Home
- Introductory Commentary by the Project Author, Abigail Vetrone
- About Gilbert and Sullivan
- Overview of the Mikado Project
- Infatuation with Eastern Culture
- The Mikado: Controversies
- The Swing Mikado (1938)
- The Hot Mikado (1939)
- Hot Mikado (1986)
- Black Mikado (1975)
- The McAdo (2022)
- The Mikado Reclaimed (2016)
- Other Non-American Adaptations
- Conclusions
- Mikado Poster Image Gallery
- Credits and Works Cited
Introductory Commentary by the Project Author, Abigail Vetrone
Prior to starting this project I had limited knowledge on the Gilbert and Sullivan partnership, by that I mean that my only interaction with any of their renowned operas was a spoof of “Three little maids from school are we” performed on Disney’s The Suite Life of Zack & Cody. Nonetheless, my appreciation for theater, despite my limited expertise on the subject, led me to a collaboration with the Rare Books department at the University of Rochester.
After some initial research into Gilbert and Sullivan’s most popular comic operas, I decided to focus my research on The Mikado. More specifically, I conducted this independent study, and subsequent digital project, to answer the following: How has The Mikado been adapted throughout the decades in response to the racism that plagues the original?
Link to The Suite Life of Zack & Cody’s spoof of “Three little maids from school are we” here.