Prince Ananias Explained

Prince Ananias was the first operetta composed by Victor Herbert. The libretto is by Francis Neilson. It was first produced by a troupe called "The Bostonians" at The Broadway Theatre on November 20, 1894, directed by Jerome Sykes.[1] It remained in their repertoire for three seasons and was given more than 300 performances in all. A modest success at first, it did well on tour.[2]

Synopsis

Arriving at the court of King Boniface, a touring troupe of players finds that the king has lost his ability to laugh. They are tasked with finding his sense of humor; the penalty for failure is death. They produce a work, Prince Ananias, that is not well-received, except that the title character is so inept that the king bursts out laughing. Thus, the players have a happy ending, as do the several pairs of lovers who overcome various romantic and backstage complications.

Roles and original cast

Musical numbers

Act I
Act II

References

External links

Notes and References

  1. https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1894/11/21/106880105.pdf "Prince Ananias Produced"
  2. Gould, pp. 266 and 269