In 2014, it performed a new translation of Die Fledermaus at the Bankhead Theater in Livermore.[9] Also in 2014, they put on Candide.[10] as well as in 2015.[11][12] In 2016, the troupe's revised version of The Mikado was well-received by critics, who judged that the retelling of the tale in Milan instead of Japan removed elements that have made the original controversial in recent years.[13] The production was named The New Mikado – Una Commedia Musicale.[14]
A "sampler" show of elements of multiple comic operas by Gilbert and Sullivan was presented in early 2017, receiving a mixed review by The Mercury News, which praised the performance but called the adaptation, created by the director, overlong at three hours.[15] In 2017, their touring performance of The Yeomen of the Guard was given a positive reception by The Mercury News.[16] Co-founder Orva Hoskinson died in 2017, after serving in the troupe for years as a director and performer;[3] the same year, the troupe announced Dennis Lickteig as artistic director.[17] Gilbert and Sullivan's The Gondoliers was put on in 2018.[18] In 2019, the Lamplighters produced a spoof: Trial by Jury Duty, paired with Thespis.[19] Later the same year, Nicolas Aliaga Garcia directed The Pirates of Penzance.[20]
Production style and venues
The company's season usually comprises four productions: a fully staged production in January/February; a staged concert in the spring; a fully staged production in July/August; and a full-length original musical comedy, presented as a champagne gala fundraiser and silent auction, in November.[21] The company also creates educational programs for schools.[22] The Lamplighters' artistic director is Jane Erwin, and its musical director is Brett Strader.[23]
The Mercury News said that "Lamplighters Music Theatre knows the works of W. S. Gilbert and Arthur Sullivan backwards, forwards, upside down and inside out."[19] Since its founding, it has "been chiefly devoted to the works of Gilbert and Sullivan," and has also produced musicals, for example A Little Night Music by Stephen Sondheim in early 2019.[26]
The San Francisco Chronicle review called the company's 2010 production of Gilbert and Sullivan's Patience, "a splendid and loving production", commenting that the performance "used the company's long experience of the Savoy operettas to fine effect. At their best, the Lamplighters' productions take an approach to this material that is mindful of tradition without ever seeming musty or warmed over."[27]Talkin' Broadway called the company's Princess Ida "a gorgeous production. ... The singing of the principals is superior. ... The chorus work as usual is superb, and the full orchestra is brilliant. The sets and costumes are breathtaking".[28]