Michael Rayner (6 December 1932 – 13 July 2015)Mackie, David. "Obituaries: Michael Rayner", Gilbert and Sullivan News, Vol. V, No. 9, Autumn/Winter 2015, pp. 17–18, The Gilbert and Sullivan Society was an English opera singer, best known for his performances in baritone roles of the Savoy Operas with the D'Oyly Carte Opera Company.
Rayner worked in his family's motor car company before eventually pursuing classical singing and, in his mid-30s, he trained at the Birmingham School of Music. He then joined Welsh National Opera's "Opera for All", to tour for two years. He played more than a dozen Gilbert and Sullivan roles with the D'Oyly Carte continuously from 1971 to 1979, also recording most of these roles with the company.
Afterwards, he had a brief government service career and sang on the concert stage. He worked with several more Gilbert and Sullivan companies for three more decades, playing some of his old D'Oyly Carte roles and more than a dozen new ones. He also appeared with Hinge and Bracket and on cruise ships, and he performed his own autobiographical musical show.
Rayner joined the D'Oyly Carte Opera Company in 1971 "Patricia Leonard: principal contralto of the D'Oyly Carte opera". The Times, 22 February 2010 as a principal baritone, immediately assuming the roles of Mr. Cox in Cox and Box, Counsel for the Plaintiff in Trial By Jury, Captain Corcoran in H.M.S. Pinafore, Samuel in The Pirates of Penzance, Strephon in Iolanthe, and Giuseppe in The Gondoliers. As Corcoran, he won critical praise for his air of authority and 'vocal size, enough to impress'". In 1972, he dropped the role of Samuel to add to his repertoire the Sergeant of Police in Pirates, and he also began to appear as Pish-Tush in The Mikado. In 1974, he added the small role of Guron in Princess Ida. For the company's 1975 Centennial Season at the Savoy Theatre, Rayner recreated the role of Mr. Goldbury Utopia Limited and sang Dr. Tannhäuser in the single concert performance of The Grand Duke. Later that year, he dropped the role of Counsel in Trial and added the role of Lieutenant of the Tower in The Yeomen of the Guard. He also exchanged the role of Cox for Sergeant Bouncer, in Cox and Box, and stepped up from Guron to Arac in Ida.Rollins and Witts, 3rd supplement, p. 28 Rayner participated in the company's tours of North America and Italy, and its Silver Jubilee Royal Command Performance of H.M.S. Pinafore at Windsor Castle during his tenure."Michael Rayner, Principal Bass Baritone", Grim's Dyke Opera programmes distributed at Grim's Dyke in 2008
Rayner's roles recorded with D'Oyly Carte included Pish-Tush (1973), Strephon (1974), Counsel (1975), Mr. Goldbury (1976), Dr. Tannhäuser (1976), Giuseppe (1977), Bouncer (1978) and Lieutenant (1979). He also played Corcoran in the company's 1973 video production of H.M.S. Pinafore.Shepherd, Marc. "The 1973 D'Oyly Carte Pinafore Video", Gilbert and Sullivan Discography, 12 April 2009, accessed 20 July 2015; and Rayner, Michael", Gilbert and Sullivan Discography, accessed 20 July 2015
From 1996 to 2008, he played several roles with the National Gilbert & Sullivan Opera Company and other companies at the International Gilbert and Sullivan Festival in Buxton, and those roles are preserved on video and available from the Festival and excerpts with Rayner from the Festival were broadcast on Songs of Praise in 1997. He also performed an autobiographical musical show called "In the Carte". "In the Carte by Michael Rayner", International Gilbert and Sullivan Festival, 21 August 1998, accessed 20 July 2015 At the Festival in 1999, soprano Jean Hindmarsh and Rayner gave the world premiere performance of "Reflect, my child", a song cut from H.M.S. Pinafore before the opera opened in 1878 and reconstructed in 1998. "Gilbert & Sullivan Rarities: Music from the Cutting-Room Floor" , Festival review, Day 2: 29 July 1999, accessed 4 November 2008Miller, Bruce and Helga J. Perry. "Lost Pinafore Song Found" , The Gilbert and Sullivan Archive, 15 April 1999, accessed 4 November 2008
Rayner lived most of his life in Derby, where he remarried, in 1984, to Joy Neal, Michael J Rayner: England & Wales, Marriage Index, 1916–2005, Ancestry.com (pay to view) a mezzo-soprano who also performed with Derby Opera, G&S Unlimited and Grim's Dyke Opera. Rayner loved sports, especially football, and played golf.Ayre, p. 339 Another hobby was cooking, and he and Joy enjoyed hosting dinner parties in later years at their home in Ilkeston.
He died in Derby Hospital, aged 82, after many years of declining health and a short illness.
Later years
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