Royal Swedish Opera 9 September 2022 - Don Quixote | GoComGo.com

Don Quixote

Royal Swedish Opera, Stockholm, Sweden
All photos (8)
Friday 9 September 2022

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Important Info
Type: Ballet
City: Stockholm, Sweden
Starts at: 19:00
Overview

Classical, colorful ballet DON QUIXOTE is back at the ROYAL OPERA.

The shrewd nobleman Don Quixote is dreaming of living his life like the gallant knights he reads about in medieval romances. He embarks on a journey to fulfil his dream of fighting all evil in the world together with his sidekick Sancho Panza. They encounter Kitri and Basilio, two lovers who wish for the blessing of Kitri’s father. It is Don Quixote’s chivalric duty to come to their aid…

The masterpiece Don Quixote is a colourful tragicomic adventure for the whole family - a classical ballet informed by Cervantes’ creative mind. This delightful, technically outstanding ballet was created by the legendary choreographer Rudolf Nureyev.

In 1959, at the age of 21, Rudolf Nureyev with Ninel Kourgapkina as his partner gave a brilliant performance of Basil with the Kirov Ballet in Leningrad. Once he had chosen to remain in the West in 1961, this became one of his cult roles, highlighting yet another facet of the dancer/actor: his mischievous spirit and his gift for comedy. Rudolf Nureyev danced the final pas de deux with Sonia Arova as early as 1962 in New York. He then restaged the entire work, devising a new choreography after Marius Petipa and Alexandre Gorski for the Vienna Opera in 1966, and asking John Lanchbery to work on several arrangements of Minkus’ music so as to give it a livelier character.

He revived it in 1970 with the Australian Ballet (with Lucette Aldous), and the following year with the Marseille Opera Ballet which was directed at this time by Rosella Hightower (Maïna Gielgud played the role of Kitri).

“This version shows the way in which Nureyev managed the great movements on stage even more clearly: the Spanish numbers swirl around the enormous village square and form an ingenious diversity of configuration intended to demonstrate the steps characteristic of Spain.
Although the purely classical sequence of the “vision” of Dulcinea and the Dryads was performed in its entirety – exactly as it was handed down by Kirov tradition – Nureyev preceded it with a scene involving a gypsy camp as a pretext for developing an amorous meeting between Kitri and Basil: moonlit pas de deux under the sails of a giant windmill.
Rudolf Nureyev also shortened the ballet to three acts with prologue: the gypsies, the windmills, the puppet theatre all becoming one scene, followed by the appearance of the Dryads.
Nureyev considerably expanded the comedy aspect. In his version, he introduced the spirit of “Commedia dell’Arte”, where Don Quixote would be Pantaloon, Kitri would be Columbine, and Basil, Harlequin, a brilliant, fast moving, leaping master of ceremonies, who runs from one end of the ballet to the other”. (Alexander Bland)

This Don Quixote performed by the Australian Ballet, was filmed in 1972 by Rudolf Nureyev himself; this was the first time he was on the other side of the camera. Rudolf Nureyev was already dancing Don Quixote with the Kirov ballet in Leningrad at the age of twenty. Marius Petipa’s libretto and choreography had been traditionally handed down, but had also been subjected to modifications due to successive revisions, the most important of which was that of Alexandre Gorski in 1900. Basing himself on this version, Rudolf Nureyev was to create a cheerful, lively Don Quixote, full of pace. He used humour and momentum for a series of colourful scenes concerning the thwarted love life of Kitri, the innkeeper’s daughter, and Basil, the barber, combined with the epic “Knight of the sad face”.

This Don Quixote also staged with the Australian Ballet (and filmed in 1972 by Nureyev himself) made its entry into the Paris Opera repertoire in March 1981 at the invitation of Rosella Hightower, then Dance Director.

The ballet has since been revived during the 1983-84 season, in July 1985 in the Nîmes arenas, in July 1986 at the Opera, in June 1989 at the Grand Palais, in 1990 as well as in May/June 1998 and in December 1998/January 1999 at the Palais Garnier. A new production was staged at the Bastille Opera in April/May 2002 and May/June 2004.

RUDOLF NUREYEV’S CHOREOGRAPHY

Nureyev revived the Kirov version (Gorski’s production after Petipa) and danced it in 1959 and 1960, bringing modifications of his own invention to it as with all his other choreographies after Petipa.

Nureyev restored the importance of the prologue: an initial view into the fantasy world of Don Quixote who makes a knight’s helmet out of a barber’s bowl, and believes he sees the white, luminous Dulcinea, the lady of his dreams, suddenly appear in his lowly, gloomy abode.

As always with Nureyev, the room, the house, the palace, is a private world; a place of torment for the soul, of dreams and nightmares that help the hero or the heroine to overcome the conventions of their subconscious.

In contrast with this, “life on the outside continues” (a phrase which was often repeated by Rudolf Nureyev with a melancholy nothing short of Chekhov): noisy and cheerful, the square in Barcelona – following the example of that in Verona for Romeo and Juliet – is the stage for an array of simultaneous actions and colourful events.

Sancho Pança, no longer a valet but a chubby, thieving, bawdy monk as they once were, is the main attraction here. He represents the old world perpetuated by Don Quixote; this idealist from another age, ill at ease in his armour, who invites Kitri to dance an old-fashioned minuet in Act 1. An old world that is going to be swept away by the youthfulness of Kitri and Basil

In his own style, Nureyev choreographed a pas de deux for Kitri and Basil in Act II, when the two lovers have run away to escape from Lorenzo who wants to marry his daughter to the ludicrous Gamache.

Rudolf Nureyev’s love of the theatre did not restrict itself to genres, consequently, the choreography contained music-hall effects such as these opening and closing umbrellas which, in the eyes of Don Quixote, seemed to be no less than frightening monsters, or such as this “floating” vision of Kitri/Dulcinea where the female dancer is lifted in the dark by a male dancer clad all in black, thus giving the illusion of a weightless being.

Nureyev also gave his Don Quixote to the Zurich Opera Ballet (1979) and the National Ballet of Norway (1980). In 1981, at the invitation of Rosella Hightower – then Dance Director for the Paris Opera – the production made its entry into the repertoire of the Opera Ballet, where only the famous pas de deux in the third act was danced. Nureyev’s Don Quixote was subsequently to be included in the repertoire of the Central Ballet Troupe in Peking, the Matsuyama Ballet Company in Tokyo (in 1985), the Scala Ballet in Milan (in 1987) and the Swedish Royal Ballet (in 1994) Cast of the creation at the Palais Garnier The “first” Don Quixote with the Paris Opera Ballet was performed on the 6th March 1981 at the Palais Garnier with Noëlla Pontois (Kitri), Cyril Atanassoff (Basil) Elisabeth Platel (Queen of the Dryads), Georges Piletta (Gamache), Jean-Yves Lormeau (Espada), and Sylvie Clavier (Street dancer); Rudolf Nureyev danced with Noëlla Pontois in the second performance.

History
Premiere of this production: 26 December 1869, Ballet of the Imperial Bolshoi Theatre of Moscow, Russia

Don Quixote is a ballet in four acts and eight scenes, based on episodes taken from the famous novel Don Quixote de la Mancha by Miguel de Cervantes. It was originally choreographed by Marius Petipa to the music of Ludwig Minkus and first presented by the Ballet of the Imperial Bolshoi Theatre of Moscow, Russia on 26 December [O.S. 14 December] 1869. Petipa and Minkus revised the ballet into a far more expanded and elaborated edition in five acts and eleven scenes for the Imperial Ballet, first presented on 21 November 1871 at the Imperial Bolshoi Kamenny Theatre of St. Petersburg.

Venue Info

Royal Swedish Opera - Stockholm
Location   Gustav Adolfs torg 2

Royal Swedish Opera is Sweden's major national stage for opera and ballet. Famous singers who have been part of the opera's ensemble have included Jussi Björling, Gösta Winbergh, Nicolai Gedda, Peter Mattei, Jenny Lind, Birgit Nilsson, Elisabeth Söderström, Fritz Arlberg, Anne Sofie von Otter, Katarina Dalayman and Nina Stemme.

The orchestra of the Royal Swedish Opera, the Royal Swedish Orchestra, Kungliga Hovkapellet, dates back to 1526. Royal housekeeping accounts from 1526 mention twelve musicians including wind players and a timpanist but no string players. Consequently, the Royal Swedish Orchestra is one of the oldest orchestras in Europe.

Armas Järnefelt was on the music staff from 1905, rising to become chief conductor between 1923–1933 and 1938–1946. The Royal Swedish Ballet, Kungliga Baletten, was founded by Gustav III of Sweden in 1773.

The building is located in the center of Sweden's capital Stockholm in the borough of Norrmalm, on the eastern side of Gustav Adolfs torg across from the former Arvfurstens Palats, now Ministry for Foreign Affairs. It lies on the north side of the Norrström river and is connected to the Royal Palace through the Norrbro bridge.

The opera company was founded by King Gustav III and its first performance, Thetis and Phelée with Carl Stenborg and Elisabeth Olin, was given on January 18, 1773; this was the first native speaking opera performed in Sweden.

But the first opera house was not opened until 1782 and served for a century before being replaced at the end of the 19th century. Both houses are officially called the "Royal Opera", however the terms "The Gustavian Opera" and "The Oscarian Opera", or the "Old" and "New" Opera are used when distinction is needed.

The Gustavian Opera
The original Stockholm Opera House, the work of architect Carl Fredrik Adelcrantz was commissioned by King Gustav III, a strong adherent of the ideal of an enlightened absolutism and as such was a great patron of the arts. The Swedish Opera company had first been located in Bollhuset, but there was a need to separate the Opera from the theatre and give them separate buildings. Construction began in 1775 and the theatre was inaugurated on 30 September 1782 with a performance of the German composer Johann Gottlieb Naumann's Cora och Alonzo. It was also the place for public masquerade balls, events inspired from the famous opera-balls in Paris, which was open for everyone wearing a mask at a cheap cost and somewhat ill-reputed.

The building was very imposing with its centre Corinthian tetrastyle portico supporting four statues and topped by the royal crown. The four-tiered auditorium was oval in shape, had excellent acoustics and sight lines. The sumptuous foyer contained neoclassic medallions and pilasters.

It was in the foyer of the opera house where the king met his fate: during a masquerade on March 16, 1792, he was shot by Jacob Johan Anckarström, and died 7 days later. (In turn, this event inspired the operas Gustave III by Daniel Auber and Un ballo in maschera by Verdi.) Following the assassination, the opera house was closed until 1 November 1792, when it was opened again, which by some was considered shocking. The son of Gustav III, King Gustav IV Adolf of Sweden, did not like the Opera, possibly because of the murder of his father, and disliked the fact that the scene of his father's murder was used as a place of amusement and leisure, and when a frivolous play was performed for his queen Frederica of Baden in 1806, he decided to close it down. It remained closed until 1809, and when the king was deposed, it took until May 1812, before it was organised enough to be fully opened again.

The Oscarian Opera, Operan

The old opera was demolished in 1892 to give way to the construction of a new Opera drawn by Axel Johan Anderberg, which was finished seven years later and inaugurated by King Oscar II with a production of a Swedish opera (that tradition having been quite firmly established during the 19th century), Franz Berwald's Estrella de Soria.

The new house had the letters Kungl. Teatern, literally "Royal Theatre" (which caused the later-founded Royal Dramatic Theatre to add the distinction "dramatic" to its name). The building is now simply called Operan ("The Opera"), written in golden letters above the middle arch on the front facade. It is a majestic neo-classical building with a magnificent gold foyer (Guldfoajén) and elegant marble grand staircase leading to a three-tiered auditorium somewhat smaller than the old theatre. It presently seats 1,200. Most productions are now sung in the original language (with Swedish subtitles), with only a few in Swedish.

The Royal Swedish Family of King Carl XVI Gustaf keeps the Royal Box reserved, located in the first tier in the auditorium above the orchestra pit.

The current general manager of the Royal Swedish Opera is the Swedish mezzo-soprano Birgitta Svendén. In November 2011, the Dutch conductor Lawrence Renes was named the next chief conductor of the company, as of the 2012–13 season, with an initial contract through the 2016–17 season.

Important Info
Type: Ballet
City: Stockholm, Sweden
Starts at: 19:00
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