Charles Montague Corri (22 June 1861[1] – 8 June 1941) was an English musician, conductor and arranger. He spent most of his career working for Lilian Baylis, as her musical director at the Old Vic Theatre, and then at Sadler's Wells Opera.
Corri married Martha Mayell in Liverpool in 1889. They had ten children
In 1898, Emma Cons, who ran the Old Vic Theatre, engaged him as musical director. At the same time she recruited her niece Lilian Baylis to help run the theatre.[3] The Old Vic was operated on a small budget for the benefit of the local community in a poor area of London. By 1898, Cons had already begun to present regular operatic evenings, offering condensed versions of major operas, always sung in English.[4] Corri was given the task of arranging the opera scores for the Old Vic's tiny orchestra. The Times wrote, "His masterpiece was said to be a transcription of Tristan for an orchestra of 13 players";[3] Baylis's biographer Elizabeth Schafer states that the Old Vic's orchestra comprised 18 players.[5]
After Emma Cons died in 1912, Baylis obtained a licence allowing the Old Vic to stage full performances of operas.[6] In the 1914–15 season, Baylis staged 16 operas and 16 plays (13 of which were by Shakespeare).[7] Corri arranged and conducted the music for the operas, and all the incidental music for the plays. In the years after the First World War, Corri was praised for his conducting of Mozart operas, not as well known then as in recent times. His singers included established stars such as Clive Carey and Heddle Nash and up-and-coming singers including Winifred Lawson, Steuart Wilson and Joan Cross.[8][9] In 1922, Corri conducted Grieg's incidental music for Peer Gynt when Ibsen's play received its British premiere at the Old Vic.[10]The Times considered the music "extraordinarily well played by Mr. Corri and his orchestra".[11]