'Basil Charles Hood' (
April 5 1864 –
August 7 1917) was a British librettist and lyricist, perhaps best known for his libretti of a half dozen
Savoy Operas and his English adaptations of
operettas, including ''
The Merry Widow''.
Life and career
The younger son of Sir Charles Hood, Basil Hood was born in
Yorkshire, educated at Wellington and Sandhurst and joined the army at the age of 19, rising to the rank of Captain in the
Prince of Wales's Own Regiment of Yorkshire.
Early musicals
Hood began writing for the theatre in his mid-twenties, and his first one-act piece, ''The Gypsies'', was mounted as a curtain-raiser at the
Prince of Wales Theatre in 1890. He provided the lyrics to
Lionel Monckton's song "What Will You Have to Drink?", interpolated into the
Gaiety Theatre burlesque ''
Cinder-Ellen Up-too-Late''.
Hood wrote two other short
operettas (with music by
Walter Slaughter), before the two completed Hood's first full-scale
musical comedy, the very successful ''
Gentleman Joe, the Hansom Cabbie'' (as a vehicle for comedian
Arthur Roberts) in 1895 (running for 391 performances). This success prompted Hood to leave the military to concentrate on his writing. In 1896, Hood and Slaughter wrote the hit, ''
The French Maid'', followed by six more Slaughter musicals in rapid succession, including another successful vehicle for Roberts, ''Dandy Dan, the Lifeguardsman'' (1897).
Librettist of Savoy Operas
After
Arthur Sullivan finished collaborating with
W. S. Gilbert (''
The Grand Duke'' (1896) was their last joint work), Mr. and Mrs.
Richard D'Oyly Carte, the proprietors of the
Savoy Theatre, looked for other librettists to provide operas for Sullivan to set. After a number of less successful operas with other librettists, Sullivan finally found success with Hood in ''
The Rose of Persia'' (1899). Hood also wrote the libretto for a short work called ''
Ib and Little Christina'' (1900) that played in several theatres including the Savoy (in 1901, as a companion piece to Hood's ''
The Willow Pattern'').
After the success for Hood and Sullivan of ''The Rose of Persia'', the pair were soon writing a second opera, ''
The Emerald Isle'' (1901). Sullivan died while writing this new work, and the task of completing it fell to
Edward German. Hood and German went on to collaborate on the successful ''
Merrie England'' (1902) and the less successful ''
A Princess of Kensington'' (1903) before their producer,
William Greet, turned away from light opera, which effectively ended their work together.
Later works
Between 1903 and 1906, Hood worked on several musical comedies, including one based on ''
Romeo and Juliet'', but when producer
Charles Frohman started altering his work to suit casting considerations, he withdrew his name from the libretto of what was produced as ''
The Belle of Mayfair'' (1906). He also adapted
Victorien Sardou's play ''Directoire'' as the libretto for
George Edwardes's musical at
Daly's Theatre, ''Les Merveilleuses'' (1906). Next, he supplied the Gaiety Theatre with lyrics for the successful ''
The Girls of Gottenberg'' (1907).
With the resurgence of interest in Continental European
operettas, Edwardes hired Hood to prepare the English versions of what became a series of extremely successful productions, including ''
The Merry Widow'' (1907), ''
The Dollar Princess'' (1908), ''
A Waltz Dream'' (1908), ''
The Count of Luxembourg'' (1911), and ''Gypsy Love'' (1912). Hood's original works were few in these years of Continental domination. In 1909, his ''Little Hans Anderson'' was produced under the management of
William Greet. In 1913 he wrote a superior but unsuccessful musical comedy, ''The Pearl Girl'', that turned out to be his last work.
In 1912, actor-manager Sir
Herbert Beerbohm Tree proposed another collaboration between Hood and German to provide a musical production based on the life of
Sir Francis Drake, but German declined the commission feeling that its
Elizabethan setting would merely result in re-covering old ground already explored in ''Merrie England''. With the outbreak of
World War I, German operetta lost its popularity. After that, Hood supplied lyrics for individual numbers for some musicals and wrote some non-musical plays.
Soon, however, Hood took a job with the British War Office.
[1] He died four years later in his chambers at St. James Street at age 53.
Work as a director
Hood was also known as a director, directing among others a number of his own short pieces.
External links
★
Biography on the British Musical Theatre site, adapted from The Encyclopedia of the Musical Theatre by Kurt Gänzl, retrieved
26 July 2006.
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Listing of English musicals with links
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Information about the Broadway runs of Hood works