Light Opera of Manhattan

Founded by William Mount-Burke, LOOM's first long-term home was in the Jan Hus theatre from the late 1960s to 1975, where it succeeded another small light opera company, the American Savoyards.Led by conductor-director Mount-Burke, principal comedian Raymond Allen and choreographer/stage manager Jerry Gotham, the company mentored many young actors and singers who went on to careers on Broadway or elsewhere in theatre or music.There it expanded its repertoire beyond Gilbert and Sullivan to American and continental operettas, such as those of Victor Herbert, Rudolph Friml, Franz Lehár, Sigmund Romberg, Jacques Offenbach and Johann Strauss II.After this, led by Allen and Gotham, with music director Todd Ellison, the company played in a series of theatres around New York that challenged its ability to keep its Upper East Side audience, and it was forced constantly to raise funds.In 1969, the company moved into the 247-seat basement gymnasium of The Jan Hus House on East 74th Street, previously the home of Dorothy Raedler's American Savoyards, intending to play a limited engagement.[14] The orchestra consisted of two players: pianist Brian Molloy, a graduate of Juilliard, who played every score by heart, and Mount-Burke himself, covering the organ and timpani, while conducting the performance.[2] Friml's The Vagabond King and Rose-Marie; Sigmund Romberg's The Student Prince, The Desert Song, The New Moon; Herbert's Naughty Marietta, The Red Mill, Mlle.Babes was a perennial hit for LOOM, offering parents an alternative to Radio City's annual Christmas show, and Victor Herbert's beloved tunes delighted older audience members.For example, in 1980 Mount-Burke directed the first professional production of Arthur Sullivan and B. C. Stephenson's The Zoo given anywhere in the world since 1879, together with Cox and Box and Trial by Jury, repeating the triple bill the following year.[24] During these seasons, despite Mount-Burke's declining health, the company attracted high-quality professional singers for their casts, generally improved costumes and sets, earned good reviews and enjoyed a seemingly secure financial future."[16] This period in the company's history is lampooned in the 2003 comic novel, Jewish Thighs on Broadway: Misadventures of a Little Trouper by Penny Orloff, who played Josephine in Pinafore, Mabel in Pirates, and the title role in Iolanthe in the summer of 1980.[27] LOOM transferred first to The Norman Thomas High School Auditorium, which was too large for its intimate productions and too distant from the Upper East Side neighborhood where it had built its reputation.[27] Although the company's ticket sales improved there, even sellout crowds were insufficient to generate sufficient revenues to stay ahead of the expenses of paying the large casts needed for light opera.
William Mount-Burke, LOOM's founder and artistic director
The Pirates of Penzance was LOOM's first production in 1968
Allen as Sir Joseph in H.M.S. Pinafore
The Eastside Playhouse
LOOM revived several Victor Herbert works
LOOM frequently produced The Mikado
Cohan wrote the songs in LOOM's last premiere, Give My Regards to Broadway
off-Broadwayrepertorylight operasGilbert and SullivanoperettasAmerican SavoyardsSavoy operasThe Pirates of PenzanceThe MikadoH.M.S. PinaforeRaymond AllenBroadwayVictor HerbertRudolph FrimlFranz LehárSigmund RombergJacques OffenbachJohann Strauss IIdiabetesUpper East Sidecomic operasSt. Michael's ChurchManhattanThe Jan Hus HouseEast 74th Streetnon-profit organizationNew York City OperaCity CenterChappell Music CompanyEquityGerard AlessandriniForbidden BroadwayLes MisérablesRobert CuccioliJekyll & HydeCarolyne MasSusan MarshallAmadeusWoman of the YearBig RiverFolliesJoan LaderTony Honors for Excellence in TheatreMadonnaSutton FosterFrederica von StadeMacaulay CulkinJuilliardstage lightingNaughty MariettaThe Vagabond KingOscar Hammerstein IIThe Merry WidowRose-MarieThe Student PrinceThe Desert SongThe New MoonThe Red MillMlle. ModisteThe Fortune TellerThe Grand Duchess of GerolsteinA Night in VenicesopranoBabes In ToylandRadio CityCentral ParkD'Oyly Carte Opera CompanyThe Grand DukeUtopia LimitedArthur SullivanB. C. StephensonThe ZooThe New York TimesIolantheJean Dalrymplemusical theatreCherry Lane TheatreGreenwich Villageblack box theatreSweetheartsGeorge M. CohanLittle Johnny JonesKenrick, JohnWayback MachineHal Leonard Publishing CorporationTampa Bay TimesNew York Times