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- Brantinghame_Hall abstract "Brantinghame Hall is a play in four acts written by W. S. Gilbert for his friend Rutland Barrington, who was then leasing the St. James's Theatre. The play opened on 29 November 1888 and closed on 29 December, after about 27 performances. It starred Barrington, his younger brother, Duncan Fleet, Lewis Waller, and Julia Neilson (being the professional stage debut of the latter two). Its companion piece was A Patron Saint.Brantinghame Hall was the worst financial failure of Gilbert's career and sent Barrington into bankruptcy. Gilbert vowed never to write another serious drama again, although eventually he did. Historian Jane Stedman speculates that the failure of this play (produced soon after The Yeomen of the Guard, which increased Arthur Sullivan's desire to turn to more serious operas), and Gilbert's subsequent aversion at this time to writing serious drama, may have hurt Gilbert's partnership with Sullivan, since Gilbert declined to write any more serious librettos for Sullivan. However, this conclusion is dubious, since Gilbert and Sullivan soon collaborated on the comic and lively (and very successful) The Gondoliers (1889). Moreover, though Gilbert declined to write the libretto to Sullivan's grand opera, Ivanhoe (1891), it was he who recommended Julian Sturgis, who wrote the libretto for Sullivan.Many of the characters in the play are reminiscent of those in Gilbert's Savoy Operas, including Somers/Boatswain; Ross/Dr. Daly; Ruth/Patience and Elsie; Alaric/Giuseppe; Mabel/Aline; and Thursby/Ludwig. Also, as in some of his earlier plays, including Charity, Gilbert touches on the theme of how a shamed woman is truly the noblest in society. The character Ruth notes, regarding the scoundrel, Crampton, "your heart was slow to turn; your eyes were closed. To open them it needed that a woman should clothe herself with shame. That has been done; and now, you see!" And she is told by Mr. Thursby, "the sooner a ship-load of you is shot into London society the better!" (Act IV)".
- Brantinghame_Hall thumbnail Brantingbarring.jpg?width=300.
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- Brantinghame_Hall wikiPageWikiLink Arthur_Sullivan.
- Brantinghame_Hall wikiPageWikiLink Category:1888_plays.
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- Brantinghame_Hall wikiPageWikiLink Charity_(play).
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- Brantinghame_Hall wikiPageWikiLink H.M.S._Pinafore.
- Brantinghame_Hall wikiPageWikiLink HMS_Pinafore.
- Brantinghame_Hall wikiPageWikiLink Ivanhoe_(opera).
- Brantinghame_Hall wikiPageWikiLink Julia_Neilson.
- Brantinghame_Hall wikiPageWikiLink Lewis_Waller.
- Brantinghame_Hall wikiPageWikiLink Morning_room.
- Brantinghame_Hall wikiPageWikiLink New_South_Wales.
- Brantinghame_Hall wikiPageWikiLink Patience_(opera).
- Brantinghame_Hall wikiPageWikiLink Point_de_Galle.
- Brantinghame_Hall wikiPageWikiLink Rutland_Barrington.
- Brantinghame_Hall wikiPageWikiLink Savoy_Opera.
- Brantinghame_Hall wikiPageWikiLink Savoy_opera.
- Brantinghame_Hall wikiPageWikiLink Sri_Lanka.
- Brantinghame_Hall wikiPageWikiLink St._Jamess_Theatre.
- Brantinghame_Hall wikiPageWikiLink St_Jamess_Theatre.
- Brantinghame_Hall wikiPageWikiLink The_Gondoliers.
- Brantinghame_Hall wikiPageWikiLink The_Grand_Duke.
- Brantinghame_Hall wikiPageWikiLink The_Sorcerer.
- Brantinghame_Hall wikiPageWikiLink The_Yeomen_of_the_Guard.
- Brantinghame_Hall wikiPageWikiLink W._S._Gilbert.
- Brantinghame_Hall wikiPageWikiLink Will_(law).
- Brantinghame_Hall wikiPageWikiLink Will_and_testament.
- Brantinghame_Hall wikiPageWikiLinkText "Brantinghame Hall".
- Brantinghame_Hall hasPhotoCollection Brantinghame_Hall.
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- Brantinghame_Hall subject Category:1888_plays.
- Brantinghame_Hall subject Category:Plays_by_W._S._Gilbert.
- Brantinghame_Hall hypernym Play.
- Brantinghame_Hall type Play.
- Brantinghame_Hall type Work.
- Brantinghame_Hall type Work.
- Brantinghame_Hall comment "Brantinghame Hall is a play in four acts written by W. S. Gilbert for his friend Rutland Barrington, who was then leasing the St. James's Theatre. The play opened on 29 November 1888 and closed on 29 December, after about 27 performances. It starred Barrington, his younger brother, Duncan Fleet, Lewis Waller, and Julia Neilson (being the professional stage debut of the latter two).".
- Brantinghame_Hall label "Brantinghame Hall".
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- Brantinghame_Hall wasDerivedFrom Brantinghame_Hall?oldid=679740946.
- Brantinghame_Hall depiction Brantingbarring.jpg.
- Brantinghame_Hall isPrimaryTopicOf Brantinghame_Hall.