The Blue Moon (musical) explained

The Blue Moon is an Edwardian musical comedy with music composed by Howard Talbot and Paul Rubens, lyrics by Percy Greenbank and Rubens and a book by Harold Ellis and by Alexander M. Thompson. It is set in India during the days of the British Raj, and concerns the love of a singing girl for a young British army officer.

It ran in London in 1905, starring Courtice Pounds, and was then played in the English provinces and in America and Australia.

History

The Blue Moon was originally staged in Northampton on 29 February 1904, with a book by Harold Ellis. By the time of the London production, Ellis had died, and the book was revised by Alexander M. Thompson (credited as "A. M. Thompson"). The lyrics were by Percy Greenbank and Paul Rubens, and the music by Rubens and Howard Talbot.[1]

The London production, produced by Robert Courtneidge, opened at the Lyric Theatre on 28 August 1905.[2] Despite generally favourable press notices, it ran for only 182 performances, not a significant success by the standards of the Edwardian London stage.[3] Nevertheless, in 1906, a production toured the English provinces. Another opened on Broadway under the direction of Frank Smithson at the Casino Theatre on November 3, 1906, starring Ethel Jackson in the title role.[4] The J. C. Williamson company toured a production in Australia in 1907–08.[5]

Cast

Synopsis

"Blue Moon" is the title by which the young singer Chandral Nil is popularly known. She is generally assumed to be Burmese, but is in fact English, abducted from her mother Lady Augusta Brabasham, by a criminal deserter from the British army. He fled to avoid arrest for theft and took the young child with him. He is now calling himself Moolraj and plies a trade as an "idol maker, juggler and marriage broker." Captain Jack Ormsby, a young officer whose regiment is stationed nearby, has fallen in love with Chandra Nil. Moolraj has other plans for her, having promised her as a wife to Prince Badahur of Kharikar. The Prince, learning of Jack's love, gracefully withdraws and hands over his bride-to-be to the young captain. Subsidiary love interests are those of Private Charlie Taylor, who loves a lady's maid, Millicent Leroy, and the journalist Bobbie Scott and his admirer Evelyn Ormsby. Moolraj comes face to face with the Major, who was the victim of the robbery that caused Moolraj to flee England. This unexpected meeting forces Moolraj to explain who Chandra Nil really is, and Jack is able to marry his singing girl without shocking his aristocratic relations.

Musical numbers

Act I – The Bungalow at Naga.
Act II – The Ruby Palace of Kharikar

Numbers marked* were composed by Talbot; the others by Rubens.[6]

Critical reception

The Times made fun of the lack of plot, and said that if there were any less of a story, the show would have to be billed as a series of turns rather than a musical play. "The only things that matter now are the turns. Are they "bright" and "pretty"? Are Mr. Edouin and Mr. Passmore funny? Are the dresses splendid, the music soothing or exciting, and the ladies beautiful? We can answer all those questions in the affirmative."[7] The Observer commented, "The specially hearty welcome accorded to the piece at its première certainly suggests that if, as some have been alleging, this particular form of entertainment is dying out, it is at any rate dying very hard, and is capable of rousing much laughter and applause by its moribund mirth."[8] The Daily Mail also predicted success for the musical, describing it as:

the pleasant, light, more or less connected variety show so dear to the heart of the tired Londoner in search of a jolly digestive. What matter if the story is conventional or the music tinkly? There are plenty of neat lyrics, comic situations, and pretty love-scenes. The dresses are lovely and charming, and the scenery charming and lovely. ... [Pounds's] charm of personality was as irresistible as ever, and he sang his best number, "The Burmah Girl," as only Courtice Pounds could sing it – even with a cold. The discovery of the evening was Miss Florence Smithson. Never has a daintier, quainter, more plaintive little singer graced the boards of the lyric stage. ... Passmore danced very nimbly, and made a hit with an eccentric number, entitled "The Crocodile." ... Moore made a sly, useful maid.[9]

Reviewing the touring production, The Manchester Guardian praised the score: "The music has not the fascinating charm of André Messager's music; it excels in a more northern quality of sentimentalism which, in moderation, does not harm anybody."[10] The New York Times gave the Broadway production an unfavourable notice; of the comic lead, James T. Powers, it wrote, "one gets rather tired seeing him labor to put humor into lines which are absolutely without a vestige of that desirable quality."[4]

External links

Notes and References

  1. "The Blue Moon", The Play Pictorial, May 1905, pp. 121–36
  2. "Prospective Arrangements", The Times, 26 August 1905, p. 6
  3. Taubner, Richard. Operetta: a theatrical history. (2003), p. 196, Psychology Press,
  4. https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1906/11/04/101849709.pdf "New Musical Show"
  5. http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article14882360? "The Blue Moon"
  6. Johnson, Colin M. "The Blue Moon", Gilbert and Sullivan Archive, accessed 29 May 2017. That site also lists four supplementary numbers – a duet for Chandra and Jack ("Out of the radiant East") composed by Talbot; a song for the Major and chorus ("Though I'm a gallant Major, I'm not like all the rest") and a song for Bobbie and chorus ("Attracted I was by a maiden I met in London Town"), both composed by Rubens; and a song "The White Pomerian", composed by George M. Saker.
  7. "Lyric Theatre", The Times, 29 August 1905, p. 7
  8. "At the Play", The Observer, 3 September 1905, p. 7
  9. The Daily Mail, 29 August 1905
  10. "Prince's Theatre", The Manchester Guardian, 23 October 1906, p. 7