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The Beggar's Opera


Archive :: production:T0381733985, opera or operetta:S1876, venue:V377

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The Beggar's OperaThe Beggar's Opera was originally produced on 29 January 1728 by the Theatre Manager John Rich at Lincoln's Inn Fields Theatre and was the first musical show to mix dialogue with songs. A story of thieves and highwaymen, it was intended to mirror the moral degradation of society and, more particularly, to caricature the then Prime Minister Sir Robert Walpole. It ran for 62 performances, the longest run then known, and the success of the production enabled John Rich to build a new theatre in Covent Garden, the forerunner of the Royal Opera House. The Beggar's Opera was first heard of Covent Garden in 1732.
Author John Gay

Production details

New Production generously supported by The Friends of Covent Garden. John's Gay's The Beggar's Opera is heard for the first time at Covent Garden in an arrangement written by Benjamin Britten in 1948. This arrangement was first performed in 1948 in Cambridge, directed by Tyrone Guthrie and conducted by the composer, with Peter Pears in the role of Macheath. The Linbury Studio

News etc

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Company

Producer Royal Opera
Conductor Christian Curnyn
Director Justin Way
Design Kimm Kovac
Design Andrew Hays
Conductor Richard Hickox
Performer Thomas Randle (Macheath)
Performer Leah-Marian Jones (Polly Peachum)
Performer Jeremy White (Peachum)
Performer Susan Bickley (Mrs Peachum)
Performer Donald Maxwell (Lockit)
Performer Frances McCafferty (Diana Trapes)
Performer Robert Anthony Gardiner (Filtch)
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