Page 6--Thursday, May 25, 1978-The Michigan Daily ilbert & Sullivan at its finest By JEFFREY SELBST SpecialtoThe Daily CHICAGO - The D'Oyly Carte Opera Company of England arrived here last week as part of their North American tour. The usual fare - Mikado, Pirates of Penzance, and Pinafore, which together are frequently and breezily referred to as MikadoPinaPirates - was supplemented by a rare tour presentation of what many critics consider to be the finest of all the Gilbert and Sullivan operettas - Iolanthe. The production of Iolanthe that was mounted Saturday night at the Arie Crown Theater in McCormick Place was recently-designed. In fact, it was put together in honor of the Silver Jubilee of Queen Elizabeth and was appropriately dressed mainly in shades of silver and black. This performance was both visually and musically stunning. From the first chorus, it was clear that the show was going to be a musical treat. The curtain opens during the overture to reveal a black scrim curtain upon which is emblazoned a silver-and-sequins medallion of an ornate floral design, in the center of which appears the words "Iolanthe/or the Peer and the Peri," which is the show's full name. THE SCRIM lifts and the stage is seen - entirely framed in a similar silver frame inside of which all the ac- tion will take place. The chorus of fairies comes on the stage and perfor- ms the opening number, "Tripping hither, tripping thither." By STEPHEN PICKOVER Special to the Daily CHICAGO - As this is the centenary for the first production of H.M.S. Pinafore, Gilbert and Sullivan's widely known operetta and the mainstay of many high school theater groups, I think it wise to see if it has maintained its charm in present day theater. The D'Oyly Carte Opera Company performed Pinafore almost exactly the way it was performed under Gilbert's fond care at its opening at the Opera Comique and, unfortunately, today's audience suffers for it. Why has the set, an unquestionably very pretty and realistic replica of a British warship's quarter deck, never been redesigned, especially when its utilization of stage space leaves something to be desired? Few but the captain may use the upper deck, so chorus and the remainder of the leads stay huddled together on the stage, producing a somewhat crowded and stagnant picture. The set causes the blocking to be merely functional, the only visually appealing scene occurring when Josephine oversees Ralph on the lower deck about to commit suicide. GRANTED, GILBERT was a stickler for detail - in all the operas where possible, he made pains to keep costumes and sets as authentic as possible. However, the man that could pen this tongue-in-cheek barb - "It so happens that if there is an institution in Great Britain which is not susceptible of any improvement at all, it is the House of Peers!" - from Iolanthe, would surely be the first to agree that after one hun- dred years, it's time to give Pinafore a face lift. lolanthe (or The Peer and the Peri) Written by W.S. Gilbert, composedby Arthur Sullivan The Lord Chancellor ................. John Reed Earl of Mount Ararat......... .... John Alydon EarlJolloller...............GeoffneyShovetton Strephon .........................Gareth Jones Queen of the Fairies ..........Patricia Leonard lolanthe .........................Jane Metcalf Phyllis .........................Barbara Lilley First performance Saoytheater, November 25, 1002 RoystenNash, musical director and conductor; Bruno Santini, costume designer; Joe Davis, lighting designer; Virginia Mason, choreography Act One succeeds as a smoothly- flowing entity, building through the familiar scenes and songs in a believable fashion through to the lengthy, operatic finale. What makes this remarkable is the tendency of the D'Oyly Carte Company - and many others who follow their lead - to treat the G&S operas as period pieces with so many "set" numbers, that is, discreet pieces with no discernible musical or dramatic relationship to each other. That they did not do so is tribute to the ascendancy of Royston Nash in the last couple of years to the post of music director.,Nash has been criticized for what many feel to be a choppy style of conducting, but nonetheless this can be seen rather as a needed infusion of dynamism into a century-old manner of performing these shows. See A SPLENDID, Page 8 H.M.S. Pinafore (or The Lass that Loved a Sailor Written by W.S. Gilbert, composed by Arthur Sullivan The Rt. Hon. Sir Joseph Porter, KIC.B....................John Reed CaptainCorcoran..............Michael Raynor Ralph Rachstraw ................Meston Reid Dick Deadeye ....................John Ayldon Josephine.................. Barbara Lilley Hebe.. . ...........Roberta Morrell Mrs. Cripps (Little Buttercup t ...... . ..... Patricia Leonard First performance-opera Comique, May 25, 1878 Roysten Nash, musical director and conductor While Gilbert's libretto and Sullivan's music are some of the best in comic opera, they have topped themselves so often in later works like The Gondoliers and Iolanthe that one can't help seeing Pinafore as a lesser opera, the groun- dwork for a brilliant duo. This feeling is only enhanced by, the D'Oyly Carte Production, which treats it like a precious museum piece, one of those paintings that "everybody" knows and adores. This attitude caused their production to rate at best a "fair," and this only because the orchestra and ac- tors' diction and vocal quality were vir- tually perfect. ROYSTON NASH, who took control of the orchestra from Isadore Godfey in 1971, has kept the sparkle, humor and airiness of Sullivan's music. However, he tended to take the patter, "When I See PINAFORE, Page8 Two views from the D'Oyly Carte company's recent tour of Chicago: top, Michael Rayner as Captain Corcoran and Barbara Lilley as Josephine in HMS Pinafore, and bottom, (from left) Suzanne O'Keeffe, John Reed, Patricia Leonard, Lorraine Dulcie Daniels, Patricia Anne Bennett, Barbara Lilley, and Geoffrey Shovelton in a scene from lolanthe. 'Colored Girls': For theatre-goers who would consider seeing something different By JOSHUA PECK ForColored When does a revue or free form Girls Who Have Considered suicide/When musical make more-sense than a more The Rainbew is Enn orthodox way of telling a story on by NtozakeShange stage? Godspell, though not a master- Fisher Theatre piece, provides one reasonable answer. LadyinOrange........,........Barbara Alston Its zaniness and deviance from the Ledy in Pink . .............. Beverly Anne Scriptures were a welcome leap from Lady in Purple_ ......Gloria Catomnee Lady in Green ........ .. Brenda J. Davis the solemn treatment usually given the Lady in Blue .....................Paula Larke life and times of Jesus. (Remember Lady in Yellow ..... ......... .Jonette O'Kelley The Greatest Story Ever Told?) Lady in Red ...............Latanya Richardson For Colored Girls who have Con- ozScott,directorandarranger; Ming ChoLee, sidered Suicide/When The Rainbow is .scenercydcsigner; Judy Dearing,costume desiger; JenniferTipton,ighting; Pata Moss, Enuf is a different matter entirely. It is choregraphy the product of a notion that is em- barrassingly new in the arts - that v- - -" - withinthe-black -minority; there- is a sub-minority of black women whose aspirations and fears are distinct from Afro-Americans' asa whole. So if the theme of black womanhood has never before been broached on the :stage, I ask, why found the genre with a "choreopoem," as Colored Girls calls itself? A more conservative form would have been more appropriate for first bringing this particular message to the (predominantly white) American theater-going public. As it stands, Colored Girls consists of 21 disjointed segments of varying moods and styles. There are dramatic monologues, songs,. dances and free style verse of every at,. titude. - - - - - - THE ISSUE of the black male mystique is that most poignantly and humorously addressed by the show, each of several scenes looking at a dif- ferent aspect. There are the "latent rapists," whose advances make every evening on the town a potential disaster. In "sorry," the six performers enact grotesque parodies of the various ways their lovers have come to them to apologize for wrongdoing: "You know I'm only human, woman" (delivered in broad dialectic slur); or (after noisily inhaling on an imaginary marijuana cigarette), "Hey, I was stoned." Their mimicry of their men's "soulful" struts - -See COLORED, Page 8