The Naughty Princess
The Naughty Princess is an opéra bouffe with music by Charles Cuvillier, book by J. Hastings Turner, and lyrics by Adrian Ross. The work, adapted from La reine joyeuse by Cuvillier and Andre Barde, depicts a princess with very modern ideas, who rebels against arranged marriage and court etiquette. It was first produced in London in 1920 and 1921.
History
The piece, adapted from the 1912 opéra bouffe La reine joyeuse by Cuvillier and André Barde, was presented under the management of George Grossmith, Jr. and Edward Laurillard at the Adelphi Theatre, London, on 7 October 1920, and ran until 28 May 1921, 280 performances. A production toured Australia in 1922, under the J.C. Williamson management.Cast
- King Michael of Panoplia – W. H. Berry
- Princess Sophia – his daughter – Lily St. John
- Prince Ladislas – his nephew – George Grossmith, Jr.
- Prince Gospodar – Leon Morton
- Countess Kittisch – Lady in waiting to Sophia – Amy Augarde
- Hyppolyte Flaméche – a painter – Philip Simmons
- Chiquette – Flaméche's latest wife – Yvonne Arnaud
- King Michael's ministers
- Salome – Heather Thatcher
- Seraphine – Silvia Leslie
- Messenger – E. Trimming Law
- Guests at the Bal des Quat'z' Arts – Miss Elaine, Miss Sabbage
Synopsis
In Paris, they all converge at the famous festivities at the Bal des Quat'z' Arts, where the theme is "ancient Egypt", with spectacular costumes and tableaux. Ladislas meets an old flame, Chiquette, who has become the wife of the real Hippolyte Flaméche. Flamméche is much taken with Sophia, but Chiquette is concerned for Sophia's innocence and takes her under her protective wing. Ladislas has by now come to love Sophia, and for her own good gives a feigned display of drunkenness and violent protestations of love under the plea that this is the thoroughly Bohemian behaviour that she craves. King Michael is enjoying himself too much to pay any attention to an urgent message brought by a courier from his capital.
At Ladislas's studio in the rue du Diable, the revellers are gathered after leaving the bal. The messenger finally manages to get Michael to attend to his message. There has been a revolution in Panoplia, Michael is deposed, and Sophia has been proclaimed queen. Sophia learns that the Bohemian who kissed her so passionately at the bal is Prince Ladislas, and gladly accepts his proposal of marriage.