Not on display

Cox and Box

Poster
1869 (printed)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

Cox and Box, or, The Long Lost Brothers by Francis Burnand and Arthur Sullivan was first performed at Moray Lodge, Campden Hill, on Saturday 26 May 1866.

This one-act opera was conceived for one of Arthur Lewis’s Moray Minstrels’ parties given at his Kensington home four Saturdays a year– all-male affairs before his marriage in 1867, with glee-singing, oysters at 11pm, an entertainment, and copious drinking and smoking. Guests included some of London’s most influential creative men including Charles Dickens, Wilkie Collins, Dante Gabriel Rosetti, Edwin Landseer, George Du Maurier, Frederick Leighton, and Frederick Walker, who designed Lewis’s engraved invitation card from 1865 to 1871.

Following Offenbach’s Les Deux Aveugles at a previous event, Burnand suggested that he and the 24-year old Sullivan set John Maddison Morton’s 1847 farce Box and Cox as an operetta. With its plot concerning a hatter and a printer who unbeknown to each other occupy the same room in lodgings due to their working hours, it was repeated at Moray House on 27th April 1867, and with Sullivan’s orchestration for benefits at the Adelphi Theatre on 11th May 1867, and at Manchester Theatre Royal on 29th July 1867. It had its first professional run at the German Reeds' Royal Gallery of Illustration in Regent Street from 29th March 1869, and featured in the D’Oyly Carte repertoire after its inclusion at the Savoy Theatre on 31st December 1894.

Object details

Categories
Object type
TitleCox and Box (assigned by artist)
Materials and techniques
Colour lithograph on paper
Brief description
Poster advertising a production of the comic operetta Cox and Box at the Royal Gallery of Illustration, Regent Street, London, 1869
Physical description
Pictorial and typographic poster advertising a production of the comic opera Cox and Box at the Royal Gallery of Illustration, Regent Street, London, 1869. The poster features a scene in their lodgings with Sergeant Bouncer standing on top of a table, flanked by Box the printer on the left brandishing the griddling iron on which he cooked his bacon, and Cox the hatter on the right, holding his hat.
Dimensions
  • Poster height: 33.2cm
  • Poster width: 41.5cm
Object history
Associated Production: Cox and Box. Playwright: F.C. Burnand. Composer: Arthur S. Sullivan. Royal Gallery of Illustration, Regent Street, London. 29.3.1869. Performance category: comic operetta.
Production
7 Poland Street
Summary
Cox and Box, or, The Long Lost Brothers by Francis Burnand and Arthur Sullivan was first performed at Moray Lodge, Campden Hill, on Saturday 26 May 1866.

This one-act opera was conceived for one of Arthur Lewis’s Moray Minstrels’ parties given at his Kensington home four Saturdays a year– all-male affairs before his marriage in 1867, with glee-singing, oysters at 11pm, an entertainment, and copious drinking and smoking. Guests included some of London’s most influential creative men including Charles Dickens, Wilkie Collins, Dante Gabriel Rosetti, Edwin Landseer, George Du Maurier, Frederick Leighton, and Frederick Walker, who designed Lewis’s engraved invitation card from 1865 to 1871.

Following Offenbach’s Les Deux Aveugles at a previous event, Burnand suggested that he and the 24-year old Sullivan set John Maddison Morton’s 1847 farce Box and Cox as an operetta. With its plot concerning a hatter and a printer who unbeknown to each other occupy the same room in lodgings due to their working hours, it was repeated at Moray House on 27th April 1867, and with Sullivan’s orchestration for benefits at the Adelphi Theatre on 11th May 1867, and at Manchester Theatre Royal on 29th July 1867. It had its first professional run at the German Reeds' Royal Gallery of Illustration in Regent Street from 29th March 1869, and featured in the D’Oyly Carte repertoire after its inclusion at the Savoy Theatre on 31st December 1894.

Associated object
Collection
Accession number
S.3858-1994

About this object record

Explore the Collections contains over a million catalogue records, and over half a million images. It is a working database that includes information compiled over the life of the museum. Some of our records may contain offensive and discriminatory language, or reflect outdated ideas, practice and analysis. We are committed to addressing these issues, and to review and update our records accordingly.

You can write to us to suggest improvements to the record.

Suggest feedback

Record createdJuly 27, 2010
Record URL
Download as: JSONIIIF Manifest