- Alice Barnett
.
Life and career
Alice Barnett was born in
London and was trained as a concert singer.D'Oyly Carte years
In 1879, Barnett joined
Richard D'Oyly Carte 's touring Comedy Opera Company as Little Buttercup in "H.M.S. Pinafore ". She traveled withW. S. Gilbert ,Arthur Sullivan and Carte to New York to create the role of Ruth in "The Pirates of Penzance " onDecember 31 1879 , after first playing Buttercup in performances there. She played Ruth throughout the American tour and continued to play the role at theOpera Comique when the company returned to London in July 1880.in the principal contralto roles at the Savoy. When Barnett regained her health, she played the contralto roles in D'Oyly Carte touring companies in 1884, before leaving the D'Oyly Carte Opera Company at the end of that year.
Peripatetic Performer
Later in 1884, Barnett appeared with
Lillian Russell inSydney Grundy andEdward Solomon 's "Pocahontas" at the Empire Theatre in London. She then travelled to America with Russell in 1885, where she played roles in "Billee Taylor ", "Claude Duval" and "Polly" (all with music by Solomon). She then moved to Australia, where she spent three years, from 1885 to 1888, playing the Gilbert and Sullivan contralto roles (Lady Sangazure in "The Sorcerer ", Ruth, Jane, the Queen of the Fairies, Lady Blanche in "Princess Ida ", and Katisha in "The Mikado ") withJ. C. Williamson 's opera company, as well as other parts such as Mrs. Privett inAlfred Cellier 's "Dorothy", withLeonora Braham in the title role.In 1889, Barnett returned to London, appearing in Cellier's "Doris", before touring in British provinces in Gaiety burlesques and with other opera companies. She finally returned to London in 1894 to create the role of Dame Cortlandt in
W. S. Gilbert andOsmond Carr 's "His Excellency". After another brief run at the Gaiety, in "The Shop Girl ", Barnett again travelled to America, where she toured in "His Excellency" withGeorge Edwardes ' Lyric Company.In 1896, Barnett returned to England to tour in "The Telephone Girl" and then back to America for DeKoven and Smith's "The Mandarin", and, in 1897 again on tour in England with "The Telephone Girl". She continued to perform in comic opera and
pantomime in London and the provinces until 1900, when she retired from the stage.She died in London the following year of bronchial pneumonia following an operation.
References
*cite book|last=Ayre|first=Leslie|year=1972|title=The Gilbert & Sullivan Companion|location=London|publisher=W.H. Allen & Co Ltd Introduction by
Martyn Green .
* [http://math.boisestate.edu/gas/whowaswho/B/BarnettAlice.htm Alice Barnett] at Who Was Who in the D'Oyly CarteExternal links
* [http://pinafore.www3.50megs.com/a-barnett-p.html Photographs]
* [http://www.savoyoperas.org.uk/iolanthe/io32.html Preview of Iolanthe] fromOctober 25 1882
* [http://www.savoyoperas.org.uk/iolanthe/io9.html Iolanthe review] fromDecember 2 1882
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