It's a comic opera by Gilbert & Sullivan
The famous English opera duo Gilbert & Sullivan collaborated on 14 operas between 1871 and 1896.
These included HMS Pinafore, The Mikado, Iolanthe, and The Pirates of Penzance.
You’ve probably heard it before
The opera is chock-full of memorable melodies, including the famous tongue-twisting song from the Major-General, ‘I Am the Very Model of a Modern Major-General’.
You might recognise this from all sorts of popular culture references – from The Muppet Show, to Family Guy to Frasier.
The song is also widely parodied with many examples of people adding their own words to the famous melody – think Tom Lehrer’s ‘Elements Song’, or taking the words and adding them to their own songs – like in hit musical Hamilton’s song ‘Right Hand Man’.
A story about pirates
As with many of Gilbert & Sullivan’s operas, the story is a bit intricate, so let’s get this straight: there are pirates, who take pity on orphans, and are really peers of the realm.
There’s a 21-year-old called Frederic, who has sworn to put the pirates behind bars, and is really only five. And there are policemen, whose lot is not a happy one, and are really, really hopeless at foiling felons… Got that?
Our production was directed by an Oscar-nominated director
★★★★★ ‘An entirely delightful evening’ The Stage | ★★★★ ‘A jolly good show’ Daily Telegraph
Mike Leigh, who might be more familiar as a film director (Mr Turner, Vera Drake, Happy-Go-Lucky), directed this production.
He joins the ranks of other celebrated film and theatre figures to have taken on opera at ENO, including Simon McBurney, Terry Gilliam, Rory Kinnear, Fiona Shaw, and the late Anthony Minghella.
See images from ENO's production of The Pirates of Penzance