Three Little Maids from School Are We

"Three Little Maids from School Are We", sometimes listed as "Three Little Maids", is a song from Act I of Gilbert and Sullivan's comic opera The Mikado.

Background
In an 1885 interview with the New-York Daily Tribune, W. S. Gilbert said that the short stature of Leonora Braham, Jessie Bond and Sybil Grey "suggested the advisability of grouping them as three Japanese school-girls", the opera's "three little maids". He also recounted that a young Japanese lady, a tea server at the Japanese village, came to rehearsals to coach the three little maids in Japanese dance. On 12 February 1885, one month before The Mikado opened, The Illustrated London News wrote about the opening of the Japanese village noting, among other things, that "the graceful, fantastic dancing featured ... three little maids!"

Synopsis and analysis
The song is a trio for three female characters, the schoolgirls Yum-Yum, Peep Bo and Pitti-Sing. Near the beginning of the opera, Nanki-Poo, disguised as a poor minstrel, but secretly the son of the Mikado (the emperor of Japan), has returned to the Town of Titipu to inquire about his beloved, Yum-Yum, who is a ward of Ko-Ko, the town's Lord High Executioner. Pooh-Bah, a high officer of state, informs Nanki-Poo that Yum-Yum is scheduled to marry Ko-Ko on the very day that he has returned. Ko-Ko arrives, soon followed by Yum-Yum, Peep-Bo, Pitti-Sing and their schoolmates, and they introduced themselves with this song.

The characters sing that they are "filled to the brim with girlish glee", find "fun" in life and "come from a ladies' seminary". The three schoolgirls note, arithmetically, that the "total sum" of three little maids is reached by adding the bride, Yum-Yum, to the two others who are "in attendance" on her for her wedding, and that if the bride is subtracted from the three, the other two "remain". The lyrics' rhyme scheme is as follows: AAAB, CCCB, DDDB, EEEB, FFFB, with a choral reprise of DDDB.

In popular culture
In 2016, the song was one of 246 featured in Taylor Mac's A 24-Decade History of Popular Music.

The song is featured in the 1981 film Chariots of Fire, where Harold Abrahams first sees his future wife dressed as one of the Three Little Maids. Television programmes that have featured the song include the Cheers episode "Simon Says",  the Frasier episode "Leapin' Lizards",  the Angel episode "Hole in the World",  The Simpsons episode "Cape Feare", The Suite Life of Zack & Cody episode "Lost in Translation", and The Animaniacs Vol. 1 episode "Hello Nice Warners". the Dinah Shore Show, Shore sang the song with Joan Sutherland and Ella Fitzgerald in 1963. Larry David's Curb Your Enthusiasm frequenty uses an instrumental version of the song.

The Capitol Steps performed a parody titled "Three Little Kurds from School Are We" about conditions in Iraq and "Three little wives of Newt", a 2012 lampoon of candidate Newt Gingrich's marital issues.

Recordings
Double A-Side singles:
 * Billy Bunch and His Smoky Rhythm, 1939
 * Black Mikado, cast recording, 1975
 * Hot Mikado, West End cast recording 1995