This is the best performance of HMS Pinafore I have seen. Very good singing and character acting. I have always appreciated how Australians bring enjoyment into whatever they do. Thanks, mates!
Wonderful. I have not sung in this since the 1980s but remember it all here in the UK. Ag 28mins is my favourite - the Queen's navy, the satire from 1870s UK, the history, our past - shared history UK/Australia. The moving up from office boy, articled clerk, solicitor (partner) - which my grandfather's brother did qualifying in the 1890s not long after that seeped through our generations to my own - at least 5 lawyers in our family and counting.... and the way the words show that wonderful point - that there were people who should never have been in charge of the navy who were put in charge of it. I also remember how scathing of G&S I felt my opera loving father was and other musicians - that this is not proper opera - why can't we just live and let live opera v operetta and all other forms of music. As my grandfather was the 10th child born in 1880 when his father was about 50 and my father similarly last child when his father was 49 we had 2 generations in place of 4 so in a sense as a family are much closer to this Victorian age than most.
Pinafore was my first G&S: the last seat in a full-house Melbourne Princess Theatre, back row of the gods. What a romp. It remains my favourite; I have seen it many times, with many companies and many theatres, and one performance using preserved Polly Woodside as the stage and the audience on tiered seats erected on the dock.
Magnificent production! And having the lyrics in subtitles really gives you a further appreciation of Gilbert’s genius in addition to that of Sullivan’s music!
I love GnS, i grew up on gramophone records, before TV, up in the country. I’ve seen, Pinafore, Mikado, Pirates and Iolanthe as school musicals, and been in Pirates school musicals. My son was introduced to GnS as a child, Opera Australia and the company with Jon English ( miss him). So I’m loving this
We did this when I was in 9th grade. Our orchestra was pretty good, our singing was generally passable (though not always), but I really don't think we understood the humor at all, the whole ambience of it. It was too old-fashioned, too English. We had a lot of fun though, and the music is really great.
Oh thank god someone uploaded this again. I watched this on YT back in 2009 and it must have been taken down because I haven’t been able to find it again since
I like just about everything of this production - except for Buttercup.I don't mind the cockney accent for her speaking but I wish her singing was less affected and bit more pleasant to listen to.
@@ZL54JK8 The rhyme is "Joseph's" with "approaches." Now, I am a believer in strict rhyme thanks to Stephen Sondheim, so I know that this isn't an exact rhyme by an stretch. It's just that it was close enough to catch my ear, and I was musing whether the rhymer Gilbert heard that when he wrote it. The quasi-rhyme was reinforced by the meter in the excerpt I wrote in my original post a year ago! : )
@@paules3437 Thank you for explaining what you meant. I don't know why you would want to discuss whether there is a rhyme present here and whether the librettist was aware of it. Of course there is no rhyme. I notice, in order to make your point, you even write out the extract, imposing your own versification on it! Here below is the original from the libretto. CAPT. You are my daughter after all. But see, Sir Joseph’s barge approaches, manned by twelve trusty oarsmen and accompanied by the admiring crowd of sisters, cousins, and aunts that attend him wherever he goes. Retire, my daughter, to your cabin - take this, his photograph, with you - it may help to bring you to a more reasonable frame of mind.
@@ZL54JK8 Let's not overthink this. I was making a mere bagatelle of a remark: just a curious observation that a near rhyme was in a speech where you would not expect a rhyme ( as you yourself pointed out). It simply struck my ear and I mused if Gilbert had noticed it. Why does it seem odd to you that I would discuss a "rhyme"? Isn't the comment section open to all kinds of comments? I am an editor and a lyricist myself and so am aware of such "rhymes" or other language quirks more than most people I know. And of course I "put my own versification " on it. That's the whole point: I noticed it because the rhythm of those few words called for them being split up in this manner.
@@paules3437 "Let's not overthink this,"-sez you, proceeding then to overthink it! I picked up this comment originally because it was such an irrelevance. You need to tell me you are an editor and a lyricist. Previously you claimed some affiliation with Sondheim. None of that gives any weight to your comment. Good prose does have a perceptible sense of rhythm and inevitably words will rhyme from time to time, as I have just illustrated here. So, you wrote something that you plucked out of thin air, and I challenged you on it. I will add that when you commented, "Did even Gilbert catch the rhyme in the phrase", which you then set out in your own self-imposed verse form, I wondered if even you caught the arrogance of your remark. In other words, WS Gilbert, great poet and dramatist that he was, might just conceivably have missed something that you, an editor and lyricist, had cleverly managed to spot!
Sullivan wrote notes to be sung, not shouted. Sir Joseph Porter and Little Buttercup and Dick Deadeye need to be reminded of that. Otherwise a nice performance.
I sang Sir Joseph I did not shout it , the performance was done by an opera company and performed in a very large theatre , I sing to my audience and want them to hear every note and word as both Gilbert and Sullivan wuld have wanted.
Although this was otherwise a brilliant production, Colette Mann as Buttercup was just absolutely awful. I know they used that voice to reflect Buttercup's lowly social standing (as it was seen in those times) but Mann can neither sing nor act.
Oh dear. G&S is, admittedly, _damned difficult_ to bring off successfully. The worst mistake you can make was endlessly repeated here - play it for laughs and it is no longer funny at all, just embarrassing. Pitching the humour and it's timing is a knife-edge balance, and I don't think the AO got it right even once, turning this into an expensive version of amateur night at the local town hall. Music and singing all OK, but the direction _terrible._ If this is the only version of G&S you have seen, keep looking, but elsewhere.
It doesn't help that it's a staged performance - meant to be seen from a distance - with so many close-ups. I attended a concert of some G&S recently and the one which really woke the audience up was the one that was appallingly hammed by the singer. I could see the conductor wincing.
And I see myself at 0:52🎻😀Absolutely loved doing this show.
It’s a fantastic production! Some standard setting renditions for several of the songs. Great work!
At last, the Australian production on TH-cam, thank you ! Greetings from Ukraine.
With you in Estonia. :-)
The best captain in all the versions I've seen.
Agreed sir
This is the best performance of HMS Pinafore I have seen. Very good singing and character acting. I have always appreciated how Australians bring enjoyment into whatever they do. Thanks, mates!
@@brianbrotherston5940
Shame, shame 😮!
That lady’s voice who plays Josephine is just beautiful
Tiffany Speight: incomparable!!!
Wonderful. I have not sung in this since the 1980s but remember it all here in the UK. Ag 28mins is my favourite - the Queen's navy, the satire from 1870s UK, the history, our past - shared history UK/Australia. The moving up from office boy, articled clerk, solicitor (partner) - which my grandfather's brother did qualifying in the 1890s not long after that seeped through our generations to my own - at least 5 lawyers in our family and counting.... and the way the words show that wonderful point - that there were people who should never have been in charge of the navy who were put in charge of it. I also remember how scathing of G&S I felt my opera loving father was and other musicians - that this is not proper opera - why can't we just live and let live opera v operetta and all other forms of music. As my grandfather was the 10th child born in 1880 when his father was about 50 and my father similarly last child when his father was 49 we had 2 generations in place of 4 so in a sense as a family are much closer to this Victorian age than most.
Pinafore was my first G&S: the last seat in a full-house Melbourne Princess Theatre, back row of the gods. What a romp. It remains my favourite; I have seen it many times, with many companies and many theatres, and one performance using preserved Polly Woodside as the stage and the audience on tiered seats erected on the dock.
Magnificent production!
And having the lyrics in subtitles really gives you a further appreciation of Gilbert’s genius in addition to that of Sullivan’s music!
I looked around TH-cam, and knew this was superior immediately, just from the caliber of the orchestra.
Discovered HMS Pinafore when I was 15 and before long I was singing Sorry Her Lot!
A superb production of two of G & S's best! The music just dances along, as it should...
I love GnS, i grew up on gramophone records, before TV, up in the country.
I’ve seen, Pinafore, Mikado, Pirates and Iolanthe as school musicals, and been in Pirates school musicals. My son was introduced to GnS as a child, Opera Australia and the company with Jon English ( miss him). So I’m loving this
We did this operetta when I was in the eighth grade in 1969. What a hoot! I can still remember all the songs. Thank you so much for this.
I was also in this operetta at high school in 1965! Hi from Western Australia.
We did this when I was in 9th grade. Our orchestra was pretty good, our singing was generally passable (though not always), but I really don't think we understood the humor at all, the whole ambience of it. It was too old-fashioned, too English. We had a lot of fun though, and the music is really great.
Dear OZ! This a wonderful production,fresh and alive. You have done Gilbert and Sullivan proud, thanks so much.
Finally the whole play from the Australian ensemble is available on TH-cam! Thank you, Si(e)r! :) Greetings from Switzerland.
I´ve never been into musicals but that blows me away. I love it :)
I’m a Gilbert and Sullivan all my life. Thank you thank you.
a big smile on my face! such energy and fun!! in one of the best G and S operettas 🙂
Nicely done overture. Tempi and dynamics right on the money. I'll have to watch the rest.
I Love Gilbert and Sullivan so much and I am 10
Me too and I am 66.
me too, 36
39 and from Switzerland :)
Me too, 71
me too and I am almost 80
Oh thank god someone uploaded this again. I watched this on YT back in 2009 and it must have been taken down because I haven’t been able to find it again since
The best of productions.
Wonderful sets too xx
This is a really great production - thank you!
Anthony Warlow what a voice..
Wonderful, and with a fantastic Josephine!
I never really got into this play until this performance, more of a pirates fan but this is good thanks for posting
Fantastic !!!
It’s so magical when a whole procession of ladies come out of the shipping container
So well done and enjoyable. Thank you fpor this download.
Never seen better. I'm moving to Australia.
RIP conductor Andrew Greene ❤
Opera Australia is absolutely brilliant 👏. Awesome.
And I salute you all yet beating each of you for I am still hanging on to my 89 [ not for long alas….] my very best wishes to you all!
Just love it!
Thanks, this is absolutely wonderful... love from the USA 😂
And I'm never never sick at sea. (Well, hardly ever).
Thank you.
Wonderful....x
Good on YA Mate - One RIPPA of a show
R.I.P. Andrew Greene
We did this in high school 1963
Great tenor. A little misplaced but makes it work. TY for the post.
Oof, I gotta order tickets for the 2023 show in Adelaide while I still can.
I performed hms 3 times sadly as raiph cauae the csptain was fun and dick deadeye. Woulda been fun. But you ausis did amazing. Ty
Vale Andrew Greene! RIP
I like just about everything of this production - except for Buttercup.I don't mind the cockney accent for her speaking but I wish her singing was less affected and bit more pleasant to listen to.
Welcome Sheila Buttercup!
Are they performing it in that big white building shaped like shell?
Yes, the Opera theatre, now named the Joan Sutherland Theatre is the home of the Australian Opera.
That is a bandshell.
am i the only one who appreciates the buttercup casting for this rendition?
Did even Gilbert catch the rhyme in the phrase
" But see, Sir Joseph's
Barge approaches"? (22:59)
What is this rhyme you refer to?
@@ZL54JK8 The rhyme is "Joseph's" with "approaches." Now, I am a believer in strict rhyme thanks to Stephen Sondheim, so I know that this isn't an exact rhyme by an stretch. It's just that it was close enough to catch my ear, and I was musing whether the rhymer Gilbert heard that when he wrote it. The quasi-rhyme was reinforced by the meter in the excerpt I wrote in my original post a year ago! : )
@@paules3437 Thank you for explaining what you meant. I don't know why you would want to discuss whether there is a rhyme present here and whether the librettist was aware of it. Of course there is no rhyme. I notice, in order to make your point, you even write out the extract, imposing your own versification on it! Here below is the original from the libretto.
CAPT. You are my daughter after all. But see, Sir Joseph’s barge approaches,
manned by twelve trusty oarsmen and accompanied by the admiring crowd of sisters,
cousins, and aunts that attend him wherever he goes. Retire, my daughter, to your cabin -
take this, his photograph, with you - it may help to bring you to a more reasonable frame
of mind.
@@ZL54JK8 Let's not overthink this. I was making a mere bagatelle of a remark: just a curious observation that a near rhyme was in a speech where you would not expect a rhyme ( as you yourself pointed out). It simply struck my ear and I mused if Gilbert had noticed it.
Why does it seem odd to you that I would discuss a "rhyme"? Isn't the comment section open to all kinds of comments?
I am an editor and a lyricist myself and so am aware of such "rhymes" or other language quirks more than most people I know. And of course I "put my own versification " on it. That's the whole point: I noticed it because the rhythm of those few words called for them being split up in this manner.
@@paules3437 "Let's not overthink this,"-sez you, proceeding then to overthink it! I picked up this comment originally because it was such an irrelevance. You need to tell me you are an editor and a lyricist. Previously you claimed some affiliation with Sondheim. None of that gives any weight to your comment. Good prose does have a perceptible sense of rhythm and inevitably words will rhyme from time to time, as I have just illustrated here. So, you wrote something that you plucked out of thin air, and I challenged you on it.
I will add that when you commented, "Did even Gilbert catch the rhyme in the phrase", which you then set out in your own self-imposed verse form, I wondered if even you caught the arrogance of your remark. In other words, WS Gilbert, great poet and dramatist that he was, might just conceivably have missed something that you, an editor and lyricist, had cleverly managed to spot!
This sound mix is a bit different from on my DVD. Bit rougher, with more flaws shining through. Still a great production.
Where exactly did Captain Corcoran insult a sailor, as Sir Joseph said? Did I miss something?
I think what has happened is that Sir Joseph feels Captain Corcoran has "patronised" his crew, which is akin to insulting them.
Great acting and singing but are the ladies fashions correct for that period?
Looks like about 1910. Ready to board the Titanic. Quite beautiful, actually.
I was sceptical at first, but then, hey, it turned out to be quite entertaining! Buttercup is a gem of a character.
Sullivan wrote notes to be sung, not shouted. Sir Joseph Porter and Little Buttercup and Dick Deadeye need to be reminded of that. Otherwise a nice performance.
Sure, Jan.
I sang Sir Joseph I did not shout it , the performance was done by an opera company and performed in a very large theatre , I sing to my audience and want them to hear every note and word as both Gilbert and Sullivan wuld have wanted.
Who is the orchestra? MSO?
Duties for a few weeks 😴 I think 868
Who falls in love
Buttercup reminds me of Julie Waters lol
The thumbnail looks like the love child of Greta Thunberg and Gavin Rossdale
Musically fine as one would expect but the dialogue is very wooden and some of them are bit old for the parts they are playing- Just my view
Jasonmm
Williams Thomas Taylor Jason Gonzalez Laura
Lee Joseph Anderson Dorothy Young Paul
Lee Gary Thompson Gary Allen Amy
Cinm
Mdsd
Although this was otherwise a brilliant production, Colette Mann as Buttercup was just absolutely awful. I know they used that voice to reflect Buttercup's lowly social standing (as it was seen in those times) but Mann can neither sing nor act.
Agreed it ruined this oarts for me. This isn’t my favourite adaptation. Mine is essgee? I think it’s spelt
6th and
Buttercup is HIDEOUS!!!
I wish the male chorus could get the fucking consonants together lol
Why the obscenity?
Mwarilj
Oh dear.
G&S is, admittedly, _damned difficult_ to bring off successfully. The worst mistake you can make was endlessly repeated here - play it for laughs and it is no longer funny at all, just embarrassing.
Pitching the humour and it's timing is a knife-edge balance, and I don't think the AO got it right even once, turning this into an expensive version of amateur night at the local town hall.
Music and singing all OK, but the direction _terrible._ If this is the only version of G&S you have seen, keep looking, but elsewhere.
It doesn't help that it's a staged performance - meant to be seen from a distance - with so many close-ups. I attended a concert of some G&S recently and the one which really woke the audience up was the one that was appallingly hammed by the singer. I could see the conductor wincing.
Cinm