Utopia, Limited or, The Flowers of Progress, is the second-to-last collaboration between composer Arthur Sullivan and librettist/satirist W.S. Gilbert. The operetta premiered on October 7, 1893, at the Savoy Theatre, and it enjoyed a run of 245 performances.
In this operetta, Gilbert satirizes a recent innovation of his time: The limited liability company, which permitted people to form a company which, if it filed for bankruptcy, was completely absolved of all its debts. This arrangement clearly favored the people forming a limited company, rather than the public at large, and as such was perfect fodder for satire.
It is also a send-up of English institutions and the status quo, ranging from the Navy to Government by Party.
Utopia is performed less frequently than the other Gilbert & Sullivan operettas, in part because it is expensive to produce, and in part because it is difficult for modern audiences to follow. Its subject matter would have been immediately grasped by its original audiences in VictorianEngland, but its finer points are lost on audiences today. In this way, it differs significantly from shows like H.M.S. Pinafore and The Pirates of Penzance: Those operettas are still immensely popular, thanks to their themes of love and duty which have transcended time.
Although some authors have described their utopia with some sorts of practicality, the term utopia has become stereotyped as reflecting notions that are too optimistic and idealistic for practical application; and readers will often mislabel their concepts as impossible or void.
Religious utopias, perhaps expansively described as a garden of delights, existence free of worry amid streets paved with gold, in a bliss of enlightenment enjoying nearly godlike powers, are often a reason for perceiving benefit in remaining faithful to a religion, and an incentive for converting new members.
Utopia, Limited (1893) is a Gilbert and Sullivanoperetta in which a small island nation reforms itself along British lines, with amusingly utter success.
Utopia, Limited or, The Flowers of Progress, is the second-to-last collaboration between composer Arthur Sullivan and librettist/satirist W.S. Gilbert.
In this operetta, Gilbert satirizes a recent innovation of his time: The limited liability company, which permitted people to form a company which, if it filed for bankruptcy, was completely absolved of all its debts.
Utopia is performed less frequently than the other Gilbert & Sullivanoperettas, in part because it is expensive to produce, and in part because it is difficult for modern audiences to follow.