Shameless and Delightful Camp

   The Light Opera Company of Salisbury’s production of Gilbert and Sullivan’s

“Iolanthe,� a comic opera about love and culture, went boldly down a trail of not just camp, but high camp.

   It was an experienced and enthusiastic cast that delighted the ear and amused the eye. If you do not care for the outrageous, however, you might have been turned off by a woodland fairy song and a dance featuring fairies that have seen far younger days.

   Dressed in pastels and sparkles, the fairies ranged from very tall to short and skinny, to kinda pudgy. The contrast between the delicacy of the costumes and the cast’s physical

reality declared itself without apology.

   But what this chorus may have lacked in uniformity, it made up for with experience and a shameless gung-ho attitude.

   “Iolantheâ€� is as much about the burden of love as it is about the burden of culture. A fairy marries a peer, has a child

and, because of this illicit love, must abandon her husband to live in the

local pond.

   Years pass. Love eventually raises its inappropriate head again, this time tying the heart of Strephon, the half-fairy, half-mortal son, to Phyllis, the Lord Chancellor’s comely ward. Of course, the Lord Chancellor is in love with Phyllis and, well, you get the idea.

   Robert Roll as Iolanthe, and Katherine DeFiglio as Phyllis, gave elegant

performances. Stephen Quint, as Lord Chancellor, and  Harriet Tomasko, as

Queen of the Fairies, were also strong. Tina McVey-Cody provided unblushing

comic relief as A Most Impertinent Fairy, but Keith Jurosko, playing Private

Willis, the common guard who wins the heart of the Fairy Queen, gave a

performance that was a notch above all the rest. The chorus of fairies and

peers was delightful.

   It was an evening in which the cast was enjoying itself as much as the audience was.

   Debuting in 1882, “Iolantheâ€�  was an extravagant production. The peers’ costumes were made

by the same tailors that made the robes for Her Majesty’s House of Lords.

“Iolanthe� is also said to be the very first production to use the on-stage electric light.

   In fact, the term “fairy lightsâ€� was coined from this opera as the fairies wore circlets of small, battery-operated lights in their hair. The effect must have been magical.

   Like its predecessor, the Light Opera Company of Salisbury production of “Iolanthe,â€� performed at the Hotchkiss School auditorium, also had its charm as well as its own unique sense of the extravagant.

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