Английская Википедия:H.M.S. Parliament

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Версия от 01:00, 18 марта 2024; EducationBot (обсуждение | вклад) (Новая страница: «{{Английская Википедия/Панель перехода}} {{Orphan|date=March 2016}} {{EngvarB|date=October 2013}} {{Italic title}} {{Use dmy dates|date=January 2024}} thumb|Advertisement published in the ''[[Toronto Globe'', 11 May 1880]] '''''H.M.S. Parliament''''', also titled '''''The Lady Who Loved A Government Clerk''''', is a comic operetta. Published in 1880, it a...»)
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Файл:HMS Parliament advertisement Toronto Globe 11 May 1880.jpg
Advertisement published in the Toronto Globe, 11 May 1880

H.M.S. Parliament, also titled The Lady Who Loved A Government Clerk, is a comic operetta. Published in 1880, it adapted the music of H.M.S. Pinafore by Arthur Sullivan to a new libretto by William H. Fuller (who was also the librettist for The Unspecific Scandal). The work satirised contemporary Canadian politics,[1] particularly the perceived corruption of Sir John A Macdonald and his government.[2] It was written as a "piece of extravagance" for performance by the Eugene McDowell Comedy Company, an American-led touring group active from 1875 to 1890.[3] The foreword suggested that the show existed only "for the fun of things" rather than any "political proclivities".[4]

The characters are largely similar to those of HMS Pinafore: Captain Corcoran is rewritten as Captain McA (John A. Macdonald); Dick Deadeye becomes Alexander MacDeadeye (Alexander Mackenzie, Canada's second prime minister); Sir Joseph Porter is renamed Sir Samuel Sillery (Sir Samuel Leonard Tilley, finance minister); and the couple Josephine and Ralph are presented as Angelina and Sam Snifter.[5] The new libretto too is loosely based on the original: for example, where Pinafore opens "We sail the ocean blue / and our saucy ship's a beauty", Parliament begins "We sail the ship of state / tho' our craft is rather leaky".[4][6]

H.M.S. Parliament opened in Montreal at the Academy of Music on 16 February 1880.[4] The work was positively received by initial audiences, and its planned run became a multi-city tour spanning 30 communities over five months.[1][5] After that tour finished, political events had made the satire out-of-date, so no further performances were done. The piece re-emerged when its book and lyrics were included in a volume of Canada's Lost Plays in 1978; a few attempts at revival were made shortly afterwards, including at least two full productions. A director of one such revival noted that "Fuller's sparkling wit remains the main preserving spice...[which] spares the operetta from the worst excesses of Victorian sentiment and patriotism".[5] TrypTych Concert and Opera presented HMS Parliament in October 2017 in Toronto. Christopher Hoile of Stage-Door.com wrote: "TrypTych Concert & Opera has given Toronto, and indeed Canada, a great present for Canada’s sesquicentennial by producing H.M.S. Parliament for the first time with orchestra since its premiere and tour in 1880."

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