The Gondoliers (2016)

Music By: Arthur SullivanThe Gondoliers Opera NUOVA
Libretto By: W.S. Gilbert
Conducted By: Kathleen Lorenz Gable
Directed By: Brian Deedrick
Stage Manager: Isabel Berquist
Set and Lighting Designer: TBD
Costumer: Betty Kolodziej
Repetiteurs: Nicola Davies & Frances Armstrong

The Capitol Theatre at Fort Edmonton Park
Fort Edmonton Park Logo

June 10 & 11, 2016 @ 7:30 PM 

Sung in English

In a Gilbert and Sullivan classic, a young bride arrive in Venice to join her husband, who happens to be the heir to the Kingdom of Barataria.  However, thanks to a drunken gondolier entrusted with the prince’s care, no one is able to remember which one is the prince.  To complicate things, the King of Barataria has died, both gondoliers are married to other women, and the bride to be is in love with another man.  It’s a calamity that can only come from Gilbert and Sullivan and will leave you laughing all the way home.


Ticket Prices

Advance Tickets Available April 15, 2015

Adults – $26.00
Seniors – $24.00
Students – $20.00
Children 14 & Under – $10.00

(+Online Service Charges)

At the Door – Ticket Prices increase by $4.00

All Performances are General Admission


Cast List     

Role

                    June 10                   June 11
Duke          
 Peter Brooks             Burak Yaman
Duchess       Ellory Clayton           Emma Bergin     
Casilda         Jayne Hammond       Sarah Amelard
Luiz            
 River Guard              Nolan Kehler
Gianetta       Alyssa Durnie           Marlise Ritchie
Tessa           Bailey Cameron        Kassandra Schantz
Marco           Sébastien Comtois   Corey Arnold
Giuseppe      Ian Cleary                Chad Quigley
Inquisitor     Josh Thayer              Nathan Sawatsky-Dyck
Fiametta       Fanny Grenier          Sawyer Craig
Vittoria         Daniela Agostino     Daniela Agostino
Giulia            Emma Houghton     Rebecca Thackray


Contadina
Jessica Andrews, Jill Goranson, Jessica MacLean
Gondoliers
Corey Arnold, Peter Brooks, Allan Cabral de Sá, Ian Cleary, Sébastien Comtois, River Guard, Nolan Kehler, Chad Quigley, Nathan Sawatsky-Dyck, Josh Thayer, Burack Yaman

 


Full Synopsis     

Plot Summary Edited from the book, The Victor Book of the Opera, RCA Manufacturing Co. Camden NJ, 1936

ACT I - The Piazetta, Venice (1750)

“The two Gondoliers, Marco and Giuseppe, are so handsome and have such winning ways that they have completely turned the heads of the pretty contadina. Marco and Giuseppe are [surprised and confused] as to whom to choose as their brides. They decide to solve the problem by allowing themselves to be blindfolded, whilst the [peasant girls] and their superfluous gondolier admirers dance round Marco and Giuseppe. In the ensuing game Marco catches Gianetta, and Giuseppe, Tessa. The remaining contadina accept their fate and pair off with the previously ignored gondolieri. They all run off merrily to get married.

As they disappear a gondola stops before the steps of the Piazetta. From it emerge the Duke and Duchess of Plaza Toro, their daughter Casilda, [and their entourage, including] Luiz. They are dressed as befits their noble station, but their clothes are a little the worse for wear. They have brought their daughter Casilda from Spain [...] demand[ing] an audience with Don Alhambra, the Grand Inquisitor.

[...] The Duke reveals to Casilda that when she was a six months old babe she was married by proxy to the infant son of the wealthy King of Barataria. The King of Barataria subsequently [became] bigoted and persecuting.  The Grand Inquisitor, determined that [this] should not be perpetuated in Barataria, stole the youthful heir to the throne and conveyed him to Venice. A fortnight later the Barataria King and his Court were all killed in an insurrection.

Casilda, therefore, is now Queen of Barataria. But the whereabouts of the new King is not definitely known. Casilda, unfortunately, is in love with someone else-her father's "private drum," Luiz-and they are both despondent at the sad thought of what the future must bring.

Don Alhambra, the Grand Inquisitor, who now approaches and is introduced to Casilda, explains that when he stole the youthful Prince of Barataria, he brought him to Venice and placed him in the family of a highly respectable Gondolier, who had a son of the same age. The Gondolier, through a fondness for drinking, muddled up the two children, and when the Inquisitor went to fetch the Royal Child he found it impossible to tell which was which. This news is received rather philosophically.  The only person who can possibly tell is the foster mother of the Prince, Inez (who is Luiz' mother). Luiz is sent to fetch her.

Giuseppe and Marco now return with their [newly-wed] wives. Don Alhambra [...] informs them that either Giuseppe or Marco is the King of Barataria, and that until the mystery is unravelled they must take up the reins of government as one individual. They may take all their friends with them-all, that is, except the ladies, who must stay behind. This is rather a blow, but they are assured that the separation will be only for a short period. A boat is then brought, and the Gondoliers clamber aboard with Giuseppe and Marco, whilst the contadina wave a tearful farewell.”

ACT II - A Pavilion in the Court of Barataria (Three Months Later)

“Both Marco and Giuseppe [...] have reorganized the state on their idealistic principles. The result is somewhat chaotic, but they seem to enjoy it, and as the act opens they are seen cleaning the royal crown and sceptre whilst they sit, clad in magnificent robes, on the royal throne. If they want anything done they have to do it themselves. In a delightful little song, "Of happiness the very pith," Giuseppe outlines his day's work as a monarch about the palace. Only one thing is missing, they feel it is dull without female society.

Scarcely have they confessed the fact when the contadina run in, led by Fiametta and Vittoria. Curiosity is the cause of the invasion, though they know they were strictly forbidden to come. They are all very excited. Tessa and Gianetta are anxious to know if their husbands have anyone to mend the royal socks, and if it is known yet which of them is to be queen.

In honor of their arrival Giuseppe and Marco announce a grand banquet and dance. In the middle of a brilliant cachucha there is an unexpected interruption. Don Alhambra enters. He is astonished at the scene, and tries, by quoting an example, to explain where their theories of government are wrong.

He announces the arrival of Casilda. One of them, he says, Marco or Giuseppe (whichever is the real King of Barataria), is married to the beautiful Casilda, and is, of course, an unintentional bigamist if he has married a contadina in the meantime. Poor Tessa and Gianetta are very upset. By the light of this new exposure, one of them is married and one of them is not. But they cannot tell which it is. They burst into tears.

Meanwhile Casilda is afraid that she will never learn to love her husband. The Duchess is firm. "I loved your father," she says, and proceeds to explain how she married and "tamed" him. The Duke has turned his social prestige to account and has become a limited company. His daughter feels that there is hope that when the King sees what a shady family he has married into he will refuse to recognize the alliance.

[...] Marco and Giuseppe explain the state of the country and the attitude of their subjects towards them. The Duke [...] instructs them on the correct demeanor of a king, which they try, very awkwardly, to adopt. Marco and Giuseppe are tactfully left alone with Casilda, but Gianetta and Tessa come in, and they all discuss the highly complicated problem of exactly who is married and who is not.

They are interrupted by Don Alhambra, who enters, accompanied by the Duke and Duchess and all the court of Barataria. Inez, the fostermother of the Prince has been found. She alone can unravel the mystery [...] She confesses that when she took care of the royal prince, and there was an attempt to steal the child, she substituted her own little boy.”