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Bluebell in Fairyland

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Bluebell in Fairyland
MusicWalter Slaughter
LyricsAubrey Hopwood and Charles H. Taylor
BookSeymour Hicks
Productions1901 West End
1905 West End
Numerous revivals

Bluebell in Fairyland is a Christmas-season children's entertainment described as "a musical dream play", in two acts, with a book by Seymour Hicks, lyrics by Aubrey Hopwood (son of John Turner Hopwood[1]) and Charles H. Taylor, and music by Walter Slaughter. It was produced by Charles Frohman. The creators sought to distinguish the work from a Christmas pantomime. The story concerns a flower girl, Bluebell, who on Christmas Eve goes to fairyland in search of the "Sleeping King", seeking to restore him to his throne, which has been usurped by the "Reigning King".

First produced in 1901 in London, Bluebell in Fairyland was a hit, running for 300 performances.[2] The piece provided inspiration for J. M. Barrie's stories of Peter Pan.[3]

Background

Ellaline Terriss in the title role

Seymour Hicks was a writer-producer-actor in London who, with his singer-actress wife, Ellaline Terriss, created a number of hit musicals and plays in London in the 1890s and for decades thereafter, later turning to film. Other successes in the years after Bluebell were The Cherry Girl (1902), Quality Street (1902), The Earl and the Girl (1903) and The Catch of the Season (1904). They were so successful with these shows that they were able to build two theatres with the profits, the Aldwych Theatre and the Hicks Theatre (now the Gielgud).

Bluebell in Fairyland was first produced at the Vaudeville Theatre in London on 18 December 1901 and played for two performances daily until it closed on 26 June 1902, running for 300 performances. It starred Hicks as Dicky and his wife, Ellaline Terriss, as the title character. Phyllis Dare played Mab. Costumes were by C. Wilhelm.[2][4] The play was a critical and financial hit; it was revived regularly in London over the next four decades and played in other theatres throughout Britain and elsewhere in the English-speaking world.[5] When Hicks built the Aldwych Theatre, he opened the house in 1905 with a long-running revival of the work.[6] The New York Times called the piece "really a charming and beautiful thing, of a simple, reminiscent kind, with capital music by Walter Slaughter and fine scenery.... Ellaline Terriss acts with exquisite simplicity ... while Hicks himself bears a large share of the work with his accustomed energy and confidence."[7]

J. M. Barrie and his friends the Llewelyn Davies boys were so taken with the play that Barrie began to think about writing his own fairy play, and so it provided inspiration for the Peter Pan segment in his book The Little White Bird and the subsequent play Peter Pan, or The Boy Who Wouldn't Grow Up.[3] In its review of the 1923 revival at the Aldwych, The Times said that the piece "wears quite well". It praised the cast, particularly Phyllis Black as Bluebell, Geoffrey Saville as Dickie, George Zucco as the Reigning King, and the children's chorus.[8] Gladys Cooper, Jessie Matthews, Charles Hawtrey and many other actors began their careers as children in the piece.

Synopsis

Act I

On Christmas Eve, Bluebell, a flower girl, is dismayed that she has not sold enough flowers to purchase Christmas gifts for her little sisters, Mab and Winnie. Mr. Joplin, a wealthy merchant, who is stuck by her beauty, has long wished to adopt Bluebell. After a misunderstanding involving the police, Mr. Joplin finds Bluebell in the Strand, among her friends, a group of flower girls and boot blacks. He gives some money to Bluebell and sends her home. In a garret, Bluebell's sisters and her faithful black cat, Peter, are preparing for Christmas. Bluebell arrives and reads to her sisters the story of the Sleepy King, who has been condemned, for undue thrift, to sleep until he should be awakened by a good girl. The three girls soon fall asleep.

Bluebell dreams that the fairy queen and the fairies step out of the fireplace and ask Bluebell to come to the Palace where the reigning King of Fairyland has usurped the throne. Bluebell and Peter soon meet Blib and Blob, who are to escort them from the Palace to the dungeon where the Sleepy King is being held prisoner. Once at the Palace, however, she sees the reigning King and Queen, whom she recognizes as Will and Won't, Mr. Joplin's eccentric servants. They are giving a children's party. Bluebell asks to be admitted, but instead she is arrested. The fairy queen rescues her, however, and leads her to the Sleepy King.

Act II

Bluebell meets Will o'the Wisp, who will help her. They meet the Fairy Waterlilly, who leads them to the Enchanted Glade, where they find the Magic Oak, which grows above the Sleepy King's dungeon. Peter kills the dwarf who is guarding the Oak, and the group descends. The Sleepy King has grown old. Bluebell awakens him by ringing a bell, and they all head for the Palace. At the Doll's Castle, a big party is in progress. Everyone enters, and Bluebell introduces the Sleepy King, who is revealed as the rightful King, and also as Bluebell's sweetheart, the crossing sweeper Dicky. The reigning King and Queen are dethroned, and Dicky asks Bluebell to be his queen. Just then the Christmas bells chime and Bluebell knows that she must return to her two sisters, so she flees back to the garret.

It is morning, and as Bluebell awakens, Mr. Joplin and Dicky come in. Mr. Joplin wants to adopt all three girls, to Dicky's great alarm. But Bluebell rushes back, and she and Dicky become engaged, and all ends happily.

Musical numbers

Act I
  • Opening and Carol – "Hour by hour the dying year tolls its solemn warning; hour by hour the new draws near"
  • Chorus of Flower Girls and Shoeblacks – "It's Christmas time, it's Christmas time, the best in all the year"
  • Song – Blue-Bell – "Night by night in dark December, while the wintry winds blow chill"
  • Trio – Will, Won't and Joplin – "Now, what you think that he meant when he said, 'Tut-tut!'"
  • Duet – Blue-Bell and Dicky – "Suppose we try a music-hall, there's always lots of fun"
  • Quartette – Girls and Cats – "Two little cats on the cold, cold leads – miaou, miaou, miaou"
  • Vocal Gavotte – Blue-Bell – "Point your toe as you trip it lightly, raise your paw and smooth your fur"
  • Chorus of Fairies – "Blue-bell, 'tis you whom the fairies have bidden; seek out the cave where the king lies asleep"
  • Vocal Polka – "Brightly, brightly our party has now begun"
  • Song – Queen and Regent, with Chorus – "A sense of humour is a thing that isn't wanted in a king"
  • Duet – Blib and Blob – "That all that glitters is not gold, the copy-books instill"
  • Trio – Blue-Bell, Blib and Blob – "I'm old Mother Hubbard who went to the cupboard to fetch the poor dog a bone"
  • Finale Act I – "I'll ask the king if we may stay, I'm sure we shan't be turned away"
Act II
  • Opening
  • Song – Water Lily and Chorus – "When the stars begin to twinkle in the silent summer skies"
  • Dance – Will o' the Wisp
  • Dance – Autumn Leaves
  • Chorus, with Dove, Sparrow, Fish, Beetle, Kite, Thrush, and Bull – "Who killed Cock Robin?"
  • Entrance of Bluebell
  • Chorus – "Peal, golden bells; let your music ring, from Fairyland's spells to waken a King"
  • Sabot Dance
  • Yacht Dance

Roles and original cast

  • Dicky – (a crossing sweeper; also the Sleepy King) – Seymour Hicks
  • Mr. Joplin – (a city merchant) –
  • Will and Won't – (Mr. Joplin's footmen; also the Reigning King and Queen) –
  • Policeman I. C. –
  • Peter – a Cat – Pat Kay
  • Slim – a Cat –
  • Hearty – (Bluebell's landlady) –
  • MabPhyllis Dare
  • Winnie and Meg – Bluebell's sisters
  • Bluebell – (a London flower girl) – Ellaline Terriss
  • The Water Lily –
  • Will o'the Wisp –
  • The Doll –
  • Flower girls, maids, boot blacks, fairies, etc.

References

  1. ^ "Hopkinson-Hornby". ''Who's Who, Volume 57, Henry Robert Addison, Charles Henry Oakes, William John Lawson and Douglas Brooke Wheelton Sladen (eds.), 1905, p. 795, A & C Black, accessed 12 July 2011
  2. ^ a b "Bluebell in Fairyland", at the Guide to Musical Theatre, accessed 26 February 2010
  3. ^ a b Birkin, Andrew. J.M. Barrie & the Lost Boys, pp. 92–93, Yale University Press, 2003 ISBN 0-300-09822-7
  4. ^ "The Vaudeville", The Penny Illustrated Paper, 23 November 1901, p. 321
  5. ^ "Sir Seymour Hicks (1871–1949)", Collectors Post, 14 February 2010
  6. ^ The Aldwych Theatre at the Arthur Lloyd theatre site, accessed 26 February 2010
  7. ^ "Theatricals in London; Christmas Week to be Given Over to Children's Plays", The New York Times, 22 December 1901, p. 7, accessed 26 February 2010
  8. ^ "Bluebell in Fairyland", The Times, 27 December 1923, p. 5