William Schwenk Gilbert (1836-1911) and Arthur Sullivan
(1842-1900)
The Yeomen of the Guard, or The Merryman and his Maid
Chronologically the eleventh Gilbert and Sullivan opera, if
we number Trial By Jury as their first, and the sixth of the Savoy Opera
productions, The Yeomen of the Guard was first given at the London Savoy on 3rd
October, 1888. It ran there for 423 performances and during its first two years
of life its name became established on a par with The Mikado and The
Gondoliers. A success in the English provinces, it was welcomed overseas in
productions by J.C. Williamson in Australia and a hundred-performance run on
Broadway, not to mention in certain bowdlerised versions in Vienna and Budapest
in 1890 which earned the composer's disapproval.
Having previously mocked time-honoured British institutions,
the Navy in HMS Pinafore and the judicature in Trial By Jury, not to mention
the newly-ordained Aesthetic Movement in Patience, in The Yeomen of the Guard
Gilbert poked gentle fun at the Sovereign's personal Guard. While Yeomen marked
a sudden departure from the opera-bouffe style most recently heard in their
1887 'melodrama burlesque' Ruddigore, towards the more dazzling operetta idiom
of The Gondoliers (1889), in dramatic terms it was the team's furthest
gravitation towards 'serious' opera. The work has since stayed the course as
one of Sullivan's finest scores. A standard in the repertoire of the original
D'Oyly Carte Company, it enjoyed frequent revivals during the first half of the
last century and was restored to the repertoire by the new Company in 1989. On
four separate occasions it was staged within the Tower of London itself, most
recently during the Tower's Ninth Centenary celebrations in 1978.
Synopsis
CD 1
Act 1
The tuneful Overture [1] partly compensates for the lack of
an opening chorus (this is the only G & S opera without one) and the
curtain rises on Tower Green. Working at her spinnin-wheel, Phoebe, the
daughter of Sergeant Meryll of the Yeomen of the Guard, sings a doleful lay.
She is hopelessly in love with the dashing Colonel Fairfax, a man of science
who was formerly a soldier of great bravery and who awaits execution in the
Tower on a false charge of sorcery [2]. She weeps as Wilfred Shadbolt, Head
Jailer and Assistant Tormentor, enters. Phoebe berates him on the cruelty of
his profession and as he takes his exit, dejected (for he, too, loves Phoebe
and is jealous of Fairfax) a crowd of villagers, followed by the yeomen on
duty, enters [3]. Phoebe protests to Dame Carruthers, the Tower's 'dragonesque'
housekeeper, that Fairfax, while admittedly a student of alchemy, is innocent
of sorcery, but the Dame, who believes Fairfax guilty, hastens to defend the
Tower's bloodthirsty practises [4]. Phoebe and Sergeant Meryll await the arrival
of Meryll's son Leonard, whose gallant service has earned him an appointment as
a yeoman. Phoebe hopes he will bring a reprieve for Fairfax, but he comes with
only a routine dispatch to the Tower's Lieutenant. Meryll recounts that Fairfax
has twice saved his life and proposes that, as no one knows Leonard, he should
hide, while Fairfax, his beard removed, should take his son's place [5]. Under
surveillance, Fairfax takes his exercise in the courtyard. He first greets
Meryll, then philosophises on his impending doom [6]. Faced with a dilemma,
Fairfax makes a final request of the Tower's Lieutenant. The sorcery charge, he
explains, is the skulduggery of his cousin Sir Clarence Poltwhistle who, should
Fairfax die unmarried, stands to inherit his estate. He asks the Lieutenant if
a bride can be found for him at such short notice - the incentive being that in
little more than an hour's time she would be a rich widow. As they go out, Jack
Point, a strolling jester, bounds excitedly onto the scene with his street-singer
companion, Elsie Maynard, pursued by a boisterous crowd [7]. They call for a
song and the duo oblige with 'The Merryman and His Maid' [8]. Hullabaloo
ensues. A citizen tries to force his attentions on Elsie, who draws a dagger in
self-defence. The Lieutenant enters. Ascertaining that Jack and Elsie are not a
married couple, he offers Elsie a hundred crowns to marry Fairfax. On the
assurance that Fairfax is soon to be executed, Jack and Elsie agree [9]. As
Elsie is led, blindfolded, into the Tower, Jack swaps jokes with the Lieutenant
and explains the jester's routine [10]. Elsie, who has just married a man she
has never seen, is led in by Wilfred. Removing her blindfold, Elsie expresses
her feelings [11]. Elsie goes out and Wilfred returns to ponder over the recent
events in Fairfax's cell (he had hoped to eavesdrop through his spy-hole, but
it had been filled in). Watched from afar by Meryll, Phoebe pretends to seduce
Wilfred. Meanwhile surreptitiously, and while serenading her enraptured victim,
she removes the keys to the jail from his belt and passes them to her father
[12]. Having released the prisoner, Meryll returns with the keys, which Phoebe
replaces on the unsuspecting Wilfred's belt. Meryll goes out again and Phoebe
continues her mock seduction of Wilfred. As they leave together, Meryll
returns, followed by a clean-shaven Fairfax clad in Yeoman's attire. The yeomen
take Fairfax for Leonard Meryll and proudly welcome him to their ranks. Phoebe
embraces Fairfax, who realises she is his 'sister', while Wilfred jealously
declares that he and Phoebe are now engaged to be married. Wilfred concedes
that, as Phoebe and Fairfax are brother and sister, their embrace is
permissible. Suddenly, a bell toll signals Fairfax's impending execution and as
the crowd enters to a funeral march the headsmen prepare the chopping-block.
The Lieutenant orders Fairfax (alias Leonard) and two other yeomen to bring the
prisoner in but in a moment they return with news that the prisoner has
escaped. As yeomen and citizens rush off to act upon the Lieutenant's 'dead or
alive' reward offer, Elsie swoons in Fairfax's arms [13].
CD 2
Act 2
The same scene, at moonlight. Two days have passed and the
prisoner is still at liberty. First the chorus, then Dame Carruthers and her niece
Kate castigate the Tower's warders for their incompetence. The yeomen enter
briefly before resuming their search [1]. Jack Point is in a quandary. He
agreed to let Elsie wed the imprisoned Fairfax on the assurance that Fairfax
would die within the hour, but now he has escaped, Elsie's marital status
prevents Jack from marrying her himself. Wilfred Shadbolt is dejected, too.
Having failed as a jailer, he thinks that he might now be better suited to the
jesting profession. Jack agrees [2 and, in return for free schooling in the
trade, Wilfred promises to assist Jack in his stratagem to secure Elsie's
'release': Wilfred is to swear that he shot Fairfax whilst trying to escape
across the Thames and he (Jack) will corroborate the story [3]. As they move
off conspiratorially, Fairfax enters and ponders his own 'situation' [4]. He is
soon joined by Sergeant Meryll and Dame Carruthers, who has been consoling
Elsie. She reveals that Kate heard Elsie moans 'How shall I marry one I have
never seen?... I love him not, and yet I am his wife' [5]. Fairfax now knows the
name of the woman he has married and, disguised as Leonard Meryll, resolves to
woo her and thus test her fidelity. However, she resists him and just as he is
about to reveal his true identity, a shot from the Tower causes commotion [6].
At this Wilfred and Point take centre stage to unfurl their tale [7]. As
Wilfred is hailed the hero of the moment, Jack reminds Elsie she may now choose
to marry whomsoever she wishes while she, Fairfax and Phoebe discourse
respectively on the art of wooing [8]. The supposed Leonard Meryll gives a
practical demonstration of his own method and as Elsie admits that she loves
him, the reality of the situation dawns on both Jack and Phoebe [9]. Left
alone, Phoebe weeps. Unwittingly, she discloses to Wilfred that the supposed
Leonard Meryll is not her brother. Realising the truth Wilfred swears revenge,
but Phoebe reminds him that he has already publicly admitted to having shot
Fairfax. Next, the real Leonard Meryll enters with news that Fairfax has been
pardoned and is returning to claim his bride. At this, Elsie is distraught that
she must follow Fairfax though her affections lie elsewhere, but when Fairfax
arrives she realises that the man she loves is the man she has married and,
amid general rejoicing, she falls into his arms. Dame Carruthers, meanwhile,
has coaxed a proposal from Sergeant Meryll, while the reluctant Phoebe is
betrothed to the uncouth Wilfred. At the opera's end, rather like Bunthorne in
Patience, the greedy Jack is left '...all for the love of a ladye!' without a
partner. Insensible, he falls at the feet of Fairfax and Elsie [10].
Peter Dempsey
Martyn Green
Born William Martyn-Green in London on 22nd April 1899,
Martyn Green studied first with his father, the distinguished English tenor
William Green, and later with Gustave Garcia (1837-1925) at the Royal College
of Music. After active service during World War I, he gained stage experience
from 1919 onwards on tour with Daly's Theatre companies in musical comedy
productions including A Southern Maid, The Maid of the Mountains and Sybil. He
joined D'Oyly Carte as a chorister and understudy in 1922 and his solo debut as
Luiz in The Gondoliers was followed by other comic leads, including John
Wellington Wells in The Sorcerer, Major Murgatroyd in Patience, Major-General
Stanley in Pirates, The Associate in Trial By Jury, and Reginald Bunthorne in
Patience. His masterly portrayal of Ko-Ko the Lord High Executioner in Mikado
is preserved in the 1939 Technicolor screen adaptation by Geoffrey Toye and in
the 1950 Decca complete audio recording. He served in the RAF during the Second
World War, but returned in 1946 to D'Oyly Carte, where he played leading comic
rôles until 1951. Subsequently, he toured the United States, performing and
directing as well as lecturing on the Savoy operas. He appeared on American
television (his was the voice of the fox in the cartoon Pinocchio) and on
Broadway as Chaucer in the musical The Canterbury Tales. He died in Hollywood,
California, on 8th February, 1975.
Darrell Fancourt
Most closely identified with the Mikado, a rôle he played
over 3,000 times and twice recorded, in his day Darrell Fancourt was also
rated, on account of his commanding stage-presence, breath control and clear
diction, an ideal Sir Roderick Murgatroyd in Ruddigore, Dick Deadeye in HMS
Pinafore, Pirate King in Pirates, and Colonel Calverly. Born in London in 1888
and educated at Bedford School, he trained at the London Royal Academy with
Alberto Randegger (1832-1911) and Sir Henry J. Wood (1869-1944) and also in
Germany with Lilli Lehmann (1848-1929). Already an experienced concert
recitalist before he sang Galitzky in Borodin's Prince Igor under Albert Coates
at Covent Garden during the 1919 Beecham opera season, he joined D'Oyly Carte
in 1920. His other G & S rôles included Sir Marmaduke Pointdextre in The
Sorcerer and Sgt. Meryll in Yeomen of the Guard. Awarded an OBE in the 1953
Coronation honours list, Darrell Fancourt was due to give a farewell
performance (as the Mikado) at Sadler's Wells when his final illness overtook
him.
Leonard Osborn
At first an amateur singer in his native London, Leonard
Osborn worked as a chemist in a silk-printing mill before joining the
professional chorus of D'Oyly Carte in the mid-1930s. After his debut with the
company in a small part in Yeomen of the Guard in 1937, he had by 1939 sung The
Defendant in Trial By Jury, Francesco in The Gondoliers, and Leonard Meryll in
Yeomen. An RAF flight-lieutenant during the Second World War, in 1946 Osborn
returned to D'Oyly Carte where, until his retirement in 1959, his many rôles
included Tolloller in Iolanthe, Fairfax in Yeomen, Marco in The Gondoliers,
Ralph Rackstraw in HMS Pinafore, Nanki-Poo in Mikado, Frederic in Pirates, and
the Duke of Dunstable in Patience.
Neville Griffiths
Now probably better remembered for his subsequent work with
Sadler's Wells Opera, Neville Griffiths joined D'Oyly Carte as a chorister in
1948. A regular member of the Company until 1958, he was heard in various tenor
leads, including Ralph in HMS Pinafore, Nanki-Poo in Mikado, Marco in
Gondoliers, and the First Yeoman.
Richard Watson
Despite his close links with Gilbert and Sullivan operas,
the career of the bass Richard Charles Watson was more far-reaching. Born in
1903 (some sources incorrectly give 1906) in Adelaide, Southern Australia,
where he studied initially at the Elder Conservatory, he was from 1926 until
1929 a vocal student at the London Royal College of Music. A principal bass at
Covent Garden from 1929 (by 1933 appearing in both the English and
International Seasons) he first sang with D'Oyly Carte in 1932 and by 1934 had
quit Covent Garden to become a Savoyard. Between 1935 and 1937 he toured
Australia and New Zealand with J.C. Williamson G & S ensembles before
resuming his career at Covent Garden, until 1939. In 1940 he returned to
Australia for recitals (for the Australian Broadcasting Corporation) and
further tours for J.C. Williamson. From 1944 to 1947 he taught singing at the
Elder (Adelaide University Conservatorium) and produced operas at the Adelaide
Tivoli for the ABC. From 1946 until 1951 Watson was again principal bass with
D'Oyly Carte both in London and the United States (notably in New York) and was
a featured soloist in various G & S recordings, including The Mikado
(Pooh-Bah), Pirates (Sergeant of Police) and Yeomen (Wilfred Shadbolt), for
English Decca. From 1951 to 1955 he was Director of the Regina Conservatory of
Music in the University of Saskatchewan in Canada, before returning to Southern
Australia for further Williamson Company G & S tours.
Ann Drummond-Grant
Although later a noted principal contralto and the wife of
D'Oyly Carte conductor Isidore Godfrey, Ann Drummond-Grant began as a soprano
in opera and musical comedy. She first sang with the D'Oyly Carte from 1933
until 1938, her rôles including the Plaintiff in Trial By Jury, Celia and
Phyllis in Iolanthe, Fiametta in Gondoliers, Josephine in HMS Pinafore, Lady
Saphir in Patience, and Phoebe Meryll. Her later career was devoted largely to
annual summer seasons and non-G&S operetta, but in 1950 she returned to
D'Oyly Carte where, a year later, she took over the repertoire vacated by Ella
Halman. She died in 1959.
Muriel Harding
A D'Oyly Carte chorus-member from 1945, before she left the
Company in 1954 her bright, evenly produced high soprano voice was heard in a
variety of rôles, including The Plaintiff in Trial By Jury, Mabel in The
Pirates of Penzance, Kate in Yeomen, Zorah in Ruddigore, Gianetta in The
Gondoliers, Princess Ida and Lady Ella in Patience, and Elsie Maynard. She was
married to the noted Savoyard bass-baritone Donald Adams (1928-1996).
Ella Halman
Ella Halman joined the D'Oyly Carte Chorus in 1937. She
remained with the Company until 1951 and sang a variety of rôles, including
Katisha in The Mikado, the Duchess of Plaza-Toro in The Gondoliers, Ruth in
Pirates, Lady Jane in Patience, and Dame Caruthers. She was married to the
Savoyard baritone Radley Flynn.