George Thorne (singer)
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

George Tyrell Thorne (6 January 1856 – 24 July 1922) was an English singer and actor, best known for his performances in the comic
baritone A baritone is a type of classical male singing voice whose vocal range lies between the bass and the tenor voice-types. The term originates from the Greek (), meaning "heavy sounding". Composers typically write music for this voice in the r ...
roles of the Savoy Operas with the D'Oyly Carte Opera Company, especially on tour and in the original New York City productions. He married D'Oyly Carte chorister Geraldine Thompson.


Life and career

Thorne was born in Chertsey,
Surrey Surrey () is a ceremonial and non-metropolitan county in South East England, bordering Greater London to the south west. Surrey has a large rural area, and several significant urban areas which form part of the Greater London Built-up Area. ...
, England. His father was Richard Samuel Thorne, who managed the
Surrey Theatre The Surrey Theatre, London began life in 1782 as the Royal Circus and Equestrian Philharmonic Academy, one of the many circuses that provided entertainment of both horsemanship and drama (hippodrama). It stood in Blackfriars Road, near the jun ...
. His elder brother, Thomas Thorne, was an actor and
theatre manager Theatre or theater is a collaborative form of performing art that uses live performers, usually actors or actresses, to present the experience of a real or imagined event before a live audience in a specific place, often a stage. The perfor ...
, best known as a founding manager of London's Vaudeville Theatre. His nephew was the actor Frank Gillmore, and his great-nieces were the actresses Ruth Gillmore and Margalo Gillmore.


Early career

Thorne began his stage career at the age of two, when he was carried on at the Theatre Royal, Margate, in the burlesque ''Medea''. Early engagements followed with his sister, Sarah Thorne's, company, (1870–73); John Coleman's stock company in Leeds (1873); the Covent Garden pantomime (1874–75); and at the Corinthian Theatre, Calcutta, where he reportedly played 104 parts in six months in 1876.


D'Oyly Carte years

Thorne joined a D'Oyly Carte touring company in 1881, playing Captain Felix Flapper in '' Billee Taylor''. Later in 1881, back in England, he toured as Reginald Bunthorne in '' Patience''. In 1882–83, he toured as Blood-red Bill in Edward Solomon and Henry Pottinger Stephens's '' Claude Duval'' and then as Bunthorne. In 1883, Thorne married actress Beatrice Thomas, who toured with Thorne as a chorister in the D'Oyly Carte Opera Company under the stage name Geraldine Thompson. In 1884, Thorne appeared as Sir Joseph Porter in '' H.M.S. Pinafore'', Major General Stanley in '' The Pirates of Penzance'', and Bunthorne, with a D'Oyly Carte touring company, adding the roles of Lord Chancellor in ''
Iolanthe ''Iolanthe; or, The Peer and the Peri'' () is a comic opera with music by Arthur Sullivan and libretto by W. S. Gilbert, first performed in 1882. It is one of the Savoy operas and is the seventh of fourteen operatic collaborations by Gilbert ...
'' and Ko-Ko in '' The Mikado'' in 1885.Stone, David
George Thorne
Who Was Who in the D'Oyly Carte Opera Company, 27 August 2001, accessed 17 May 2018
In 1885, Thorne traveled to New York to present ''The Mikado'' at the
Fifth Avenue Theatre Fifth Avenue Theatre was a Broadway theatre in New York City in the United States located at 31 West 28th Street and Broadway (1185 Broadway). It was demolished in 1939. Built in 1868, it was managed by Augustin Daly in the mid-1870s. In 1877, ...
, where the company played until 1886. This production also included Geraldine Ulmar as Yum-Yum, Courtice Pounds as Nanki-Poo, and Fred Billington as Pooh-Bah. While in New York,
Arthur Sullivan Sir Arthur Seymour Sullivan (13 May 1842 – 22 November 1900) was an English composer. He is best known for 14 comic opera, operatic Gilbert and Sullivan, collaborations with the dramatist W. S. Gilbert, including ''H.M.S. Pinaf ...
wrote a special comic orchestration for Thorne (stressing the bassoon part) as an encore to "The Flowers that Bloom in the Spring" (preserved in Sullivan's autograph score), performed in pantomime. Later, other D'Oyly Carte artists performed a pantomime encore. Returning from America in 1886, Thorne toured the British provinces and Europe as Sir Joseph and Ko-Ko until 1887. He then returned to England to rehearse the new opera, '' Ruddigore''. He gave two matinee performances as Robin Oakapple at the Savoy Theatre and then traveled to New York again to play Robin there with substantially the same troupe that had played in ''The Mikado'' in New York in 1885–86. From 1887 to 1890 (with a break in late 1889 to early 1890, when he contracted typhoid fever), he toured playing Bunthorne, Ko-Ko, Sir Joseph, and later the Major General and Jack Point in '' The Yeomen of the Guard''. Thorne originated the tragic ending for that character, which was later adopted by most portrayers of the role. He said that Point was his favourite of the roles. From 1890 to 1896, Thorne was the principal comedian with a D'Oyly Carte touring company, playing John Wellington Wells in '' The Sorcerer'', Sir Joseph, the Major General, Bunthorne, the Lord Chancellor, King Gama in '' Princess Ida'', Ko-Ko, Jack Point, and the Duke of Plaza-Toro in '' The Gondoliers''. He also played Bumbo in '' The Nautch Girl'' (1892). From 1896 to 1897, he was on the first D'Oyly Carte tour of South Africa, playing his usual roles, as well as Scaphio in '' Utopia Limited'' and Rudolph in '' The Grand Duke''. He then toured in Britain in 1898 to 1899. Thorne says, in his memoir ''Jots'' (1897), that he had occasions to play the Judge in '' Trial by Jury'', which would mean that he played the leading comic role in all 13 extant Gilbert and Sullivan operas, but he doesn't say when or where. Thorne died in Edlesborough, Bedfordshire at the age of 66. He is buried at Kensal Green Cemetery, London.


Playwright and author

Thorne wrote several pantomimes, some burlesques, two comic operas, and adaptations of several of Charles Dickens's novels for the stage. He also wrote a volume of reminiscences, entitled ''Jots'' (1897).


Film

*Thorne appeared in ''Tit Willow'' (1907) British (B&W), a short film directed by John Morland. It was distributed by Walturdaw Company in standard 35mm spherical 1.37:1 format, using the Cinematophone Sound-on-disc sound system (synchronized phonograph recording;
Phonoscène The Phonoscène was an antecedent of music videoKeazor, Henry and Wübbena, Thorsten (eds). "Introduction" to ''Rewind, Play, Fast Forward: The Past, Present and Future of the Music Video'', transcript Verlag (2010) and was regarded by Michel Ch ...
).
Altman, Rick Rick Altman is a professor of Cinema and Comparative Literature in the Department of Cinema and Comparative Literature, University of Iowa, Iowa City, United States. He has also publish Publishing is the activity of making information, l ...
''Silent Film Sound'', Columbia University Press (2005), p. 159,


Notes


References

* Introduction by Martyn Green. * Jones, Brian (2005). Lytton, Gilbert and Sullivan's Jester. London: Trafford Publishing. *


External links

*
1895 review of Thorne's Lord Chancellor


{{DEFAULTSORT:Thorne, George 1856 births 1922 deaths People from Chertsey Burials at Kensal Green Cemetery English opera singers 19th-century English singers