ROBERT AND ELIZABETH
A Musical in 2 Acts, 15 scenes. From an original idea by Fred G. Moritt;
Music by Ron Grainer: Book and Lyrics by Ronald Millar: Based on The
Barretts of Wimpole Street by Rudolph Besier
Lyric Theatre, London - October 20, 1964 (948 perfs)
SYNOPSIS
We are introduced, through the eyes and voices of the
members of the large Victorian era family Moulton-Barrett -
especially the tyrannical, unyielding father and his invalid
elder daughter, Elizabeth. She confides to her sister,
Henrietta, that she has been receiving letters from a fellow
poet, Robert Browning, that have been highly complimentary
about her work.
Browning is rehearsing one of his plays at the Theatre
Royal at Haymarket, and things are going badly. The mood
takes an abrupt turnaround, however, when his manservant
brings him word that Elizabeth Barrett has agreed to see
him. There, upon their first meeting, Browning expresses his
love.
Love has a remarkable effect. Elizabeth begins to gain
strength. Her brothers and sisters now move her to the
sunlight of the garden each day. Her father believes he is
losing his grip on the only one of his children he really
loves and disapproves. Elizabeth's growing self-confidence
and independence cannot be dominated. Browning's devotion
and continuous optimism encourage her to try to walk. Father
arrives on the scent and forbids Browning to visit the house
again. Respecting his wishes, they part.
Elizabeth has a relapse. Browning, in a state of some agitation, arrives
at the conclusion that all the properness of England is not enough to
keep him from her. The whole family is on the verge of revolt against
their father's aggression. Father Barrett decides the best solution is
to close the house on Wimpole Street and move the family to seclusion
in the country. Hearing this, Browning - in a secret meeting - tells Elizabeth
that they must elope to Italy or she must face the remainder of her days
in a sickroom. Family ties give her pause for the first time, and Browning
leaves without an answer. His eternal optimism deflated, he waits, frustrated,
until her letter arrives conveying her consent. Their train has arrived:
happiness cannot be denied as they board to begin their life together.
|
MUSICAL NUMBERS:
ACT I
- OVERTURE
- OPENING STREET SCENE (Ensemble)
- TRIO (Arabel, Septimus and Octavius) … "Love
and Duty"
- OCTET (George, Charles, Henry, Alfred, Septimus,
Octavius, Arabel and Henrietta) … "The Family Moulton-Barrett"
4a SCENE CHANGE (2,-3)
- DUET (Elizabeth and Henrietta) .. "The World Outside"
- (Deleted)
- (Deleted)
- OPENING—SCENE 4
- SONG (Browning and Ensemble) … "The Moon In My Pocket"
- SCENE CHANGE … (4-5)
- SONG (Browning) … "I Said Love"
- DUET (Browning
and Elizabeth) … "Want To Be Well"
- REPRISE (Elizabeth and Browning) … "I Said Love"
- SCENE CHANGE (5-6) AND MONTAGE AND SONG (Henrietta) … "You
Only To Love Me"
- SONG (Elizabeth and Ensemble) … "The Real Thing"
15a BALLET
15b SONG (Elizabeth and Ensemble) … "The Real Thing" (Coda)
15c LINK AFTER "THE REAL THING"
- DUET (Elizabeth and Browning) … "In
A Simple Way"
- DUET (Elizabeth and Browning) … "I Know Now"
17a - ACT I. CURTAIN
ACT II
- SOLILOQUY (Elizabeth)
- SEXTET (George, Charles,
Henry, Alfred, Septimus and Octavius) … "Pass
The Eau-de-Cologne"
- SONG (Bella) … "What's Natural"
- SONG (Barrett
and the Brothers) … "I'm The Master Here"
- CREMORNE QUADRILLE
- SONG (Browning and Chorus) … "Escape Me Never"
- DUET (Henrietta and Captain Cook) … "Hate Me,
Please"
- DUET (Browning, Cook and Ensemble) … "Under
A Spell"
- CONCERTED NUMBER (The Family and Wilson) … "The
Girls That Boys Dream About" .
- SCENE CHANGE (11-12)
- SONG (Barrett) … "What The World Calls Love"
28a - SONG (Elizabeth) … "Woman And Man"
28b - SCENE CHANGE (12-13)
- SONG (Browning) … "Frustration"
29a - REPRISE (Wilson and Captain Cook) … "Frustration"
29b - MELOS
29e - MELOS
- REPRISE (Elizabeth, Browning and Ensemble) … "I
Know Now"
- CURTAIN CALLS
- FINALE
INSTRUMENTATION:
Lead violin, 1st violin, 2nd violin, viola, cello bass, flutes
I-II, clarinet I, bass clarinet, clarinet II/tenor sax, horns III, trumpet,
trombone, percussion, harp, organ.
CASTING:
40 roles, 4 principals, plus large singing and dancing
chorus.
- Edward Moulton-Barrett, stern actor who sings.
- Elizabeth, excellent actress with lilting singing voice.
- Robert Browning, winning, energetic actor with excellent singing
voice, minor dance.
- Henrietta, actress who sings.
- Cook, straight-man actor who sings.
- Seven other younger brothers and sisters with support roles, sing
and dance.
- Dr. Chambers, character actor.
Singing Principal
Elizabeth.
Henrietta and Arabel, her sisters.
Bella, their cousin.
Wilson, Elizabeth's maid.
Robert Browning.
Edward Moulton-Barrett.
George, Alfred Henry, Charles Septimus and Octavius, his sons.
Captain Surtees Cook, in love with Henrietta.
Doctor Chambers.
Smaller Roles
Mrs Butler, an actress.
Lady Mary and Lady Sarah, friends of Browning.
Evans, Browning's manservant.
Mr Macready, the actor-manager
Mr Harrison and Mr Langton, members of his company.
Henry Bevan, Bella's fiancé
Travers, the gardener
Total cast 40-60.
For the Chorus
Above-average opportunities for the creation of individual characterisations.
A highly intelligent score, very much in the modem idiom, calls for precise
preparation if its highly rewarding potential is to be realized. The chorus
appear as passers-by in a moodsetting opening sequence, as visitors to
the garden of 50 Wimpole Street, as theatre staff and members of Macready's
stage company, guests at the Cremorne Gardens fancy-dress ball, passengers
at Vauxhall station, and the crowd at Florence Station.
SCENES AND SETS:
2 acts, 15 scenes, and 5 full stage sets, including two painted
backdrops. Two insert sets, 1 painted scene front drop. Insets are on
wagons, as is the telescoping train in Act II, Scene 8.
ACT I
Scene 1: The Vicinity of Wimpole Street
Scene 2: The Hall of No. 50 Wimpole Street
Scene 3: Elizabeth's Room
Scene 4: The Stage of the Theatre Royal, Haymarket
Scene 5: Elizabeth's Room
Scene 6: The Hall of No. 50 Wimpole Street
Scene 7: The Garden of No. 50 Wimpole Street
ACT II
Scene 1: Elizabeth's Room
Scene 2: The Hall of No. 50 Wimpole Street
Scene 3: Cremorne Gardens,
Chelsea
Scene 4: The Hall of No. 50 Wimpole Street
Scene 5: Elizabeth's
Room
Scene 6: Outside Browning's Study
Scene 7: Vauxhall Station
Scene 8: Florence
PERIOD AND COSTUMES:
1845-1846, London. Victorian costumes for street vendors, policemen,
street sweeper, lamplighter, elegant ladies and gentlemen, townspeople,
postman, cook, working boys and girls, pickpocket, barmaid, the Barrett
children, servants and maids, Browning's suits and casual clothes, sandwich-board
man, uniforms for train station workers. Two fantasy ballet sequences.
CHOREOGRAPHY:
Stylised opening number, folk dance steps, ballet, choreographed dance
and movement.
LIGHTING AND SPECIAL EFFECTS:
General dramatic lighting, fireworks, rising steam from train. Model
train behind scrim travels across rear drop ground row. Lampposts.
NOTES: Due to legal complications, Robert
and Elizabeth has not been performed on Broadway. Apart from the
Papermill Playhouse production US presentations have been restricted
to professional dinner theatres, stock companies, and non-professional
groups. It is still restricted in some areas at various times when a
professional production is mounted.
|