Summer Operetta

Gilbert & Sullivan’s

Patience

July 26-28

Nancy O’Brian Center for the Performing Arts

The Summer Operetta features performances by emerging artists as well as community members. Performers from a wide range of backgrounds come together to present a Gilbert and Sullivan Operetta and provide entertainment for the Norman and wider Oklahoma Community.

Auditions for Patience will be held in April 2026. Check back for more details!

Tickets on sale soon!
A photo of a production of Patience with Cimarron Opera with the dates (June 26-28, 2026) and location (Nancy O'Brian Center for the Performing Arts)

About Patience

All the village maidens are besotted with Reginald Bunthorne, a brooding “aesthetic” poet who claims to suffer exquisitely for his art. There’s just one problem: it’s all an act. Bunthorne doesn’t even like poetry–he just likes the attention. The only woman immune to his charms is the sweet, simple milkmaid Patience, who believes love must be completely selfless.

Complicating matters further, Patience is in love with her childhood friend Archibald Grosvenor, who is a true poet and, unfortunately, far too perfect to be married (at least in Patience’s eyes). Meanwhile, the serious and decidedly not poetic Heavy Dragoon Guards, once engaged to the swooning village maidens, find themselves suddenly abandoned in favor of flowery verse, languid poses, and a whole lot of aesthetic angst.

Patience is one of Gilbert & Sullivan’s most successful operettas. It’s a rollicking satire that gleefully pits the straight-laced ideals of the Victorian era against the passions and indulgences of the 1870s Aesthetic Movement. With sparkling wit, infectious music, and plenty of absurdity, Patience proves that taking oneself too seriously is always a recipe for trouble.

 

Cimarron Opera’s Summer Operetta is made possible with support from Allied Arts, Kirkpatrick Foundation, Norman Arts Council First Presbyterian Church and St. John’s Episcopal Church. This project was made possible by Oklahoma Arts Sector ARPA Grants, an investment made by leaders of the State of Oklahoma, led by the Oklahoma Arts Council in partnership with Allied Arts OKC and Arts Alliance Tulsa.