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Kenneth Sandford (28 June 1924 – 19 September 2004) was an singer and actor, best known for his performances in roles of the of Gilbert and Sullivan.

After service the Royal Air Force during World War II, Sandford turned away from a career in art and studied singing. He performed in in the West End and on tour between 1950 and 1956, including 800 performances starring in a called Jokers Wild with The Crazy Gang. He also began a concert career. In 1957, he was engaged by the D'Oyly Carte Opera Company and immediately began to perform eight principal roles in repertory, including Pooh-Bah in . He remained with the company for 25 years until it closed, also making about twenty recordings with the company, and several recordings for Reader's Digest and others.

In later years, Sandford continued to tour in and direct Gilbert and Sullivan productions, often with his former D'Oyly Carte colleague Roberta Morrell. After The International Gilbert and Sullivan Festival was established in 1994, he often performed and lectured for the festival's audiences and held master classes for its performers.


Beginnings
Kenneth Sandford was born Kenneth Parkin in , and raised in , where his father became landlord of a pub. The Daily Telegraph obituary, 11 October 2004 Sandford hoped to be an artist, studying painting at the College of Arts and Crafts in Sheffield, where he won a scholarship to the Royal College of Art in London.Stone, David. Kenneth Sandford at the Who Was Who in the D'Oyly Carte Opera Company website, 21 September 2004, accessed 6 April 2009 After he returned from service in the Royal Air Force during World War II, he attended that college, but he took up singing and became intrigued by the theatre.Forbes, Elizabeth. Kenneth Sandford obituary, The Independent, 23 September 2004 He began to perform in musicals, concerts and and switched to school. At this time he adopted his mother's maiden name as his professional surname, believing that Parkin "hardly rang with theatrical overtones."Morrell, p. 10

Sandford played roles in several shows in the West End and on tour between 1950 and 1956, including Carousel at the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane (1950–51) (understudying and appearing as Billy Bigelow); on tour as Count Igor Staniev in King's Rhapsody; as Sandy Twist in Paint Your Wagon at His Majesty's Theatre (1953–54); in Kismet (understudying and going on for ) and 800 performances starring in a called Jokers Wild with The Crazy Gang at Victoria Palace Theatre (1954–56). Kenneth Sandford profile at the Memories of the D'Oyly Carte website In April 1955, he appeared in the Royal Variety Show supporting The Crazy Gang in a bill that featured , George Formby and the young team of Morecambe and Wise. The Manchester Guardian, 10 March 1955, p. 5 He also sang in concert as a during this period, including a recital in April 1951 in songs by composers as diverse as Wolf-Ferrari, and .Morrell, p. 12 The Times, 9 April 1951, p. 6

In 1952, he married Pauline Joyce, and the couple had a son and a daughter. Kenneth Sandford obituary, The Times, 14 September 2004


D'Oyly Carte years
Sandford joined the D'Oyly Carte Opera Company in 1957, for the pay of £37 and 10 shillings a week (about £700 at 2007 values)Morrell, p. 25 Measuringworth.com He immediately assumed eight principal roles: the Sergeant of Police in The Pirates of Penzance, Archibald Grosvenor in Patience, Private Willis in , King Hildebrand in , Pooh-Bah in , Sir Despard Murgatroyd in , Wilfred Shadbolt in The Yeomen of the Guard, and Don Alhambra del Bolero in . He dropped the role of Sergeant of Police in 1962 (which he found uncomfortably low for his "creamy and slightly breathy" lyric baritone voice) and added Dr. Daly to his repertoire when was revived in 1971. In 1962, he played Shadbolt in a grand production of Yeomen staged by at the Tower of London as part of the first City of London Festival. said, "Mr Kenneth Sandford's lean, melancholy, decidedly sympathetic Shadbolt steals the show." The Times, 10 July 1962, p. 13 By this time, the copyrights on Gilbert and Sullivan had expired and, to Sandford's delight, Besch's production was completely restaged, allowing Sandford to develop a new interpretation of the role.

For the National School of Opera in 1963, Sandford took part along with , , and others, in a gala at Sadler's Wells Theatre. praised his "distinguished singing" and added, "we hope this talented singing actor will not remain forever in ." The Times, 29 July 1963, p. 14 Sandford had been invited to join the company of the Glyndebourne Festival in 1961, but with a young family to support he felt he could not abandon the security offered by his D'Oyly Carte contract, and thereafter "it was never the right time or the right financial deal to lure him."Morrell, p. 41 Sandford sometimes bridled at the D'Oyly Carte directorial "traditions". He was originally trained in his roles by (Mrs. ), then the company's stage director. Sandford later recalled,

For the 1975 D'Oyly Carte centenary season, Sandford played all his principal baritone roles as well as King Paramount in the company's first revival of Utopia, Limited since the original production. Andrew Lamb, writing in The Musical Times, thought him "outstanding" in the role. The Musical Times, June 1976, pp. 496–97 Sandford sang Ludwig in a concert performance of The Grand Duke in the same season. The Savoyard, September 1975, pp. 9–12 In addition, during that season, Trial by Jury was preceded by an original short play, Dramatic Licence by William Douglas-Home, in which Gilbert, Sullivan and Richard D'Oyly Carte plan the birth of Trial in 1875. Sandford played W. S. Gilbert in the playlet. He remained with the company for twenty-five years, ending on the company's last night, 27 February 1982.


After the D'Oyly Carte
After the D'Oyly Carte Opera Company closed, Sandford continued his association with Gilbert and Sullivan. He acted as managing director of a touring concert group, "The Magic of D'Oyly Carte" (later called "The magic of Gilbert & Sullivan")The group changed its name after the D'Oyly Carte Opera company revived in 1988 and along with his friend and former D'Oyly Carte colleague Roberta Morrell, he appeared in and co-directed several Savoy Operas at , . Sandford toured North America several times with Geoffrey Shovelton, , Lorraine Daniels and others in a series of Gilbert and Sullivan concerts entitled "The Best of Gilbert & Sullivan", and in other concerts and productions, including at the Choral Institute with John Reed in The Gondoliers (1985).

In the 1990s, he gave master classes and performed at Gilbert and Sullivan conferences in Toronto and Philadelphia, and at 's International Gilbert and Sullivan Festival.See, e.g., Shepherd, Marc. "A Buxton Travelogue" (1994), reprinted at The Gilbert and Sullivan Archive (1997), accessed 6 April 2009 In 1999 he co-operated with Roberta Morrell in the writing of a book, Merely Corroborative Detail, published in 1999, which combined his biography with detailed notes on the interpretation of his D'Oyly Carte roles.Morrell, passim

Sandford died at , at the age of 80.


Recordings
Sandford recorded all of his major roles with the D'Oyly Carte Opera Company, except Dr. Daly, for . The Times, 24 September 2004, p. 37 He also recorded several parts with the company that he never performed with them on stage (although in subsequent years he performed some of them): Counsel for the Plaintiff in Trial by Jury (1964); Usher in Trial (1975); Phantis and Lord Dramaleigh in a recording of Utopia excerpts (1964), and Thomas Brown in (1978), making about twenty recordings in all for the company. Sandford took part in the 1965 BBC television broadcast of Patience as Grosvenor, he played Pooh-Bah in the 1966 film version of The Mikado,Shepherd, Marc. . A Gilbert and Sullivan Discography, 15 April 2009, accessed 16 July 2014 and he was the voice of Sir Despard in the 1967 Halas & Batchelor Ruddigore cartoon.

Sandford also participated in a Reader's Digest LP collection, "The Best of Gilbert & Sullivan" in 1963. Contractually prohibited from recording the roles he had played with the D'Oyly Carte Opera Company, Sandford instead sings excerpts from several of the Gilbert and Sullivan roles that he never played or recorded during his years with the company, including the Pirate King in Pirates, the Earl of Mountararat in Iolanthe, the Duke of Plaza-Toro and Giuseppe in The Gondoliers, and Colonel Calverley in Patience. The Gilbert and Sullivan Journal, September 1964, p. 244


Notes
  • Introduction by .
  • An account of the Kenneth Sandford Memorial Service held on 6 May 2005, The Savoy magazine, Autumn 2005, Roderick Murray (ed.)


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