Richard D'oyly Carte and the Dynasty He Founded
by Diana Burleigh
Most people can quote a line or two of W.S.Gilbert's verse or hum a few bars
of Arthur Sullivan's music, but while many know the name of their entrepreneur,
and may have heard he once quarreled with Gilbert over a carpet, he remains a
shadowy figure in the background. Little about his life or personality is known.
Yet Richard D'Oyly Carte was a man of extraordinary vision, a talented musician
and his business acumen set up a company which made him a richer man than his
partners. On his death he left nearly a quarter of a million pounds, twice that
of Gilbert's estate and four times more than Sullivan's.
Richard D'Oyly Carte was born on 3rd May 1844 in Greek Street, Soho,
London. His father, Richard Carte, was a flautist and musical
instrument manufacturer, a partner in the firm of Rudall, Carte and Co.
The "D'Oyly", a Norman French name, came from his mother's side of the
family. She was born Eliza Jones, and her father was a Welsh clergyman
passionately devoted to art and literature. He did not approve of
Richard Carte and Eliza was forced to elope and the couple's early
married life was fraught with financial difficulties. However their
only son received a good education at University College School and he
showed an early aptitude for music. He initially joined his father's
business but by the age of 25 had started his own theatrical and concert
agency. He also had something of a musical career, writing operettas
for The Royal Gallery of Illustrations, which he also conducted.
His agency however prospered and he had an extensive list of famous
clients, for whom he organised concert tours or speaking engagements.
In 1874 Madam Selina Dolaro, lessee of the Royalty Theatre, engaged
Carte as her manager. In January 1875 a season of Offenbach's LA
PERICOLE opened at the theatre and achieved only moderate business.
Victorian audiences expected a full evening for their entertainment and
the main production was usually preceded by a curtain raiser and
sometimes followed by an afterpiece. Carte decided that the Offenbach
could be strengthened by the addition of a new afterpiece. He was
separately acquainted with both Gilbert and Sullivan, who despite
having collaborated on a Christmas show in 1871 and then produced a
couple of drawing room ballads, seemed to have little in common.
By 1875 Gilbert (aged
39) had progressed from being the author of cartoons and comic verse
in FUN to a position of some eminence as a playwright. He was already
staging his own dramatic works in a manner that was then considered
fresh and natural. Sullivan (33) was destined for a career in
serious music. By this time he had composed a symphony, several overtures (including di
ballo), a number of oratorios and much ecclesiastical work (of which
Onward Christian Soldiers is one of the best known).
Sullivan was hailed as the English Mendelsshon and though he had dabbled
with the odd lighter work it was not thought to be where his future lay.
All this was to change when Gilbert ran into Carte one snowy February
day. Carte asked if Gilbert could help him with a one act piece and the
librettist happened to have a work on hand. It had begun life as a
brief comic verse (a Bab Ballad), but he had expanded it for the stage
at the request of Carl Rosa, who planned to use it as a vehicle for his
wife. When Madam Rosa died the planned production was cancelled. Carte
immediately proposed Sullivan as a composer and in less than a month the
dramatic cantata, as it was billed, was ready. On 25th March the
patrons of The Royalty enjoyed an evening which began with a comedy with
the name CHRYPTOCONCHOIDSYMPHONOSOMATICA, followed by LA PERICOLE and
capped off with TRIAL BY JURY. The work was enthusiastically reviewed
and remained on the Royalty boards after its original companion pieces
finished their runs.
Its success allowed Carte to realise something which had long been his
dream, a school of English comic opera. His initial intention was to
commission a variety of librettists and composers, but such was the
success of the Gilbert and Sullivan partnership, he had little time to
encourage others. To set up his enterprise Carte enlisted four
partners, three were in the music business and the last was a manufacturer of
water carts. Each man put up £500, a lease was taken out on the
Opera Comique, and Carte announced the formation of The Comedy Opera
Company. Gilbert and Sullivan obligingly wrote THE SORCERER, which
opened in November 1877.
It returned a moderate profit and the directors of The Comedy Opera
Company (who had shown some alarm about their capital) agreed to
continue with a new work entitled HMS PINAFORE, which opened in May
1878. It proved to be an unusually hot summer and initially audiences
did not respond. The directors continually got cold feet and put up
closing notices several times. Finally Carte dissolved the partnership
and took on the risk himself just as the box office experienced an
upturn. Soon PINAFORE was the hottest ticket in town and the erstwhile
directors became insensed at having lost their profit. They decided
that they still owned the sets and costumes and one evening during a
performance sent a gang of thugs into the theatre to claim them. A
pitched battle behind the scenes followed, the stage hands of the
Opera Comique winning. Later Carte won a further battle in court.
Carte now formed a partnership with his author and composer. Each
contributed £1000 and an agreement was drawn up in which Gilbert and
Sullivan undertook to provide a new work as required on six months
notice. The great Triumvirate was born! The pair wrote a stream of
success, which not only received lengthy London runs but were toured
extensively throughout the British Isles, often with several companies
running at once. These were billed as "Mr D'Oyly Carte's Company" until
1889, when the title The D'Oyly Carte Opera Company was introduced and
so remained until 1961, when The D'"Oyly Carte Opera Trust was formed.
The operas proved equally popular in America, and to stop the numerous
pirate productions, which paid no royalties to the authors, companies
were sent out to tour the States too.
Soon Carte had the idea of building his own home for English Comic Opera
and bought a plot of land that is now so centrally in London that it is
difficult to realise it was then an open space. The area was redolent
in history. In 1240 the Palace of the Savoy was built there. It became
the home of the Dukes of Lancaster. Chaucer wrote THE CANTERBURY TALES
while working as a clerk in the palace, which was burnt down during Wat
Tyler's rebellion in 1381. All that remains of the original edifice is
the Royal Chapel of Savoy.
Here Carte built the Savoy Theatre, the most modern of its time, the
first in the world to be lit entirely by electricity. This caused some
consternation as many believed any contact with electricity would be
lethal. To prove them wrong, Carte made a rare appearance on the stage
at the theatre's glittering gala opening on 10th November 1881. He
entered carrying a light globe, wrapped it in muslin and smashed it with
a hammer, which obviously extinguished the light but Carte then held up
the muslin to demonstrate that it was not even singed. The ovation he
received eclipsed that given earlier to the cast. For the first time
auditorium lights could be lowered during a performance and so lighting
effects were introduced. Gas lamps consume oxygen and cause great heat,
so the audience's comfort was greatly increased at the Savoy. Other
innovation included the introduction of queues for the cheaper seating,
a ban on tipping attendants, and the provision of free programmes and
cloak room facilities.
Of course electricity was not then generally available. Carte used a
patch of open ground adjacent to the theatre to house a steam-driven
generator which produced 120 horsepower. In 1889 this open patch was
used to further glorify the D'Oyly Carte empire when he opened the Savoy
Hotel. This had taken five years to build, was the first building to be
entirely fireproofed, had one telephone, two "ascending rooms" (the
first lifts in London) and seventy bathrooms, which caused the plumber
to inquire if the expected guests were amphibious. Caesar Ritz was
placed in charge of the restaurant and his chef, Escoffier, created
Peache Melba for a distinguished Australian visitor. Later a special
suite of rooms was made available to Marconi for his experiments with
wireless communications. The hotel is now flagship of The Savoy Group of
Companies, which include Claridges and The Berkely.
Assisting Carte in his ventures from the time he opened his Concert
Agency was a remarkable woman. Born Helen Cowper-Black, she was the
daughter of a distinguished Scottish Judicial figure. She took honours in
four subject at London University and then went on the stage, changing
her name to Lenoir. Eventually she applied for the position of
secretary to Carte and soon became an indispensable business manager.
In 1888 she became his second wife in a ceremony at the ancient Savoy
Chapel with Sullivan as best man.
Henry Lytton, who was a member of the Savoy Companies from the 1890's
until he retired in 1933, the only performer of G.& S. ever to be
knighted, wrote of her in his autobiography: "There was hardly a
department of this great enterprise which did not benefit, little though
the wider public knew it, from Mrs Carte's remarkable genius. It was
not alone that her's was the woman's hand that lent an added
tastefulness to the dressing of the productions. She was a born
business woman with an outstanding gift for organisation. No financial
statement was too intricate for her and no contract too abstruse. Once
when I had to put put one of her letters before my legal adviser he
declared firmly 'this must have been written by a solicitor'. He would
not admit that any woman could draw up a document so cleverly guarded
with provisos and qualifications. The New York productions of the
operas were often placed in her charge."
This supreme tact often smoothed out differences between her husband and
his partners. It was not, however, sufficient to avert the biggest of
their problems, the carpet quarrel. When the Savoy was built the
partnership agreement was redrawn and contained the following clause:
"The said R. D'O.C agrees to pay each of them, the said W.S.G. and A.S.,
one third of the net profits earned by the representations after
deducting all expenses and charges of producing the the said operas and
all the performances of the same, including such expenses a rental of
£4000 per annum for the Savoy Theatre and all rates, taxes, expenses of
lighting repairs incidental to the performances and the rendering from
time to time by ordinary wear and tear."
During the run of THE GONDOLIERS Gilbert decided to query the accounts
and was astounded at what he felt were higher than warranted production
expenses. The figure that amazed him most was £140 for a new carpet for
the Savoy foyer. He argued that it was not an expense "incidental to
the performance" and that at any rate the clause referred to repairs, not
relacements. His temper flared and after a major row he left and
confidently contacted Sullivan, expecting his collaborator's backing.
To his dismay Sullivan (who had little understanding of business
affairs) took Carte's side and matters progressed to the point where
Gilbert sued both his partners. A close examination of the books
revealed a discrepancy of some £1400 which Carte was obliged to repay.
This led to the partnership being dissolved with much bad grace all
round. Meanwhile on stage THE GONDOLIERS' cast were singing "Quiet calm
deliberation disentangles any knot".
Sullivan's alliance with the Manager was possibly influenced by the fact
that Carte was at that time engaged in building a new theatre expressly
to house Sullivan's first (and as it transpired, only) grand opera.
Having succeeded in his desire to promote English comic opera, Carte now
felt that he could do the same with English Grand Opera and commissioned
Sullivan to write what he hoped would be the first of a new school. On
land purchased in Shaftesbury Avenue The Royal English Opera House was
erected and IVANHOE made a triumphant debut. It soon became obvious
that this would not receive the same public favour as Sullivan's works
with Gilbert and that no further operatic works would be forthcoming.
Within a couple of years Carte acknowledged his failure and sold the
theatre, which initially became a music hall.
The quarrel was eventually patched up and two more Gilbert and Sullivan
collaborations were produced, but for the most part the Savoy housed
revivals of the G. & S. works or original productions either by Sullivan
without Gilbert or by a variety of other authors (including one written
by J.M. Barrie and Arthur Conan Doyle), but none was a spectacular
success.
Through the end of the 1890's Carte suffered ill-health and was not told
in November 1900 of the death of Sulllivan. Nevertheless some days later
he was found slumped by the window of his bedroom. "I have just seen
the last of my old friend, Sullivan" he said as they helped him back to
bed, referring to the State funeral of the composer which had processed
past his home. Six months later Richard D'Oyly Carte was dead.
His wife, Helen, took on the management of the opera companies.
Although still doing good business in the provinces, the operas had lost
popularity in London. Helen D'Oyly Carte made the bold decision to
mount a repertory season of four operas in 1907. Up till then the works
had been revived singly, but Helen persuaded the recently knighted Sir
William Gilbert (now 71) to supervise the productions. They were a
tremendous success, despite the banning of THE MIKADO lest it give
offence to a visiting member of the Japanese royal family!
After Helen's death in 1913 her stepson Rupert D'Oyly Carte became
chairman of both the opera company and the hotel group. For a time
Victoriana was old hat and interest in the operas faded. But in 1919
Rupert brought the touring company (another innovation, a special London
company had always been cast before) into the Princes Theatre for 18
weeks in a tremendously successful season that placed the operas at the
heart of British theatrical life for the next forty years. Rupert
remained at the helm until 1948, when in his 70's, he died. His only son
had been killed in an automobile smash some years before, so
stewardship of the operas fell to his surviving daughter, Bridget.
When the copyright of the operas ran out in 1961 Miss Carte formed The
D'Oyly Carte Opera Trust to administer the operation of the Company,
though she remained the chairman of directors, living in a suite in the
Savoy Hotel. In 1975 the centenary of TRIAL BY JURY was celebrated by a
2 week season at the Savoy Theatre in which each of the operas was
presented in chronological order to an ecstatic series of audiences
drawn from G & S fans from around the world. The chairman was made a
Dame of the British Empire in honour of the occasion.
Unfortunately even in the midst of the celebrations, the future of the
company was in doubt. Rising costs had taken their toll and standards
were falling. Finally it was decided that the company that had been
founded by Richard D'Oyly Carte a hundred years earlier could no longer
be sustained and at the end of a well-attended London season the curtain
was rung down on 27th February 1982. An encore awaited however. When
Dame Bridget died a few years later her she left money to the D'Oyly
Carte Trust to reform the company. The New D'Oyly Carte was constituted
not to operate continuously through the country, but to mount short
seasons on fresh productions in London and major regional centres.
Contemporary accounts of Richard D'Oyly Carte depict him as both
generous and mean. George Grossmith, the first of his leading men, was
taken to lunch and over a plate of oysters persuaded to drop his
requested salary by three guineas a week. He later calculated that over
fourteen years this had cost him some £1800. Henry Lytton on the other
hand records that Carte would always leave the office with a pocketful
of sovereigns to pass one over to any down at heel actor he might meet.
He may have drawn up his contracts with his partners to his own best
advantage, but it was his foresight, planning and business acumen that
made their fortunes and permitted the Gilbert and Sullivan Operas to
allow their creators to shine through the twentieth century in reflected
light.