Savoy operas - significado y definición. Qué es Savoy operas
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Qué (quién) es Savoy operas - definición

OPERA GENRE
Savoy Operas; Savoy Opera; Savoy operas
  • Patience]]''
  • Savoy Theatre, c. 1881
  • Gilbert, Workman and German at a rehearsal

Savoy opera         
Savoy opera was a style of comic opera that developed in Victorian England in the late 19th century, with W. S.
Ball im Savoy         
OPERETTA BY PAUL ABRAHAM
Ball im savoy; Ball at Savoy; Ball at the Savoy
Ball im Savoy (Ball at the Savoy) is a jazz operetta in three acts and a prelude by Paul Abraham to a libretto by Alfred Grünwald and Fritz Löhner-Beda.
Curro Savoy         
SPANISH MUSICIAN
Kurt Savoy
Curro Savoy or Kurt Savoy (born Francisco Rodríguez, Andújar, Jaén Province, 1948) is a Spanish musician specialised in whistling who lives currently in France.

Wikipedia

Savoy opera

Savoy opera was a style of comic opera that developed in Victorian England in the late 19th century, with W. S. Gilbert and Arthur Sullivan as the original and most successful practitioners. The name is derived from the Savoy Theatre, which impresario Richard D'Oyly Carte built to house the Gilbert and Sullivan pieces, and later those by other composer–librettist teams. The great bulk of the non-G&S Savoy Operas either failed to achieve a foothold in the standard repertory, or have faded over the years, leaving the term "Savoy Opera" as practically synonymous with Gilbert and Sullivan. The Savoy operas (in both senses) were seminal influences on the creation of the modern musical.

Gilbert, Sullivan, Carte and other Victorian era British composers, librettists and producers, as well as the contemporary British press and literature, called works of this kind "comic operas" to distinguish their content and style from that of the often risqué continental European operettas that they wished to displace. Most of the published literature on Gilbert and Sullivan since that time refers to these works as "Savoy Operas", "comic operas", or both. However, the Penguin Opera Guides and many other general music dictionaries and encyclopedias classify the Gilbert and Sullivan works as operettas.

Gilbert and Sullivan's early operas played at other London theatres, and Patience (1881) was the first opera to appear at the Savoy Theatre, and thus, in a strict sense, the first true "Savoy Opera", although the term "Savoy Opera" has, for over a century, referred to all thirteen operas that Gilbert and Sullivan wrote for Richard D'Oyly Carte.