|
|
 |
The Mikado Advance Ordering OPERA Tickets
OPERA Tickets
EVENTS->OPERA
|
The Mikado Tickets
|
|
For The Mikado Advance Ordering Schedule or The Mikado Advance Ordering tickets availability click above link
|
 |
Tickets--Tickets.Com is one stop online shop to buy The Mikado Tickets. Find detailed information to Buy The Mikado OPERA tickets or to Buy The Mikado OPERA tickets at our online store.
If you need Sports , Concert , Theater , Broadway Tickets ,SuperBowl, NBA, NFL, NHL, WNBA , Order online or call us today at 281-447-8833. You can see all your favorite events upclose and personal.
Use our search facility specially customized for you to get details of special hard to find events schedule infromation easily from comfort of your home. And once you are ready, order them with a click of a mouse or talk to us at 281-447-8833.
Do not have much time? No problem!! We will be happy to ship your tickets overnite right at your door.
Note : On-Line orders placed on the day of the show may not be filled. Please call us directly for 'same day' ordering and delivery options. We will be happy to help you. Thank you!
We appreciate your business and take great pride in serving you.
|
 |
| The Mikado Schedule |
| The Mikado Parking |
|
| The Mikado Events |
| The Mikado Refund Policy |
| The Mikado |
Advanced ordering for the The Mikado before the event goes
on sale is available. A fan may call to order for an event before it goes on
sale to the public. We can guarantee getting our Customers the seats they are
looking for. We do not Guarantee a row but we can guarantee an area. For the
The Mikado advanced ordering, a fifty percent deposit is required in
advance of the general public on sale. Call one of our sales associates
today at 281-447-1579 and place your The Mikado advanced order
today. There are no refunds for deposits once a deposit is placed. You may
request an up grade at any point and we can make every effort to accomadate
you. The Mikado advance ordering is the best way to lock in your
seats before the event sells out thru the general on sale. Its really the
best way to get the best seats for a premium.
|
The Mikado, or The Town of Titipu, is a comic opera in two acts, with music by Arthur Sullivan and libretto by W. S. Gilbert. It opened on March 14, 1885, in London, where it ran at the Savoy Theatre for 672 performances. Before the end of 1885 it was estimated that, in Europe and America, at least 150 companies were producing the opera. It remains the most frequently performed Savoy Opera, and it is especially popular with amateur school productions. Indeed, The Mikado is possibly the most frequently played piece of musical theatre in history. This was the ninth operatic collaboration between Gilbert and Sullivan.Setting the opera in Japan, an exotic locale far away from England, allowed Gilbert to more freely satirize English politics and institutions by disguising them as Japanese. Gilbert used foreign locales in several operas, including The Mikado, The Gondoliers, Utopia Limited, The Grand Duke and Princess Ida, to soften the impact of his pointed satire of British institutions. To the extent that the opera is inspired by, and purports to portray, Japanese culture, design and govenment, it draws on Victorian notions of the subject, gleaned mostly from the popular Japanese exhibition of the time in Knightsbridge, near London, and the general British fascination with Japanese fashion and art that immediately followed the beginning of trade between the two island empires. The song "Miya sama", however, is a version of an actual Japanese song which Sullivan appropriated for the operetta. The same melody was also adapted by Giacomo Puccini in Madama Butterfly.It is also worth noting that many of the names in the play are unpronounceable in standard Japanese – but perfectly understandable as English "baby-talk". The headsman is named Ko-Ko; one pretty young thing is named Pitti-Sing; and the heroine is named Yum-Yum. The pompous officials are Pooh-Bah and Pish-Tush; and our hero, Nanki-Poo (which might be baby-talk for "handkerchief") is fleeing from the awful Katisha.//Gilbert and Sullivan were considered to be in a bit of a slump at the time they wrote The Mikado. Their previous opera, Princess Ida, had run for nine months – a short duration by their own standards. For the first time in their partnership, there was no new opera ready when it closed. A revised version of The Sorcerer, coupled with Trial by Jury, played at the Savoy while they prepared their next work
|
|