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Edward Geoffrey Toye (17 February 1889 – 11 June 1942), known as Geoffrey Toye, was an English conductor, and producer. He is best remembered as a musical director of the D'Oyly Carte Opera Company and for his association with Sadler's Wells Theatre. One of his ballets, The Haunted Ballroom (1934), became popular and was revived several times, and the new overture that he prepared for Gilbert and Sullivan's in 1919 became the standard version.

He began his career as the piano accompaniest . By 1906 he conducted performances of André Messager's opera Mirette. His early compositions included for a play and ballet music. By 1913 Toye was conducting in major London theatres. In 1914, he conducted premières of Ralph Vaughan Williams's London Symphony and George Butterworth's A Shropshire Lad. After Army service he was engaged as assistant conductor of the Beecham Opera Company and also conducted concerts for the Royal Philharmonic Society in 1918 and 1919. He served as musical director for three London seasons of the D'Oyly Carte Opera Company, earning warm notices. In 1925 and again in 1927 the broadcast The Red Pen, an operatic piece with words by A. P. Herbert and music by Toye.

Toye was made a governor of the and then Sadler's Wells Theatre, in 1931, where, as co-director with , he managed the opera and ballet until 1934. For the company, he composed two ballets, including The Haunted Ballroom, in which had her first principal role; Ninette de Valois choreographed. It was revived several times and remained popular for many years as an orchestral piece. From 1934 to 1936, Toye became Managing Director of the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden. In 1938, he adapted, produced and conducted The Mikado for film and composed and arranged the music for two other British films in 1936: Men Are Not Gods and Rembrandt. In 1940, Toye joined the staff of the . His lungs were damaged during , and he died at the age of 53.


Life and career
Born in , , Toye was the younger son of Arlingham James Toye and his wife Alice Fayrer née Coates. "Toye, (John) Francis". Who Was Who, A & C Black, 1920–2008; online edition, Oxford University Press, December 2007, accessed 4 August 2010 Toye's father was a at Winchester College, who for many years ran a music society for the boys.Chislett, W A. Sleeve notes to EMI LP TWO 295, 1970 His elder brother was also a composer and musician.Weedon, Robert. "Geoffrey Toye", War Composers: The Music of World War 1, accessed October 21, 2021


Early years
Toye studied at the Royal College of Music, concentrating on composition and conducting. He also displayed such skill as a pianist that he was engaged "when little more than a boy" to accompany the celebrated . 12 June 1947, p. 7 As early as 1906 he deputised for André Messager as conductor at performances of Messager's opera Mirette at . The Times, 4 July 1906, p. 3 Together with his brother Francis he composed for The Well in the Wood, a "pastoral masque" by C. M. A. Peake; The Times, 29 July 1909, p. 11 and was sole creator of the scenario and music for a short ballet, The Fairy Cap, first given at His Majesty's Theatre in 1911, revived for charity performance the following year. The Times 22 November 1911, p. 10; and 18 March 1912, p. 12

By 1913 Toye was conducting in major London theatres – for Maurice Maeterlinck's Blue Bird at the Haymarket Theatre, 's opera season at the , and for the première of Bernard Shaw's Androcles and the Lion. The Times, 1 September 1913, p. 8 In 1914, he was entrusted by Ralph Vaughan Williams with conducting the première of his London Symphony at the Queen's Hall. When the manuscript was lost (having been sent to in Germany just before the outbreak of the First World War) Toye, together with George Butterworth and the critic Edward J. Dent, helped Vaughan Williams reconstruct the work.Mann, William. Liner notes to EMI CD CDM 7 64017 2, 1987 Also in 1914, Toye introduced Butterworth's rhapsodies A Shropshire Lad and The Banks of Green Willow to London audiences. The Musical Times, Vol. 107, No. 1483 (September 1966), pp. 769-71 The night before the première of , Toye dined with its composer, , and the conductor . Boult later recalled that Toye took exception to one bar in "Neptune", where the brass play chords of E minor and G minor together: "I'm sorry, Gustav, but I can't help thinking that's going to sound frightful." Holst agreed, and said it had made him shudder when he wrote it down, but he insisted that it must be that way: "What are you to do when they come like that?"Boult, p. 32

Toye joined the Army in 1914, first as a private in the Duke of Cornwall's Light Infantry, and later in the Royal Flying Corps, in which he served in France as a photographic specialist. He retired with the rank of major. For a time after the war he was a member of the insurers Lloyd's of London, where he organised many amateur musical activities and founded the Lloyd's Choir.Scowcroft, Philip L. "Some British Conductor-Composers", part 3, MusicWeb-International.com (1997) He was engaged as assistant conductor of the Beecham Opera Company and also conducted concerts for the Royal Philharmonic Society in 1918 and 1919.Stone, David. "Geoffrey Toye". Who Was Who in the D'Oyly Carte Opera Company (2001)

Rupert D'Oyly Carte, a fellow , appointed Toye as for three D'Oyly Carte Opera Company seasons at the Prince's Theatre in London: 1919–20, 1921–22, and 1924.Rollins and Witts, Appendix pp. I and II In his first season there, Toye revised the score of Gilbert and Sullivan's , cutting some music and writing a new and more dramatic overture that did not use themes from numbers that Toye had cut.Hughes, p. 138. Thereafter, Toye's overture was always used by the D'Oyly Carte Opera Company, even when the cut numbers were restored in the 1970s, and it became the standard performance version. He also arranged a new overture for The Pirates of Penzance, but that did not remain in use, and no copy of the score is known to have survived.Shepherd, Marc. Discussion of Toye's Ruddigore overture, A Gilbert and Sullivan Discography As D'Oyly Carte's musical director, Toye impressed the critics; The Musical Times wrote, "Mr. Geoffrey Toye is doing his work as conductor conspicuously well. He has made many of us realise afresh how beautifully the operas are scored. He has never-failing vivacity and the right sense of musical humour." The Musical Times, November 1919, p. 626 In 1925 and again in 1927 the broadcast The Red Pen, "a sort of opera", with words by A. P. Herbert and music by Toye."Broadcasting", The Times, 20 March 1925, p. 6; and 7 February 1927, p. 4 In 1927 Toye was joint musical director of a benefit performance for the old D'Oyly Carte leading man, , in which Toye was joined by stars from many branches of theatre, including , , , Gertrude Lawrence and . The Times, 13 December 1927, p. 18


Later years
Toye, who had already been made a governor of the , became a governor of Sadler's Wells Theatre in 1931, where, as co-director with , he managed the opera and ballet until 1934. The Times, 15 November 1932, p. 12 For the company, he composed two ballets to his own scenarios: Douanes, in October 1932, a comedy set in a customs post The Musical Times, 1 November 1932, pp. 1036-37 described by The Times as "delightful and amusing", The Times 16 November 1932, p. 12 and, in 1934, The Haunted Ballroom, which portrays the Masters of Treginnis who are cursed to dance themselves to death in a gloomy ancestral ballroom by the ghosts of the women whom they had loved. As in , the curse is passed to the heir of the accursed. The piece makes "imaginative... use of an eerie... chorus commentary".Lace, Ian. Review of 2001 recording of Tribute to Madam, which includes several of Ninette de Valois's ballets, including The Haunted Ballroom, MusicWeb.UK.net 1 November 2001 The Haunted Ballroom was 's first principal role and also starred . Ninette de Valois choreographed both works and revived The Haunted Ballroom several times after Toye's death.De Valois revived it at Sadler's Wells in 1949 ( The Times, 9 November 1949, p. 7) and 1953 ( The Times, 8 October 1953, p. 10); and for London Festival Ballet in 1965 ( The Times, 2 April 1965, p. 17). Its last performance in Sadler's Wells's repertoire was on BBC television on 24 February 1957. Dance Chronicle, Vol. 19, No. 1 (1996), pp. 17-92 The original choreography of the piece now survives only in fragments. The Waltz from the score is probably Toye's best-known composition and has been recorded several times. It remained popular for many years as an orchestral piece.

From 1934 to 1936, Toye became Managing Director of the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden, working alongside the Artistic Director, . Despite early successes, Toye and Beecham eventually fell out over Toye's insistence on bringing in a popular film star, , to sing Mimi in La bohème. The production was a box-office success, but an artistic failure.Jefferson, p. 175 Beecham manoeuvred Toye out of the managing directorship in what described as an 'absolutely beastly' manner.Kennedy, p. 174

Toye obtained the film rights to the Gilbert and Sullivan operas. In 1938, he adapted, produced and conducted , starring , and the American singers Kenny Baker and ,Shepherd, Marc. The Mikado, 1938 film, A Gilbert and Sullivan Discography but the onset of war prevented further screen adaptations. Toye composed and arranged the music for two other British films of the 1930s: Men Are Not Gods and Rembrandt, both for in 1936.IMDB

In 1940, Toye joined the staff of the , in the American Liaison and Censorship Department. He was twice married, first in 1915 to the actress , The Times, 27 February 1915, p. 1 and later to Dorothy Fleitman, with whom he had one son, , who was an actor and then a long-time news anchor for Scottish Television; he took his own life in 1992.Obituary and report for John Toye, Herald 30 April 1992 and 30 May 1992 Toye's elder brother, , was a well-known critic and scholar. Their sister Eleanor's daughter became a principal soprano with D'Oyly Carte under the name .Eleanor (born 1894) first married Joseph Remington Charter in 1923 and then Joseph Richard Bishop, with whom she had a son Francis Peregrine Bishop and a daughter Jennifer Gay Bishop. Jennifer was a principal soprano with D`Oyly Carte between 1954 and 1965, using her uncles' name, Toye, as her stage name. See, Stone, David. "Jennifer Toye". Who Was Who in the D'Oyly Carte Opera Company, 27 May 2004, accessed 25 August 2010

Toye died in 1942 in London at the age of 53, a victim of , during which a blast damaged his lungs.Death notice. Gloucestershire Echo, 12 June 1942, p. 3, column 7


Compositions and recordings
In addition to his ballets, Toye's compositions included several books of songs (including some ), a symphony, a , Day and Night, a : The Red Pen (1925, with A. P. Herbert), an opera: The Fairy Cup, and two short choral items: Henrichye's Death, with orchestra, and The Keeper, with brass accompaniment.

Toye made very few gramophone records. For HMV, in 1928, he conducted the London Symphony Orchestra in recordings of , On Hearing the First Cuckoo in Spring, and In a Summer Garden. The composer wrote, "All three... are excellent and I shall be glad to have them sold as authorised by me."See Discography, London Symphony Orchestra website. Delius's helper and amanuensis, stated that when Delius was close to death, Fenby played him Toye's recording of In a Summer Garden, the last music, Fenby says, that Delius ever heard. See Fenby (1981), p. 221 Toye also recorded The Walk to the Paradise Garden in 1929.

Toye's overture to Ruddigore has been recorded numerous times, conducted by , , and (who each recorded the complete opera) and Sir Charles Mackerras, among others. Norris, Godfrey and Sargent all observe some or all of Toye's cuts and other minor alterations in the score. Summary of Ruddigore recordings at the G&S Discography Toye's only recording conducting a Gilbert and Sullivan work is the 1938 film of The Mikado referred to above. Of Toye's original music, the waltz from The Haunted Ballroom has been recorded several times, Information about recordings of The Haunted Ballroom including one in the 1990s by the Marco Polo record label. A complete recording of the ballet was made in 2001 by the Royal Ballet Sinfonia.


Notes
  • (1979). 9780241101780, Hamish Hamilton.
  • (1981). 9780571118366, Faber and Faber.
    (First published by G Bell & Sons in 1936)
  • (1979). 035404205X, Macdonald and Jane's. 035404205X
  • (1989). 9780333487525, Papermac.


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