Derby Day is a 1932 three-act light opera, with music composed by Alfred Reynolds to a libretto by A. P. Herbert. Herbert wrote his text between March and May 1931, whilst on a trip to Australia, during the first run of his successful Tantivy Towers.[1]
One contemporary review described the work as "mainly a Cockney opera", and praised the work as "topical in the best sense" and said of the music:[1]
I do not know if Mr. Reynolds is himself a Cockney, but I do know that his Cockney music, particularly in the coster scenes, is the best that has ever been written.[1]
In particular, the song for the tipster, "'Oo wants a winner for the big race tomorrer?", has been singled out for particular praise as a musical expression of the Cockney.[2]
Frederic Austin as Sir Horace Waters, J.P. (a race-horse owner) in his last stage appearance
Mabel Sealby as Lady Waters (his wife)
Dewey Gibson as Eddy (their son)
Guelda Waller as a Gypsy Woman
Dewey Gibson as a Bookmaker
John Thompson as a Policeman
Pamela Stanley in a walk-on role, making her stage début.
Synopsis
The story is set in the present day (the early 1930s), and centres on a day at The Derby, the major horse-racing event of the year. In Act III, Mr Bitter proposes to Mrs Bones.
Broadcasts
The BBC broadcast an abridged radio version of the work in 1932[6] and 1934.[7] It was also broadcast twice in 1937, on Derby Day itself and two days later on the day the Oaks was run.[5]