Patience

Lyrics by W.S. Gilbert
Music by Arthur Sullivan

May 30th-June 15th 2025

The Brunish Theatre
Antoinette Hatfield Hall
1111 SW Broadway
Portland, Oregon 97205

Cast and Crew

Reginald Bunthorne (a Fleshly Poet)
Laurence Cox

Patience (a Dairy Maid)
Kayla Ray

Archibald Grosvenor (an Idyllic Poet)
Lincoln Thomas

Colonel Calverly
Casey Lebold

Major Murgatroyd
Thomas McAulay

Lt. The Duke of Dunstable
Riven Dederian

The Lady Angela
Ashley Moore

The Lady Saphir
Morena Colombetti

The Lady Jane
Sara Rivara

The Lady Ella
Lindsey Lefler

CHORUS OF Rapturous Maidens

Anne Kolibaba Larkin, Bryanne Lemieux, Cathrine Huard (cover: Jane), Cynthia Trif, Dominique Garrison (cover: Saphir, Ella), Jani Van Pelt, Keegan Brown (cover: Angela), Rebecca Raccanelli (cover: Patience), Shirley Liu

CHORUS OF Dragoon Guards

Chase Reinhardt (cover: Colonel), Chaz Guinan, Czar Alvord (cover: Bunthorne, Grosvenor), Jerry Larkin, Jerry Woodbury, John Knowles (cover: Major), John McNeur, Leo Decklar (cover: Duke)

Director
Laurence Cox

Assistant Director
Lindsey Lefler

Musical Director
Josh Pounders

Producer
Sara Rivara

Technical Director
Tom Harper

Set Design & Construction Manager
David Ridley

Stage Manager
Ethan McCrann

Costume Coordinator
Nan Dahlquist
Lindsey Lefler

Choreographer
Ireland McNeill

Rehearsal Pianist
Courtney Holmes

SUmmary


The sixth G&S collaboration was "Patience", or "Bunthorne's Bride". Patience opened on April 23, 1881 at the Opera Comique and ran for 578 performances, moving on October 10, 1881 to D'Oyly Carte's new theatre, the Savoy, the first theatre in the world to be lit entirely by electric lights.

Patience satirizes the "aesthetic craze" of the 1870's and '80s, when the output of poets, composers, painters and designers of all kinds was indeed prolific — but, some argued, empty and self-indulgent. This artistic movement was so popular, and also so easy to ridicule as a meaningless fad, that it made Patience a big hit. The topical nature of the story may make Patience somewhat less accessible to some modern audiences, and G&S fans tend to have strong feelings one way or the other about Patience.

All the well-born young ladies in the village, rapturously caught up in aestheticism, are in love with two contrasting aesthetic poets — a "fleshy" poet and an "idyllic" poet. But the poets are both in love with Patience, the simple village milkmaid, who cares nothing for poetry. Patience learns that true love must be completely unselfish--it must wither and sting and burn! The girls' military suitors don't see the point to aesthetics, but they decide to give it a try to win the women's hearts. It is touch and go for awhile, but everyone ends up with a suitable partner, even if it is only a tulip or lily.

From: The G&S Archive (https://gsarchive.net/patience)