| The Geisha | |
|---|---|
| a story of a tea house | |
Vocal Score | |
| Music | |
| Lyrics |
|
| Book | Owen Hall |
| Productions | 1896West End |
The Geisha, a story of a tea house is anEdwardian musical comedy in two acts. The score was composed bySidney Jones to a libretto byOwen Hall, with lyrics byHarry Greenbank. Additional songs were written byLionel Monckton and James Philp.
The Geisha opened in 1896 atDaly's Theatre in London'sWest End, produced byGeorge Edwardes. The original production had the second longest run of any musical up to that time. The cast starredMarie Tempest andC. Hayden Coffin, with dancerLetty Lind and comicHuntley Wright. The show was an immediate success abroad, with an 1896 production starringDorothy Morton in New York and numerous tours and productions in Europe and beyond. It continued to be popular until World War II and even beyond to some degree. The most famous song from the show is "The Amorous Goldfish".[1]
The success ofAn Artist's Model in 1895 had set the pattern for the Hall, Greenbank and JonesEdwardian musical comedies. Edwardes immediately put his team to work on a new musical.


The Geisha was first performed on 25 April 1896 atDaly's Theatre in London, produced byGeorge Edwardes. The original production ran for 760 performances. This run, the second longest of any musical up to that time, would be beaten three years later by Edwardes'San Toy, which was written by Jones, Greenbank and Monckton. The cast includedMarie Tempest in the role of O Mimosa San andLetty Lind as the dancing soubrette Molly Seamore.C. Hayden Coffin played Lieutenant Reginald Fairfax,Huntley Wright played Wun-Hi, and laterHilda Moody,Rutland Barrington andScott Russell joined the cast. Direction was by J. A. E. Malone, choreography byWillie Warde and costumes byPercy Anderson. The music director wasErnest Ford. Edwardes took advantage of the continuing fascination of the public with the orient that had brought such success toGilbert and Sullivan inThe Mikado.[2] However,The Geisha was a more topical entertainment thanThe Mikado, and despite its great initial popularity,The Geisha and the many other topical oriental Edwardian musicals, such asSan Toy,A Chinese Honeymoon and evenChu Chin Chow did not endure through the decades as well asThe Mikado.[3]
Jones, aiming for a light, breezy score, kept each of his musical numbers under three minutes, except that the finales ran to about five. In addition to oriental shadings, Jones's music borrowed from continental European dance rhythms. Hall had taken some of the sauciness out of his style, sinceAn Artist's Model, and evolved a combination of sprightly, up-to-date comedy and old-fashioned romance, into which he would insert parodies when the opportunity arose. Indeed, the Daly's Theatre shows were more romantic in character than the sillier Gaiety Theatre shows. Still, these musicals hewed to most of the features that made the Gaiety Theatre shows popular, especially Edwardes' prettyGaiety Girls, dressed in the latest fashions. Many of the best-known London couturiers designed costumes for stage productions. The illustrated periodicals were eager to publish photographs of the actresses in the latest stage hits, and so the theatre became an excellent way for clothiers to publicise their latest fashions. The Gaiety Girls were, asThe Sketch noted in its 1896 review ofThe Geisha, "clothed in accordance with the very latest and most extreme modes of the moment, and the result is a piquantly striking contrast, as you may imagine."[4] The next musical for the Hall, Greenbank and Jones team moved from Japan to Ancient Rome, withA Greek Slave.
The Geisha was also an immediate success abroad, with an 1896–97 production in New York atDaly's Theatre (starringDorothy Morton, replaced byNancy McIntosh in November).[5] It became the biggest international sensation that the British musical theatre had ever known. It enjoyed other productions in America and played for thousands of performances on the European continent (one source counts some 8,000 in Germany alone).[6] It has been "ranked as the first internationally successful British musical," helping to introduce the previously obscure term "Geisha" into many languages as a symbol of Japanese culture.[7] In 1897,Robert Baden-Powell appeared in the role of Wun-hi inSimla, India. Two years later,Anton Pavlovich Chekhov was present at its premiere in the Russian resort town ofYalta and mentions the show as a backdrop to the climactic scene in one of his best-known stories, "The Lady with the Dog" (1899).[8]
The musical continued to tour for a few decades in Britain, receiving its last major revival in 1934,[3] although lesser productions continued into the 1950s,[9] and it was popular with amateur theatre groups, particularly in Britain, from World War I into the 1960s.[10]
The following were in the original cast:[11][12]

Stationed in Japan, far from his fiancée Molly, Lt. Reggie Fairfax of the Royal Navy is lonely. He begins to spend much of his free time at the Tea House of Ten Thousand Joys which is run by Chinaman Wun-Hi. There he meets the geisha O Mimosa San, with whom he builds a friendship, but she is in love with Katana, a soldier, so she discourages him with her tale of 'The Amorous Goldfish'. However, Reggie gives Mimosa a lesson in kissing.
The relationship does not go unnoticed by Lady Constance Wynne, a touring English aristocrat, who catches Reggie engaged in his tête-a-tête with Mimosa and reminds him that he is engaged to Molly. Lady Constance contacts Molly, telling her to travel to Japan as quickly as possible. The local overlord Marquis Imari, who also fancies Mimosa, is annoyed that his intended bride is consorting with the newly-arrived British sailors, and he orders that the teahouse be closed and the girls be sold off. The Marquis himself is pursued by the French interpreter Juliette.
Molly arrives unexpectedly. Left alone, Molly is joined by Mimosa and Lady Constance, who tell her how fond Reggie has become of one geisha in particular. Mimosa then suggests that Molly should dress up as a geisha herself to try and win him back. It is now time for the sale of the geishas' indentures. The Marquis tries to buy Mimosa for himself, but Lady Constance manages to outbid him to keep her out of his clutches. Unfortunately, she cannot stop him from purchasing lot number 2, a new geisha called Roli Poli whom nobody has seen before. Only after the Marquis has made his purchase is it revealed that this geisha is actually Molly in disguise.
In thechrysanthemum gardens of the Imari palace, Molly, still disguised as Roli Poli, awaits her impending marriage to the Marquis, who has become much attracted to her. Mimosa proposes a plan to save Molly from her fate: Mimosa will sneak into the bridal suite and exchange the veiled Molly for another veiled bride - Juliette, the French interpreter.
The wedding ceremony starts, and the plan is put into effect: Juliette is exchanged with Molly, and the Marquis unwittingly marries the wrong bride. On discovering the ruse, he accepts his fate philosophically, concluding that "every man is disappointed in his wife at some time or other". Mimosa is now free to marry her lover Katana, and Molly is re-united with Reggie, declaring that she would never marry a foreign nobleman when she could have a British sailor.


Source:[15]
During the long original run of the show, songs were added to and deleted from the performances.[1] Some of these are listed in contemporary vocal scores as "Supplementary songs":[15]
The first complete recording of the musical was made in London in 1998 byHyperion, with the New London Light Opera and Orchestra, conducted byRonald Corp, withLillian Watson as O Mimosa San,Sarah Walker as Molly,Richard Suart as Wun-Hi andChristopher Maltman as Fairfax.[9]