The Union Theatre’s acclaimed all-male version of Gilbert & Sullivan’s The Pirates of Penzance is transferring to Wilton’s Music Hall for a limited season in the spring (18 April to 16 May 2010, previews from 8 April), following its sell-out run at the Southwark venue in July last year.
The Pirates of Penzance (or The Slave of Duty), was first produced at the Fifth Avenue Theatre, New York on 31 December 1879. The London debut followed in April 1880 at the Opera Comique.
The story concerns Frederic, who as a boy was mistakenly apprenticed to a pirate instead of a pilot. Interestingly, Gilbert himself had been captured by Italian brigands at the age of two and then been ransomed for £25. Most of Sullivan’s score was written in his New York hotel room. During the work, he famously wrote to his mother saying, “I think it will be a great success for it is exquisitely funny and the music is strikingly tuneful”.