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The Making of
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![]() Martyn Green as George Grossmith. |
"One of my most exciting moments in the film was the scene of the first night of Iolanthe, when the new Savoy Theatre was opened with its daring innovation of electric lighting. (Actually, the Savoy was opened with Patience, but this was thought less suitable for the purposes of the film, and it was taken to have been Iolanthe.) Grossmith is intensely nervous and has to go through, for the first time before an audience, that exacting ordeal, the Lord Chancellor's Dream Song. The management is also intensely nervous, about the success of their new opera, the success of their new theatre, and whether the electricity will work. Shots of Grossmith singing the Dream Song alternate with shots of sweating anxious men working the electrical generators on a vacant lot outside the theatre. A breathless audience is intent on the intricate patter of the song, and there is a sigh of relief as Grossmith gets through, without fluffing, to the climax of the last words:
The night has been long;
Ditto, ditto my song;
And thank goodness they're both of them over!
As he mopped his forehead I had to express Grossmith's relief as well as the Lord Chancellor's exhaustion, and perhaps my own real relief as well, for filming is always a taxing business, and parts of that sequence were shot again and again.
"I enjoy filming, despite the hard work, and this film in particular was welcome to me, for it showed that though I have left the D'Oyly Carte I have not severed my connection with Gilbert and Sullivan.
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The D'Oyly Carte Opera Company's Annual Picnic.
George Grossmith (Martyn Green) dispenses champagne.
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Marc Shepherd, oakapple@cris.com