W.S. Gilbert

W. S. Gilbert (1836-1911) began his career as a civil servant and later was a barrister at law before he became known as a writer and artist for the humor magazine Fun and other periodicals. His Bab Ballads, published in Fun between 1866 and 1871, were widely read, and provided a core of ideas to which he would repeatedly return for use in his operas with Sullivan. During the 1870s, Gilbert's writing for the theatre enjoyed immense success; indeed, he was the preeminent British playwright of that decade, with extravaganzas, fairy comedies, farces and serious dramas to his credit. These works are for the most part forgotten, but his collaboration with Arthur Sullivan resulted in a series of comic operas that have never lost favor and have provided a basis for the modern musical theatre.