, very sweet soprano voice.
And the large, on-and-off the stage (many times) Chorus are troubadours extraordinaire as they sing and dance their
plotting of coup, take over and rule, and final submission to the rightful
Duke.
In the
end, The Grand Duke certainly is not a show I would
want to sit through quite as often as other Gilbert and Sullivan classics; but
I certainly hope that it will not be another 62 years before Lamplighters once
again visits the Duchy of Pfennig-Halbpfennig.
Rating: 4 E's

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