Miss Esmeralda
Miss Esmeralda is a
The piece premiered in 1887 at the Gaiety Theatre in London, starring Marion Hood in the title role, with Frank Thornton as Quasimodo and featuring E. J. Lonnen and Letty Lind.
Background and production
Miss Esmeralda premiered on 8 October 1887 at the Gaiety, starring Marion Hood in the title role, with Frank Thornton as Quasimodo and featuring comedy star E. J. Lonnen and dancer Letty Lind. Percy Anderson designed the costumes.[5] Fred Leslie and the theatre's leading actress, Nellie Farren, were away on tour. When they returned, the piece closed in December to make way for a new piece starring Leslie and Farren, Frankenstein, or The Vampire's Victim, which opened on 24 December 1887.[6]
Plot
Act I: A market in Paris
The gipsy Esmeralda is in love with the dashing young Captain Phoebus, who is, unfortunately, engaged to the fierce Fleur-de-Lis. Esmeralda has inadvertently also captivated a monk, Claude Frollo, and the hunchback Quasimodo. Frollo vengefully stabs Corporal Gringoire and tries to frame Esmeralda with the crime; she is arrested.
Act II: A prison and a court of justice in Paris
Quasimodo visits Esmeralda in prison and vows to help her, assuring her that he can establish her innocence. Frollo says that he will liberate her if she agrees to marry him. At her trial, Frollo is the prosecutor, and Phoebus is counsel for the defence. Esmeralda's innocence is proved the apparition of Gringoire, which is produced by Quasimodo.
Roles and original cast
- Clopin – Leo Stormont
- Claude Frollo – E. J. Lonnen
- Quasimodo – Frank Thornton
- Corporal Gringoire – George Stone
- Belvigne – E. W. Colman
- Captain Phoebus – Fannie Leslie
- Ernest – Ada Blanche
- Esmeralda – Marion Hood
- Madame Gondelarieur – Emily Miller
- Fleur-de-Lis – Letty Lind
- Zillah – Addie Blanche
- Female Warders – Maud Richardson and Marie de Braham
Musical numbers
- Only a Gypsy Girl – Esmeralda
- His for evermore – Esmeralda
- The Noble Born – Clopin
- Killaloe – Frollo
- Convicts – Chorus
Notes
- ^ Stewart, Maurice. 'The spark that lit the bonfire', in Gilbert and Sullivan News (London) Spring 2003.
- ^ "Theatrical Humour in the Seventies", The Times, 20 February 1914, p. 9
- ^ Programme for Carmen up to Data Archived 2008-12-10 at the Wayback Machine
- ISBN 978-0-304-29372-8
- ^ Howard, Cecil. "Miss Esmeralda", The Theater: A Monthly Review and Magazine, Wyman & Sons, 1887, pp. 266–268
- ^ Hollingshead, p. 53
References
- Hollingshead, John. Good Old Gaiety: An Historiette & Remembrance (1903) London: Gaiety Theatre Co