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Choreography:
Alberto Alonso. Composer: Bizet.
The
Pas de Deux will be danced by Tatiana
Berenova & Pavel Homko.
This
ballet is infused with the tradition and mystery of Spain
and the belief in the power of Fate. From the midst of
the story emerge one man and one woman whom Fate binds
together, sealing their destiny with a flower. The adaptation
of Bizet's music that is most commonly used is that composed
by Rodion Shchedrin for the ballet created for his wife,
Maya Plisetskaya. The choreography for this ballet by
Alberto Alonso began before a note of the music was even
prepared.
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The
Story of David Nixon's Carmen
ACT
1: From the opening, the ballet is infused with the
traditions and mysteries of Spain and the belief in the power
of Fate. From the midst of the group emerge one man and one
woman whom Fate binds together, sealing their destiny with a
flower.
We
see Carmen in the cigar factory where, more inclined to revel
in life than to work, she and two gypsy friends begin to dance.
At the height of the dance, a fight breaks out between Carmen
and a woman, who ends up being cut by Carmen's knife. José
arrives with the soldiers to arrest Carmen, but as José
approaches her, the room stills, and Fate once again shows her
power. Left alone to question Carmen, José falls prey
to her charms. He makes her a deal that he will allow her to
escape on the way to the prison.
Stripped
of his rank and imprisoned, José reflects on this woman
who has seeped into his being. He attempts to throw away the
flower but Fate will not allow this.
At
Pastias, a tavern, where Carmen and her friends dance until
the late hours before setting out on their nightly adventures,
we encounter Escamillo. Proud and elegant, he relates in dance
his conquests of the day. He seeks to win over Carmen, who initially
leads him on, but in the end Escamillo leads the revelers into
the streets. Carmen is about to leave too when José appears
from the shadows. She is amused and ready to honor her debts.
José, no longer able to resist Carmen, possesses her
for a moment. When he shows his nervousness, Carmen mocks José
and, feeling her debt is paid, kicks him out.
José
struggles to keep his attention on his guard duties but he is
haunted by Carmen. In the shadows lovers meet and dance. In
all the women he thinks he sees Carmen. Obsessed, he seeks out
Pastias again.
José
finds Carmen, but in the arms of his captain, Zuniga. She refuses
José's demands that she come away with him. In desperation,
José challenges Zuniga to a fight in which Zuniga is
killed. Drawn by the bond of spilt blood, Carmen leads José
safely away and to her way of life.
ACT
2: Carmen appears in disguise among the women of society
in order to lure the wealthy men into her net. In the shadows,
the fugitive José tries to steal a moment with Carmen.
Rejected, José reflects upon his life . . . although
he has lost forever his old life and its values, he does not
have Carmen's love. He is whisked away by two gypsies. Carmen
is successful in leading the wealthy men into the shadows where
José and the gypsies rob them.
At
dawn, José must retreat from the public eye. From his
hiding place he sees the street children, the dragoons, and
is shocked to see Carmen flirting with Escamillo. When the crowd
departs, José emerges worn and destroyed. He longs to
shed his fate but finally he accepts it.
Carmen
is preparing for the bullfight. She has taken a new lover. Frightened
by the vision of Fate in her mirror, she is relieved to find
it is only José. He desperately tries one more time to
possess Carmen but she will not be tamed. When he threatens
her with a knife, Carmen only laughs at her fate . . . she will
not be possessed or caged.
In
front of the arena, the people display their best dresses. Carmen
arrives with Escamillo and together they fire up the fiesta.
José arrives, externally transformed to his former self
but internally he is driven by one thought and one passion.
The tension grows as Carmen refuses him and continues to dance
with Escamillo. As the celebrations proceed into the bullring,
José forces Carmen back. He will possess Carmen or deny
her to anyone else. Carmen equally of one mind, refuses him.
As Carmen turns and sees her fate, she falls upon José's
knife. Was it her fate to be stabbed, or did she buy her freedom
on his knife? As Carmen kisses José good-bye, she pulls
the fated flower from his pocket. Fate removes the flower and
leaves José in eternal possession of Carmen.
Carmen
as a Ballet
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Petipa, before his days as the great choreographer of Russian
ballet, drew on Mérimée's Carmen for
his Carmen et son Toréro in Madrid, 1845, some
thirty years before Bizet's opera.
Carmen
was one of the popular ballets produced at London's Alhambra
Theatre and was seen in at least three different incarnations:
October 20, 1897, with choreography by A. Bertrand and music
by Georges Jacobi; in 1903 with choreography by Lucia Cormani
and music by Georges Bizet & George W. Byng; and again in
1912, choreography by Augustin Berger and music by Georges Bizet,
George W. Byng and George Clutsam.
During
the late 1800s ballet in Europe was out of favor and dancers
were usually engaged only for incidental dances in operas. In
London, ballet took root in two great music halls, The Alhambra
and the Empire in Leicester Square, where it occupied a large
part of the program alongside variety acts. Ballet flourished
in these theaters and attracted a large following. However,
the raising of artistic standards was not paramount. These audiences
were seeking light entertainment and above all wanted to feel
that they were experiencing a show that was up to date. Initially
there was little dramatic action in these ballets but by the
1890s ballets with complicated plots were being presented.
The
Alhambra maintained a large corps de ballet and engaged celebrity
choreographers including A. Bertrand, Carlo Copi, Alfred Curt
and Joseph Harness. Male dancers were at a premium and usually
confined to dancing a national dance or an eccentric number;
a pure classical dancer was regarded as effete or even loathsome.
For this reason the roles of young men were often taken by women
following the British traditions of the "principal boy"
in "pantos" being played by a female. The music was
generally arranged by the theater's musical director, George
Jacobi, who held the position for twenty six years during which
time he was associated with some one hundred ballets. He was
succeeded by G.W. Byng in 1898.
No
expense was spared on star ballerinas who included Emma Bessone,
Maria Bordin, Cecillia Cerri, and most famous of all, Pierina
Legnani who performed her famous thirty two consecutive fouettés
at the Alhambra before introducing them in Petipa's Swan
Lake.
The
first adaptation of Bizet's music to full ballet was by Roland
Petit for his Ballets de Paris in 1949. The many dance rhythms
in Bizet's score make it ideal for dancing. The music for Petit's
ballet (in five acts, that loosely follows the opera), was re-arranged
by André Girad. Renée (Zizi) Jeanmaire was Carmen,
and Petit took the role of Don José himself. It was for
Carmen that Renée Jeanmaire first cropped her
hair and thus initiated a fashion, as did Antoni Clavé
with his designs that made the corset type bodice a fixture
of ballet design of the period.
Petit's
Carmen has been filmed for television including one
version with Jeanmaire, Baryshnikov and Petit's Ballet de Marseilles.
Apart from selections from the original Bizet score and the
subsequent orchestral suites, the most used adaptation of Bizet's
music is that composed by Rodion Shchedrin for the ballet created
for his wife, Maya Plisetskaya, by Alberto Alonso. Alonso began
to create his Carmen before a note of the music was
prepared. Two years before he visited Moscow and worked with
Plisetskaya he began working out movements with members of the
Ballet Nacional de Cuba. Only once Shchedrin saw the rehearsals
with Plisetskaya did he commit to writing the music. The scenario
was developed by Alonso and departs from the familiar opera
plot. The emphasis is on the characters of Carmen, Don José
and the toreador rather than the plot. The setting is an abstraction
of a bullring with dancers in masks seated on tall stools representing
the spectators. The fatal contest within this arena of life
is between Carmen and her Fate - in the manifestation of a black
bull. Neither is victorious; they die simultaneously because,
as Plisetskaya explains, "Carmen and her fate are one and
the same." Boris Messerer designed the set. The premiere
took place April 20, 1967 with the Bolshoi Ballet.