Bless the Bride
Bless the Bride is a musical with music by Vivian Ellis and a book and lyrics by A. P. Herbert, the third of five musicals they wrote together. The story is about an English girl who elopes with a debonair French actor; he goes off to serve in the Franco-Prussian War, and his friend, who bears a grudge against the English, tells his bride that he has been killed in action. The musical is remembered as Ellis's best work and for the recordings of "This is my lovely day" and "I was never kissed before", with Lizbeth Webb and Georges Guétary. The musical was Charles B. Cochran's 125th production. Cochran had signed 19-year-old Adele Leigh as the lead, but the next day the new Royal Opera offered her principal roles. After much negotiation, Cochran released her from the contract.
The premiere production opened at the Adelphi Theatre in London on 26 April 1947, just before Oklahoma! and was directed by Wendy Toye. It was not overshadowed by the American hit, enjoying a good reception from the critics and audiences, and running for three years and a total of 886 performances. The production was notable for its highly stylised scenery by Tanya Moiseiwitsch, a break with the realism of earlier musical comedy sets. One of Webb's songs with Guétary, "This Is My Lovely Day", became one of the BBC's most requested songs of all times, and the song's popularity, and that of the show, were increased by their association with the wedding in 1947 of Princess Elizabeth and Lt. Philip Mountbatten.
Only four of the songs were recorded as studio singles by the original cast. A "disappointing" studio recording was made in 1967 with Mary Millar and Roberto Cardinali, and a revival was presented in London in 1987. In 1994, a recording of songs by the original cast was released, produced by David Cunard, as a result of a discovery in the United States of recordings of a radio broadcast.
Synopsis
;Act IIn Victorian England, it is 1870, the eve of the Franco-Prussian War, and a young woman, Lucy Veracity Willow, is having second thoughts about her imminent marriage to the Hon. Thomas Trout. He will not join her in her favourite game of croquet, preferring the "shocking" new game of lawn tennis. Worse, he makes good-natured but pointed fun of her principles, especially her attachment to the truth. She is resigned to her duty to marry the man approved by her parents, but bemoans the lack of love in their relationship. Thomas introduces Lucy to a couple of new French friends of his, the debonair and romantic Pierre Fontaine, an actor, and his companion Suzanne, who is also on the stage. Lucy and Pierre quickly fall in love, much to Suzanne's chagrin, and they elope to France together in the middle of the elaborate preparations for Lucy and Thomas' wedding.
;Act II
In France, Pierre and Lucy are with Suzanne, who seems to be overcoming her initial jealousy of Lucy and is acting as chaperone until the couple can be married. The three take a table in a beachside restaurant. Into the restaurant crash Lucy's father, mother, cousin George, and the jilted Thomas, who is determined to fight a duel with Pierre if they can find him. They have come to "rescue" Lucy, and to this end have adopted disguises. Their efforts to pass themselves off as French arouse suspicions, and Lucy and Suzanne have to step in to vouch for the party, saving them from arrest as Prussian spies. Lucy declares her love for Pierre to her family, and Thomas confronts Pierre. Dramatic news arrives of the declaration of the Franco-Prussian War. Pierre is a reserve officer and must leave at once to join his regiment. Suzanne and the exultant French crowd leave with him – while poor Lucy must return to England with her family.
A year passes, and it is Lucy's twenty-first birthday. A message has arrived from Suzanne telling her that Pierre was killed in the disastrous war. A chastened Thomas renews his suit for Lucy's hand. She tells him that she cannot forget Pierre but will marry him if he does not rush the date of the wedding. Suzanne shows up, interrupting the birthday party. She admits that, resentful of the English, she had cruelly lied about Pierre, who is alive and here! Lucy is ecstatic, but Pierre is concerned when he sees Thomas's ring. However, Thomas nobly removes it and hands it to Pierre, and the lovers can at last marry with everyone's approval.
in white gown from "Bless the Bride"
Roles and original cast
- Lucy Willow – Lizbeth Webb
- Alice, Ann, Charlotte, Elizabeth, Frances and Millicent, her sisters – Diana Beall, Joan Elvin, Pamela Carroll, Winifred Hammick, Mildred Griffiths and Natasha Wills
- Mary Willow their mother – Edna Clement
- Augustus Willow, their father – Eric Fort
- Suzanne Valdis, an actress – Betty Paul
- Thomas Trout – Brian Reece
- Pierre Fontaine, an actor – Georges Guétary
- Nanny – Anona Winn
- Albert Willow, Lucy's grandfather – James Harcourt
- Harriet Willow, Lucy's grandmother – Hebe Bliss
- Cousin George – Stewart Vartan
- Monsieur Robert, maitre d'hôte, Café des Pommes – Peter Lupino
Musical numbers
- Croquet, Croquet – Company
- Too Good to Be True – Thomas and Lucy
- Any Man But Thomas T. – Lucy
- Oh, What will Mother Say – Lucy's sisters
- En Angleterre, les Demoiselles – Suzanne, Pierre and Thomas with Chorus
- I Was Never Kissed Before – Lucy and Pierre
- Where Is the Times? – Augustus with Family and Chorus
- Come, Dance, My Dear – Chorus
- God Bless the Family – Ensemble
- Ma Belle Marguerite – Pierre and Chorus
- The Silent Heart – Lucy
- Ducky – Lucy and her Nanny
- Bless the Bride – Company
- Bobbing, Bobbing – French maidens
- Bless the Sea – Girls and Lucy
- Mon Pauvre Petit Pierre – Suzanne, Lucy and Pierre
- The Englishman – Thomas and Family
- A Table for Two – Pierre
- This Is My Lovely Day – Lucy and Pierre
- The Fish – The Family, Waiters and Chorus
- This Man Could Never Be a Spy – Lucy and Suzanne
- To France – Pierre and Chorus
- Twenty-one Candles Nanny and Sisters
- Here's a Kiss – Lucy's sisters
- My Big Moment – Thomas
- Summer – Lucy
- Finale – Company