The Mikado 1966 (Speed corrected) D'Oyly Carte Opera Company Gilbert & Sullivan

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  • Опубликовано: 4 окт 2024
  • This is the film version of The Mikado shot in 1966 and released in theatres in 1967.
    The versions of this film which have been released on DVD play slightly too fast resulting in a pitch which is a semi-tone too high.
    I have adjusted the video to the correct speed by changing the frame rate from 25 frames per second to 24 frames per second.
    This results in the correct pitch and tempo.
    Visually the DVD version also seemed a bit 'squashed' to me so I have adjusted the picture aspect ratio to what looks more correct to my eye.
    I've also tried to improve the muddy audio of the original.
    Hopefully one day we will get a fully restored widescreen edition of this film with excellent colour and sound. Until then, enjoy this version.
    The Mikado was filmed at the Golders Green Hippodrome on enlarged stage sets. The City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra was conducted by D'Oyly Carte's longstanding conductor, Isidore Godfrey. Set design and decoration were by Disley Jones and Peter Howitt. With one exception the costumes were by Charles Ricketts, first seen in D'Oyly Carte stage productions in 1926 and retained by subsequent D'Oyly Carte designers.
    The cast:
    John Reed as Ko-Ko
    Kenneth Sandford as Pooh-Bah
    Donald Adams as the Mikado
    Valerie Masterson as Yum-Yum
    Philip Potter as Nanki-Poo
    Christene Palmer as Katisha
    Peggy Ann Jones as Pitti-Sing
    Thomas Lawlor as Pish-Tush
    Pauline Wales as Peep-Bo
    George Cook as Go-To

Комментарии • 424

  • @chriswright4252
    @chriswright4252 3 года назад +631

    My MUM starred in this. Christene Palmer, as Katisha! I’m very proud of her and, yes mum is still alive at 89 years of age. A real golden era. It’s so surreal watching mum in action before I was born!

    • @ginawiggles918
      @ginawiggles918 3 года назад +55

      Thank you for sharing. Katisha is one of my favorite G&S characters and your mum was the best I've seen. Glad to hear she is well.

    • @PlanetBobstar
      @PlanetBobstar 3 года назад +36

      She is legendary here

    • @chriswright4252
      @chriswright4252 3 года назад +23

      That’s high praise indeed, thank you.

    • @PatrickHedgesArtist
      @PatrickHedgesArtist 3 года назад +31

      I finally got a car with a CD player and I was listening to your mum on my drive to work just today. Then I found this! What a treat!! I'm not surprised you are proud.

    • @cg98243
      @cg98243 3 года назад +18

      God bless her. What a wonderful performance.

  • @chloescricuttutorials5992
    @chloescricuttutorials5992 Год назад +95

    My Grandfather (Philip potter) plays Nanki-Poo in this film. Thank you so much for uploading its wonderful to see this again ❤️

    • @mrtactica
      @mrtactica 5 месяцев назад +4

      Philip Potter -one of the best!

    • @fritula6200
      @fritula6200 5 месяцев назад +3

      Chloe..... what a honour !!!!

    • @seanmaher3518
      @seanmaher3518 4 месяца назад +3

      Must be very proud

    • @chriswright4252
      @chriswright4252 2 месяца назад +2

      @@chloescricuttutorials5992 my mum played Katisha…….they were good friends!

  • @margaritab.2665
    @margaritab.2665 3 года назад +130

    This D'Oyly Carte production is the gold standard, it has to be one of, if not the best G&S operettas. Interesting this show is 55 years old, it's still as fresh and entertaining as ever, made me laugh out loud. I never tire of watching it!

    • @shiannamariestentt
      @shiannamariestentt Год назад

      It's my favorite one because it's in English. I actually know what they're saying.

    • @generaldingus344
      @generaldingus344 8 месяцев назад

      I like the master collection the BBC put out the best. London sympathy orchestra and opera singers from the Sydney opera house

    • @bridgetyoung4936
      @bridgetyoung4936 6 месяцев назад

      The opera itself is considerably older. 1885 first performance

    • @fritula6200
      @fritula6200 5 месяцев назад

      AGREE !!

    • @c.v.yardley
      @c.v.yardley 4 месяца назад

      @@generaldingus344 I rather like the idea of a London Sympathy Orchestra 😉

  • @etherealtb6021
    @etherealtb6021 3 года назад +85

    Wow. 2 hours of Gilbert & Sullivan cures the COVID blues, at least for 2 hours!

    • @samhooper
      @samhooper 3 года назад +7

      Hear, hear!

    • @patriciane3551
      @patriciane3551 3 года назад +5

      O agree, Ive had a lovely night watching much of early G&S after finding some old 'Ive had since about 1969 but watching has been a real treat

  • @notninelivesbrian8471
    @notninelivesbrian8471 4 месяца назад +8

    An infinite clap to the hero who corrected the time-lag. A thousand thanks!

  • @katelinnett9020
    @katelinnett9020 3 года назад +60

    This was my favorite record album as a child, and I know every word and note...and although I have since seen and heard many performances of this wonderful operetta, nothing comes close to THIS production! How wonderful, then, to FINALLY SEE this original version! Until now, I never knew a made-for-tv production even existed...how very wonderful!!! 😍

    • @katelinnett9020
      @katelinnett9020 3 года назад +6

      I was lucky enough to see John Reed and The D'Oyly Carte production of "HMS Pinafore" in Boston when I was a small child, back in the mid-60s. That started my life-long love of Gilbert & Sullivan...I'll always be grateful to my Auntie Susan & Uncle Jimmy for that amazing experience!

    • @dougr.2398
      @dougr.2398 2 года назад +3

      I knew the Martyn Greene version from the 1940s which was excepted on 45 RPM records.

    • @hughcards
      @hughcards 2 года назад +3

      Agree. I saw the very same production on stage (with the very same actors) when I was a wee boy. Plus I had the record and new it all by heart. Splendid all round.

  • @robertthomson1587
    @robertthomson1587 Год назад +15

    I sang in the men's chorus in our high school production in 1979. Even after all these years I can still sing the tenor line of the choruses.

  • @Afalstein
    @Afalstein 3 года назад +40

    "Here's a Pretty How-De-Do"
    Honestly I'm just watching John Reed's footwork in the background.

  • @dovasvariakojis6934
    @dovasvariakojis6934 3 года назад +94

    This is amazing. I could watch this over and over again. John Reed blew me away as Ko-Ko. Every song and every word was filled with passion from every character. The story was intriguing, easy to follow, and had so much magic throughout the entire opera. I will cherish this until the day I die. The Mikado will always remain as my favorite opera of all time. Thank you so much for bringing us this. Long live the work of Gilbert and Sullivan!!

    • @helenaconstantine
      @helenaconstantine 3 года назад

      You poor thing

    • @dovasvariakojis6934
      @dovasvariakojis6934 3 года назад +3

      @@helenaconstantine What is that supposed to mean?

    • @helenaconstantine
      @helenaconstantine 3 года назад

      @@dovasvariakojis6934 The suffering occasioned by the epistemic confusion necessary to think this is better than Don Giovanni or Siegfried must be terrible.

    • @mjmcrae1168
      @mjmcrae1168 Год назад +6

      Yes! It's my favorite too. The music and a few of the complete numbers were used in the movie "Foul Play," with Goldie Hawn and Chevy Chase. I loved this music before I even knew who Gilbert and Sullivan were.

    • @webz3589
      @webz3589 Год назад +1

      @@helenaconstantine this is certainly more fun than those bloated things. I'd rather sit through a performance of this over the ring cycle. But i generaly can't stand opera.

  • @redmerlin777
    @redmerlin777 Год назад +14

    I too love this operetta. Dad was in the local amateur dramatics in Burnham-on Sea in the late 1940's . He was a fine tenor. As a child after the last war I was lucky enough to watch rehearsals and grew to love G& S. Sadly my voice wasn't wonderful or I am sure I would have plucked up enough courage to join at some time. Even now seventy years on I can still sing along . I was so pleased to find this. Chris Wright you must be so proud of your , Mum. She is very gifted. What a wonderful performance. This has brought back so many happy memories for me. Dad would have loved this.

  • @connormclernon26
    @connormclernon26 3 года назад +40

    They had a showing of this play for a Japanese Prince once, even though the British government worried that he might get offended. I recall reading he quite enjoyed it

    • @Altinget
      @Altinget Месяц назад +1

      Don't Japan have a long tradition for exaturated makup and costumes in theater.

  • @karldelavigne8134
    @karldelavigne8134 3 года назад +37

    Thank goodness this was preserved on film, as every D'Oyly Carte production was the gold standard. I also enjoy the idiosyncratic 1939 film with Martyn Green. The loss of this unbroken performing tradition was a great cultural tragedy.

  • @26001993
    @26001993 4 года назад +57

    Absolutely fantastic. Cheered me up no end. What great performances from Reed and Masterson, the very best of all time.

    • @happyarcadia
      @happyarcadia  4 года назад +5

      Glad you enjoyed it Albert.

    • @andrewrayment536
      @andrewrayment536 3 года назад +6

      Yes, the immortal John Reed!

    • @th2184_cma_.
      @th2184_cma_. 3 года назад +3

      @@happyarcadia how did you manage to download this so you can upload it?

    • @HannibalFan52
      @HannibalFan52 3 года назад +6

      @@andrewrayment536 John Reed is one of the few actors who can emote well with his back to the audience. His little head-shake in the dialog sequence leading up to 'Here's a How-de-Do' is a perfect example. Martyn Green also had that facility.

  • @tedwoe
    @tedwoe 3 года назад +23

    How have I never seen this masterpiece?!?
    Wow! I've been missing out on the good things in life!

  • @robertpettengill2883
    @robertpettengill2883 4 года назад +100

    What a treat! No question this is the gold standard, the benchmark. I saw this cast in Detroit in the 1950s. Most true to the original D'Oyly Cart conception. Thanks so much for your efforts.

    • @johnangelico667
      @johnangelico667 3 года назад +2

      Surely you didn't see the original D'Oyly Carte production when Gilbert & Sullivan were at their peak? :-)

  • @valerieirving9338
    @valerieirving9338 2 года назад +12

    My Dad played and of course sang the part of Nanki Poo back in the 1930s . He didn't tell me about until we produced the Mikado at school in the 1960s. I'm not a singer but created the visual stuff, costumes and settings. I will always love it.

  • @carriescarbrough9869
    @carriescarbrough9869 4 года назад +17

    What a joy! In 1949, as a child, I saw my aunt’s high school do Mikado and have loved it ever since.

    • @patriciane3551
      @patriciane3551 3 года назад +1

      Ifirst saw a high school production inManchester of The Mikado in 1961 been an ardent fan since seeing productions in Sydney, Newcastle and of course London when on trips home -Heaven

    • @ER1CNOIR
      @ER1CNOIR 2 года назад

      How was the Last Supper, by the way? I heard Big J was in rare form that night - cuttin up turning ALL the water to wine!

  • @icequeen917
    @icequeen917 2 года назад +8

    I JUST noticed that the eye-shadow combo that was put on Spock in the old Star Trek series is very, very reminiscent of how "Asian" people were portrayed back in the day. That whole short tilted black eyebrow with the grey shadow lid and white brow highlight.

  • @rickcummins7347
    @rickcummins7347 4 года назад +21

    This is the definitive version, best I've ever seen. Everything (scenery, costumes) is so well done not to mention great cast. Well worth your time to watch the greatest musical comedy of all time so well executed.

    • @vking8084
      @vking8084 3 года назад

      There is a version better than this search mikado act 1 it is funny and great music

  • @grahamdalbymusic
    @grahamdalbymusic Год назад +4

    This is a superlative exhausting performance, it doesn't get much better than this.

  • @neilforsyth2638
    @neilforsyth2638 4 года назад +43

    A welcome improvement on the DVD. Correcting the pitch also does justice to the tone of the voices (particularly the higher voices) and reminds us how good they were.

  • @roderickwright3199
    @roderickwright3199 Год назад +4

    This is simply superb. The trio at 44 mins, for example, it's acting, timing, synchronization and musicality is simply The BEST. Our thanks for making this available

  • @richardherbert9320
    @richardherbert9320 3 года назад +7

    My absolute favourite G&S!
    Loved by all true Brits and myself! Thank you for this video!

  • @janmcdonald698
    @janmcdonald698 4 года назад +28

    forgive my musical ignorance but this was such a treat for me to see Phillip Potter here.
    He was such a wonderful childhood memory for me as i grew up in the kingsbridge inn , at Totnes devon, where my father worked as a barman.
    i remember watching him sing at the end of the bar from time to time ,such a funny kind man.
    thanks uploader ,means a lot.

    • @happyarcadia
      @happyarcadia  4 года назад +5

      Thank you for sharing that anecdote. I’m glad you enjoyed it.

    • @whyis_hehere6638
      @whyis_hehere6638 2 года назад +4

      That's so Interesting. When I first got into g&s I listened to a recording of pirates of Penzance with Phillip potter is Frederic. He was my introduction to shmultsy g&s tenor songs. That's so Interesting you got to hear him live

    • @chloescricuttutorials5992
      @chloescricuttutorials5992 Год назад +5

      Hi Jan,
      I’m one of Philip & Gill’s granddaughters (Susannah is my mum if you remember her from the pub)
      Just wanted to say thank you for your comment. It’s lovely to see grandads kindness and well as his talent hasn’t been forgotten ❤️

    • @janmcdonald698
      @janmcdonald698 Год назад +3

      @@chloescricuttutorials5992 Hello Chloe,
      Wow! You're Susannah's kid?
      Remember her? Couldn't forget her!..and the amount of trouble we'd get in!
      Think most of my childhood memories have your mum in there somewhere!
      Trying to avoid the ghost on the back stairs,your uncle Nick, chasing us through the pub with his guitar. lovely Caroline always trying to keep the peace.
      Gill always looking like a movie Star.
      God,so many memories coming back right now!
      I do hope she's well?
      Ahh, you're Grandad was a truly beautiful soul.
      I know my dad loved him very much.
      We all did ❤️

  • @missm8067
    @missm8067 Год назад +8

    My favorite part is 21:25 where John Reed sings I’ve Got A Little List 😂

    • @StephenSE9
      @StephenSE9 Год назад +3

      Mine too. Thanks for putting down the time code.

    • @missm8067
      @missm8067 Год назад +1

      @@StephenSE9You betcha! 😊

    • @StephenSE9
      @StephenSE9 Год назад

      @@missm8067 🫶

  • @bighuge1060
    @bighuge1060 10 месяцев назад +3

    Thank you for posting this. The Mikado was my late father's sole venture into theater and I have loved this operetta since because of this.

  • @faw3511
    @faw3511 4 года назад +34

    Thank you forever for uploading this. Valerie Masterson and John Reed are superb.

    • @chriswright4252
      @chriswright4252 3 года назад +6

      John Reed was my mum’s best friend at the time and God father to my brother. My mum was in this production as Katisha - aka Christene Palmer.

  • @chriswardlow9441
    @chriswardlow9441 4 года назад +17

    Such cherished memory,s of all the opera's thanks to my late Mum & Dad .They held Gilbert & Sullivan record nights for anyone who wanted to come along and I still have the now well worn out vinyl L Ps Thank You for this great video.

  • @WildwoodClaire1
    @WildwoodClaire1 3 года назад +11

    Lovely to rediscover this old gem after many decades. Watch in combo with the movie "Topsy-Turvy"!

  • @naomiperreira1809
    @naomiperreira1809 3 года назад +18

    Thank you for sharing one the greatest live performing ensembles ever in Music History.
    The Mikado is my personal preference out of all the Gilbert and Sullivan works. And, thankfully, to PBS TV stations here in the United States, I've been able to see it and other great Gilbert and Sullivan operas performed by various groups worldwide, and having a famous actor perform 1 of the main characters in The Mikado. For example, I saw Broderick Crawford on a PBS Station, play the part of the Mikado. He was surprisingly quite good. I had only knew of him when I was just a little girl, and he played a tough Captain or Chief in the very popular TV series Highway Patrol. I loved his tremendous deep voice.
    And, I was very fortunate to have been able to see them perform The Mikado in Long Beach, California in June of 1978, with my now deceased first husband. He had played one of the 3 Little Girls in The Mikado while he was attending an all male private boarding school in Northern India, while he was growing up.

  • @cs-ht9cv
    @cs-ht9cv 6 месяцев назад +13

    Screw political correctness! This is a classic!

  • @patriciane3551
    @patriciane3551 3 года назад +8

    I first saw this in installments at The Royal Opera House Manchester in this year . I was not long in the Police Force and it was one of the 'perks' that you took a break from pounding a beat by checking various restaurant kitchens, pubs and entertainment places. Standing quietly at the back of the theatre watching this was some of my best memorie

    • @PeterBrownPianist
      @PeterBrownPianist 3 года назад +2

      Hi Patricia, Well fancy that! You probably heard me as part of the orchestra at the Opera House. I was a student cellist at the old Royal Manchester College of Music and played the D,Oyley Carte seasons in 1966/7and loved it....small world!

  • @karenwalz70
    @karenwalz70 Год назад +4

    OMG. I saw this on my B&W TV in the 1970s, and since the days of online searches, have been looking for it ever since. Whenever The Mikado was shown on TV afterward, it was never this version, which is the absolute best of all the filmed performances. I love all the major roles, and especially John Reed, who really brings the comic element as no one else. But the Mikado and Katisha, all of them, were first-rate. The direction, timing, sets, and costumes are all excellent. I'm so thrilled to finallly find this again!

  • @Themanwhocameback2
    @Themanwhocameback2 4 года назад +16

    Thanks for posting! I saw D'oyly Carte with these 3 lead men, and the exact same sets, when they came to NYC in the 70's. It was a fantastic experience. The awful 1939 film was given a Criterion Edition DVD, and I got it as a gift, but I can't stand it. This is sublime.

  • @johnbartash8473
    @johnbartash8473 4 года назад +20

    What a wonderful treat, This will make this tough weekend. bearable
    .Please note you have made this man so very happy. I have watched most, if not, all the G & S on U tube. There is no question this is on the top of all performances and you made this possible Thankyou thank you.

    • @happyarcadia
      @happyarcadia  4 года назад +2

      Thank you John. Also check out my other videos where I am synching footage from this film with superior sounding studio recordings.

  • @EMomp
    @EMomp 10 месяцев назад +3

    This is my ALL TIME favorite of G&S!! I have loved this music since 1959😊. Whoever posted; many, many thanks ❤

    • @ruthshortland5864
      @ruthshortland5864 5 месяцев назад

      While I really enjoyed this performance, I must admit "The Pirates of Penzance" is my favourite- especially the Kevin Kline and Angela Landsbury one.

  • @Baueresque
    @Baueresque 4 года назад +35

    What we need right now thank you

  • @LOVECATO1
    @LOVECATO1 4 года назад +17

    My brother in the late 1960’s took me to Carnegie Hall to see the Mikado by the D’Oyly Carte

    • @rar446
      @rar446 3 года назад +2

      In the 1960s, that D'Oyly Carte production may have been at City Center, where they had performed for many years.

  • @misterdavid9903
    @misterdavid9903 2 года назад +7

    I have watched the Eric Idle version many times but I think you need to watch an authentic Mikado to fully appreciate it.

  • @epsteinisms1483
    @epsteinisms1483 4 года назад +52

    Please let me add my appreciation to all the others. Can't thank you enough for this. Great job cleaning up the sound and picture. Also, great job on your other videos with the synced stereo sound. I can't imagine how you did it!
    In 1976 I had the pleasure of seeing D'Oyly Carte perform this in NY. During the "Here's A How-De-Do" trio Ko-Ko discovered something hanging out of a pocket. He started tugging on it, and, Houdini like, it just kept spilling out. Eventually the others on stage helped unfurl it, aided by stage hands from the wings, until they got it all untangled and showed it to the audience. What was it? The American flag!! Again, this was in 1976, our bicentennial year. And here was this British company giving their little salute and tribute to our independence. Can you imagine the audience reaction? We were all on our feet cheering for what seemed hours. Easily the greatest moment I ever had in the theater.

    • @happyarcadia
      @happyarcadia  4 года назад +5

      Glad you like the videos and thank you for sharing the anecdote.

  • @davidwalker8955
    @davidwalker8955 3 года назад +7

    Thank you for Uploading this version of the Mikado which I have never seen before . Really Enjoyed this during Lock down here in NZ currently.

  • @Dazzily
    @Dazzily 3 года назад +5

    It is probably 55+ years since I saw D'Oyly Carte do their "fortnight" at The Alexandra in Birmingam. Me Mom dad and then wife. A marvellous time. This film brings in all back. The "stars", my parents, and some tears.
    This was magnificent, everybody, but Christine Palmer, Valerie Masterton, Donald Adams particularly. and my all time favourite Kenneth Sandford. "Chop it off KoKo, chop it off"! MAGNIFICENT. THANK YOU SO MUCH

    • @britdude4508
      @britdude4508 3 года назад

      I was there at the same time !!! I’m a Brummie and watched everything at the “Alic” as we called it in Brum.

    • @Nina5144
      @Nina5144 2 года назад

      Mom? Birmingham USA? G&S are popular all over the world aren’t they? Great production

  • @tizzsy6056
    @tizzsy6056 3 года назад +18

    I saw this production at the Savoy Theatre in London ... four times.

  • @BrianCarter-k8g
    @BrianCarter-k8g Год назад +4

    Wonderful production with a stellar cast. I have seen this performed on several occasions with the same principals. Gillian Knight as Katisha was a hard act to follow but Christine Palmer was excellent. A golden age. My Mother and father were G&S devotees and I was introduced to live performances at the age of 8 and have been one myself ever since. DVDs are great for posterity but it is difficult to replicate a live performance unless a stage version is filmed. The encores are so much part of the tradition. The Pinafore filming of a live performance did capture it quite well with the incomparable John Reed and "Ring the Merry Bells on Board Ship".

    • @GeldardtheGrey
      @GeldardtheGrey Год назад

      Gillian Knight was, in my mind, the definitive Katisha. There was a BBC Radio2 production in 1987 which I can find absolutely nowhere. I've even tried to contact the BBC itself but the production is not available. It was outstanding. Classic cast. Richard Van Allan, Valerie Masterson, Forbes Robinson, Gillian Knight.

    • @BrianCarter-k8g
      @BrianCarter-k8g Год назад

      I am not aware of the Radio 2 production but I agree about Gillian Knight. She was wonderful in all her roles.

  • @liamvnbw
    @liamvnbw Год назад +3

    Thank you very much for uploading this, and for adjusting the speed! It’s been an immense pleasure to watch!

  • @rotherbirdo
    @rotherbirdo 2 года назад +11

    It's slightly ironic that Sullivan, having apparently witnessed the first demonstration of the recording wax cylinder, basically said of it that it was an amazing and horrifying invention, because so many great voices and performances would be preserved for posterity, but so would a vast amount of rubbish - and here is his (great) work transposed to the digital 'wax' cylinder of social media, still proving his point over a century later.

  • @barbarawillis5187
    @barbarawillis5187 3 года назад +7

    The movie is excellent. Great performers, production design, and costumes. Thank you for improving the technical issues on the dvd. I feel like singing.🙂

  • @ingridself6076
    @ingridself6076 3 года назад +10

    oh this is wonderful! I had no idea it was on RUclips, it takes me back to my childhood, I saw this production in the 50s & 60s in Birmingham, England with all those familiar faces/names. Perfect, thank you so much - I have adored John Reed all my life, I hope he had a good and happy life

    • @britdude4508
      @britdude4508 3 года назад +2

      Me too ! I was born in Brum in 1944 and was watching with my G&S obsessed mother in the 60’s and late 50’s

  • @johnpetley-jones9563
    @johnpetley-jones9563 2 года назад +2

    Thank you for this labour of love. Much improved presentation of the traditional classic production.

  • @brionneeley5660
    @brionneeley5660 2 года назад +4

    this is delightful. I love the Mikado's performance. I've watched several versions of The Mikado and always marvel at how different actors approach the role of the Mikado.

  • @kendalson7100
    @kendalson7100 3 года назад +6

    Great costumes and cinematography. Great KoKo and PoohBah.

  • @louisecozier8581
    @louisecozier8581 Год назад +2

    It was so good to see it with the proper costumes!!!! A really good production.

  • @GoodnessoGracious
    @GoodnessoGracious 3 года назад +6

    It's brilliant of you to have made that adjustment; thank you.

  • @VgnRaj
    @VgnRaj 4 месяца назад +1

    Richard McMillan was the quintessential Pooh-bah played less than 20 years later in Stratford. What comedic gravitas he had. Seeing him live as Scar in Lion King and in his one-man play "Through The Eyes", he showed skill and grace I have yet to see matched.

  • @mjmcrae1168
    @mjmcrae1168 Год назад +3

    Of course, if I'm the type of fan who came to this operetta from the movie "Foul Play," I'm also one who came to love the opera "Carmen" because of the movie "Bad News Bears."

  • @hlnbee
    @hlnbee 3 года назад +4

    I saw this on stage when I was 8 yo. 70 years ago!!!!

  • @moimeself1088
    @moimeself1088 3 года назад +12

    Funny, eveybody's memory is of seeing a professional production. My sole memory is of our high school production when i was 11/12. I still remember most of the songs, even if not all the lyrucs. Would love to see a professional production.

  • @execelsior999
    @execelsior999 4 года назад +6

    Thank you so much for uploading this wonderful production.

  • @ahay241
    @ahay241 2 года назад +3

    Brilliant production from so many years ago. D’Oyly Carte at their zenith.

  • @brendahenderson3418
    @brendahenderson3418 3 года назад +8

    The Mikado by the D'Oyly Carte was the first opera I ever saw when I was about twelve around 1958? This performance was at the Fairfield Hall in Croydon. All I remember is that Nanky Poo had a lovely voice but was distinctly silver-haired! Nevertheless it hooked me on opera for life. A few years later I was in the chorus for our school production.

  • @richardalfredpalmer9660
    @richardalfredpalmer9660 Год назад +2

    That was absolutely amazing opera performance 🎭 ❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️🇬🇧🇬🇧

  • @ttintagel
    @ttintagel 2 года назад +5

    No mtter how many times I hear it, the joke about "my suit was hopeless" always catches me off guard. Made me snort ginger ale out my nose tonight.

  • @Wisepati
    @Wisepati 9 месяцев назад +2

    Thank you. My mom loved this. She is gone but I feel close to her watching this.

  • @hemeljohn1
    @hemeljohn1 3 года назад +29

    Valerie Masterson's is magnificent as Yum-Yum! "The Sun's Whose Rays Are All Ablaze" is the definitive performance!

    • @keikekaze
      @keikekaze 8 месяцев назад

      I agree. The whole production is near perfection, and every one of the performers is extremely good, but Ms. Masterson in "The Sun Whose Rays . . ." is, well, celestial!

  • @philiphaley5414
    @philiphaley5414 7 месяцев назад +2

    I've been in G&S since 1973 and tonight (16.2 24) have just come home from presenting The Story of Gilbert & Sullivan to the Halifax G&S Society in West Yorkshire, UK.

    • @kennethwayne6857
      @kennethwayne6857 5 месяцев назад

      Wish I had been there. From what I remember, the film was a wonderful opportunity to see Martyn Green do what he did best.

  • @georget1717
    @georget1717 3 года назад +3

    My parents lived in Okinawa in the mid sixties and I remember my dad had a great British cast recording. I wish I had it. Brings me back. Thanks for sharing this is wonderful.

  • @andrewdarley8988
    @andrewdarley8988 2 года назад +2

    Absolutely classic performance with particularly brilliant acting by Ko-Ko and Poo-Bah and great singing.

  • @Th0ughtf0rce
    @Th0ughtf0rce 3 года назад +21

    Ah, the great John Reed in his prime. Such a pity only 2 of his recordings ever made it into DVD format.

    • @SarahB1863
      @SarahB1863 3 года назад +11

      And also the great Kenneth Sanford as Pooh-Bah. What a voice!

    • @Th0ughtf0rce
      @Th0ughtf0rce 3 года назад +4

      @@SarahB1863 "MERCY EVEN FOR POOH-BAAAAH!" XD

    • @melenatorr
      @melenatorr 3 года назад +6

      @@Th0ughtf0rce I love the byplay with him and Pitti Sing.

    • @ARCtheCartoonMaster
      @ARCtheCartoonMaster 2 года назад

      I’m assuming the other one is the animated _Ruddigore_ ? That one’s a classic. :)
      At least I’m assuming that made it to DVD, since the version up on RUclips is in DVD quality.

    • @Th0ughtf0rce
      @Th0ughtf0rce 2 года назад +1

      @@ARCtheCartoonMaster ah. I totally forgot about the Ruddigore cartoon. I actually meant HMS Pinafore.

  • @fritula6200
    @fritula6200 5 месяцев назад +1

    The BRILLIANCE OF THE ENGLISH & GILBERT & SULLIVAN : THANK YOU GENTLEMEN FOR THE HONOUR OF WATCHING AND LISTENING TO WHAT THEY CREATED FOR HUMANITY:

  • @rogerbarton497
    @rogerbarton497 3 года назад +15

    Brilliant - D'Oyle Carte are the masters.
    The scary thing for me was that Pooh-Bah resembled an ex-girlfriend, she wasn't as well built, but her voice was deeper. Donald Adams is the most frightening Mikado I've seen.

  • @paulgarland3140
    @paulgarland3140 3 года назад +5

    Thank you so much for this absolutely fabulous!!!

  • @markbeck8384
    @markbeck8384 4 месяца назад

    I saw this production, and it was so great. Wonderful casting and decor. This is my favorite G&S Operetta.

  • @margondine
    @margondine 2 года назад +3

    Thank you so much. I knew the recording, but had not seen it.

  • @anthonydavis5779
    @anthonydavis5779 Год назад +6

    shame the last verse of Wandering Minstrel was cut (a song of the sea..) Philip Potter's singing superb.

  • @MrMjp58
    @MrMjp58 Год назад +1

    Brilliantly. I’ve been waiting for this for years.

  • @thetoiletinspector6878
    @thetoiletinspector6878 3 года назад +7

    Just read that Thomas Lawlor (Pish Tush) passed away towards the end of 2020. RIP.

  • @critter7052
    @critter7052 2 года назад +2

    Great job, D'Oyly Carte Opera Company. Thanks for posting.

  • @internetfairy1
    @internetfairy1 2 года назад +2

    Outstanding! All the more for me as it was my great grandfather Michael Gunn with Richard D'Oyly Carte who help finance Gilbert and Sullivan. Michael Gunn owned and ran The Gaiety Theatre in Dublin, then the Savoy Theatre in London he and others formed a syndicate and with the proceeds of The Mikado at the Savoy, they proceeded to have The Savoy Hotel built.

  • @magdahearne497
    @magdahearne497 3 года назад +2

    Brilliant!
    I haven't seen that since I was a kid, thanks for sharing
    🌸💖🌸

  • @gavrinmahaffey3656
    @gavrinmahaffey3656 4 года назад +6

    Absolutely brilliant!!👏👏👏👏👏

  • @shiannamariestentt
    @shiannamariestentt 3 года назад +4

    I haven’t seen this in I don’t even know how long. My birthday is coming up on Sunday and you don’t even know what this means to me to find this again two days before my birthday. I’ll be 18.

  • @user-martinpd
    @user-martinpd 8 месяцев назад +1

    "My good Sir. I decline to pin my heart on any lady's left heal."

  • @songsmith31a
    @songsmith31a 2 года назад +4

    Handsomely mounted, impeccably performed - a joy from the start, albeit I noticed the absence
    of Nanki-Poo's verse about "And if you call for a song of the sea..." What would Gilbert have said?!
    This was the greatest G&S success in their marvellous sequence of word and music magic -.
    so much that continues to stand the test of time with successive generations relishing the
    sheer. brilliance of the creative forces that produced such consistent excellence. Was there
    ever any composer who could match Sullivan's wonderful range of melodious inspiration?

  • @philiphaley5414
    @philiphaley5414 7 месяцев назад +1

    Donald Adams is The Mikado. I have sung with him, back in the 1970's and early 80's.

  • @LannyChambers
    @LannyChambers 4 года назад +18

    Very nice, indeed. I have the 1958 vinyl with Tom Round and Jean Hindmarsh, who are my favorite leads, but of course without John Reed, who absolutely defines "comic baritone." A few other G&S opera recordings feature all three stars. The Opera Australia Mikado is not to be missed as well--it's bloody hilarious, and snarkily anachronistic with the "little list" being read from an iPad!

    • @johnpickford4222
      @johnpickford4222 4 года назад +2

      The recording that you mention was the one that I grew up on and it included both Kenneth Sanford as Pooh-Bah and Donald Adams as the Mikado conducted by Isidor Godfrey but more importantly, Ann Drummond-Grant as Katisha and Peter Pratt’s Ko-Ko. Drummond-Grant died of cancer shortly after this was recorded and Pratt left the company so only Mikado and Pirates of Penzance in the late ‘50’s were recorded by them (with Sanford as the Sergeant of Police in the latter.). EXCELLENT, EXCELLENT recordings. Get them or live with regret. John Teed is nice, but PETER PRATT was the real thing. Funnier, sarcastic, sad, better tone and delivery. Enjoy them or be boiled in oil!!

    • @ARCtheCartoonMaster
      @ARCtheCartoonMaster 2 года назад +1

      I have that same recording on CD, and... yeah, I find Peter Pratt is a bit of a miscast for Ko-Ko. His voice is a bit too shaky, and sounding like he's trying too hard to emulate his predecessor, the wickedly talented Martyn Green. For me, John Reed *is* Ko-Ko - he's right there, in the role, though I at least respect that Pratt walked so that Reed could run, so to speak.
      With that said, that also goes both ways, and I find that Pratt was the perfect King Gama in _Princess Ida_ , whereas Reed was a bit of a tryhard in that role. Reed's Gama was a bit too obnoxious and Gilbert Gottfried-esque, whereas Pratt manages to pull off the cantankerous old geezer like it's second nature (nowadays known as a "boomer", after the generation that's currently like that).

  • @davidleavitt835
    @davidleavitt835 2 года назад +3

    Thanks for this. 43:53 my favourite trio. Lovely!

  • @stubrechner590
    @stubrechner590 2 года назад +6

    no one better than john reed

  • @andrewferguson5653
    @andrewferguson5653 4 года назад +13

    A great improvement from the DVD!

  • @alistaircox3867
    @alistaircox3867 3 года назад +1

    I used to travel to The Angel, Islington every month to see see John Reed and his fellow cast members in all of the G& S performances. What wonderful shows they were. It is so lovely to have discovered this excellent version of ‘The Mikado’ . Thank you for posting it.

    • @mikeevans9014
      @mikeevans9014 4 месяца назад

      Ah! The London season! .My wife worked for the Company in the London office at the Savoy so we had the privilege of free tickets whether at Sadlers Wells or the Savoy. A visit to the Wells always included a meal. at The Ballerina cafe close bye. Probably long gone now but happy memories particularly of the Last Night performances which were always huge fun. I remember one when Hinge and Bracket performed and another when a Royal Marine Band led by Royston Nash who later became the Conductor came on in "Pinafore".

  • @BernardVictor
    @BernardVictor 3 года назад +6

    What a pity that there do not appear to be any other live D'Oyly Carte productions.

  • @gailliescodd1043
    @gailliescodd1043 5 месяцев назад

    My step father had just joined the D.C. when this was filmed. He is one of the Mikados guards. He went on to become principle bass for a very short time. I had the great pleasure of watching him as the Pirate King, but never as the Mikado himself. This is my very favourite operetta.
    As a child I sat on lots of these lovely ladies knees. I could not understand the Christine Palmer had any other name than Katisha. She was quite lovely about being called it by me.

  • @elizabethrandall519
    @elizabethrandall519 3 года назад +3

    Absolutely gorgeous!!!

  • @brendagilson934
    @brendagilson934 6 месяцев назад

    Our son Tim played Ko-Ko in 1983. Age 17❤️
    This production was the year he was born.

  • @listen2meok-t6f
    @listen2meok-t6f Месяц назад

    The Best so far. It's all about the sound recording. Because
    when it is right all is right and I am right.
    And your opinion is hardly one.

  • @mrs.g.9816
    @mrs.g.9816 2 года назад +2

    I heard of, but never watched, Gilbert & Sullivan light operas until recently. I watched HMS Pinafore and loved it, and I've just watched The Mikado, and love this one, too. I watched this one on my smart TV with sound bar and woofer, so I really enjoyed the music, colors, facial expressions, gestures, and all the characters. But unfortunately, I couldn't make the captioning come on for any of the RUclips videos I watch on the smart TV. I'm slightly deaf, so I had trouble hearing some words. I'll try to get printed-out librettos so I can follow along more closely.
    I really liked the anatopism (British speech, mannerisms and musical styles in a far-east setting).

    • @Yakkymania
      @Yakkymania Год назад

      exactly the same for me, except i had never really heard of them either. I discovered them from The Simpsons and found myself watching both this and HMS Pinafore as they’re both referenced in the episode Cape Feare

  • @johnpickford4222
    @johnpickford4222 4 года назад +2

    This performance is available on the Kulture DVD label. I bought it first on VHS and then on DVD experiencing the problems which you corrected here. I wish Kulture had taken the care that you did. This is a gem and wish this could be the basis for a restored version. When companies wonder why studio opera recordings or filmed performances like this don’t sell, it is simply because of the inferior product which they manufacture and sell.

  • @virginiafry9854
    @virginiafry9854 14 дней назад

    I saw this cast live in Birmingham, UK, 1975

  • @にしやわ
    @にしやわ 4 года назад +4

    この舞台がyoutubeで見たMikadoの中で最も歌唱のクオリティが高いと思います。CDが欲しいですね。

  • @thetoiletinspector6878
    @thetoiletinspector6878 4 года назад +8

    Thanks for uploading this. I'm a bit of a Thomas Lawlor fan.

    • @kennethwayne6857
      @kennethwayne6857 4 года назад +5

      So am I!! I've learned he's still alive and living in Rhode Island, and at least until recently was still directing G&S. Sadly, his ex-wife Pauline Wales (Peep-Bo in this performance) has recently passed.

    • @thetoiletinspector6878
      @thetoiletinspector6878 3 года назад +3

      @@kennethwayne6857 Just read that Thomas Lawlor passed in October 2020.

    • @kennethwayne6857
      @kennethwayne6857 3 года назад +4

      @@thetoiletinspector6878 Very sorry to hear that. With him goes the last of the men of the old D'Oyly Carte as far as I know. Some from the '80's may still be with us. (Well, the classic D'Oyly Carte.)

  • @stischer47
    @stischer47 2 года назад +10

    For those upset for its portrayal of Japan and Japanese culture, look up Prince Komatsu Akihito and his reaction to seeing the play in London in 1886.