Remove ads
1935 ballet by Sergei Prokofiev From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Romeo and Juliet (Russian: Ромео и Джульетта, romanized: Romeo i Dzhulyetta), Op. 64, is a ballet by Sergei Prokofiev based on William Shakespeare's play Romeo and Juliet. First composed in 1935, it was substantially revised for its Soviet premiere in early 1940. Prokofiev made from the ballet three orchestral suites and a suite for solo piano.
This article has multiple issues. Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page. (Learn how and when to remove these messages)
|
Romeo and Juliet | |
---|---|
Choreographer | Ivo Váňa-Psota |
Music | Sergei Prokofiev |
Libretto | Adrian Piotrovsky,
Sergei Radlov, Sergei Prokofiev, Leonid Lavrovsky |
Based on | Romeo and Juliet |
Premiere | 1938 Mahen Theatre, Brno |
Original ballet company | Ballet of the National Theatre, Brno |
Characters | Ivo Váňa-Psota as Romeo Zora Šemberová as Juliet |
Genre | Drambalet |
Based on a synopsis created by Adrian Piotrovsky (who first suggested the subject to Prokofiev)[1] and Sergey Radlov, the ballet was composed by Prokofiev in September 1935 to their scenario which followed the precepts of "drambalet" (dramatised ballet, officially promoted at the Kirov Ballet to replace works based primarily on choreographic display and innovation).[2] Following Radlov's acrimonious resignation from the Kirov in June 1934, a new agreement was signed with the Bolshoi Theatre in Moscow on the understanding that Piotrovsky would remain involved.[3]
However, the ballet's original happy ending (contrary to Shakespeare) provoked controversy among Soviet cultural officials.[4] The ballet's production was then postponed indefinitely when the staff of the Bolshoi was overhauled at the behest of the chairman of the Committee on Arts Affairs, Platon Kerzhentsev.[5] The ballet's failure to be produced in the Soviet Union until 1940 may also have been a result of consequences in the performing arts following Pravda's denunciation of Dmitri Shostakovich in 1936, as well as other "degenerate modernists" including Piotrovsky.[6] The conductor Yuri Fayer met with Prokofiev frequently during the writing of the music, and he strongly urged the composer to revert to the traditional ending. Fayer went on to conduct the first performance of the ballet at the Bolshoi Theatre.
Suites of the ballet music were heard in Moscow and the United States, but the full ballet premiered in the Mahen Theatre, Brno (then in Czechoslovakia, now in the Czech Republic), on 30 December 1938.[7] This version was a single-act production with music mainly from the first two suites. Prokofiev was not able to attend the premiere due to his status of outbound restriction.
The history of the creation of the ballet was recited by the composer Sergei Prokofiev himself:
At the end of December (of 1934) I returned to Leningrad specifically for the negotiations with the Kirov Theatre. I expressed my wish to find a lyrical scenario for a ballet… We started recalling the scenarios: Piotrovsky named "Pelléas and Méllisande", "Tristan and Isolde", "Romeo and Juliet". I immediately "clung" onto the latter – it would be impossible to find a better one! It was arranged that Piotrovsky, Radlov and I (S.P.) would be making a libretto. It was decided to engage as a producer Rostislav Zakharov – a former student of Radlov… However, we didn't conclude a contract with the Kirov Theatre… I arrived in Moscow, and Golovanov, the then chief conductor of the Bolshoi Theatre said that if this was about "Romeo" the Bolshoi theatre would immediately conclude a contract with me. The contract was signed in the summer of 1935. The theatre gave me the opportunity to work on the ballet in "Polenovo" – the holiday home of the Bolshoi theatre, where I managed to almost finish the ballet using themes composed in the spring. An audition of the ballet took place in the theatre. It had no success. The ballet was not put on the stage at that time… Yet it was staged in the Kirov Theatre in 1939 (1940). R. Zakharov dropped out after the ballet had been rejected by the Bolshoi theatre. Lavrovsky, on the other hand, during the staging of the ballet in Leningrad, added quite a lot to what had been composed before him. Later I decided to include him in the co-authors of the libretto.[8]
It is better known today from the significantly revised version that was first presented at the Kirov Theatre (now Mariinsky Theatre) in Leningrad (now Saint Petersburg) on 11 January 1940, with choreography by Leonid Lavrovsky and with Galina Ulanova and Konstantin Sergeyev in the leading roles. Despite the objections of Prokofiev, Lavrovsky significantly changed the score of the ballet. This production received international acclaim and was awarded the Stalin Prize.
In 1955, Mosfilm made the film version of this production with Galina Ulanova as Juliet and Yuri Zhdanov as Romeo. This film won the Best Lyrical Film and nominated as Palme d'Or in the 1955 Cannes Film Festival.
Original Cast
In 1955, Frederick Ashton choreographed a production of Romeo and Juliet for the Royal Danish Ballet.
In 1962, John Cranko's choreography of Romeo and Juliet for the Stuttgart Ballet helped the company achieve a worldwide reputation. It had its American premiere in 1969.
In 1965, choreographer Sir Kenneth MacMillan's version for the Royal Ballet premiered at the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden. Margot Fonteyn and Rudolf Nureyev danced the title roles. Fonteyn, considered to be near retirement, embarked upon a rejuvenated career with a partnership with Nureyev. Also in 1965, Oleg Vinogradov stages a version in Russia while serving as assistant ballet master to Pyotr Gusev.
In 1971, John Neumeier, partly inspired by John Cranko, created another version of the ballet in Frankfurt. In 1974, Neumeier's Romeo and Juliet premiered in Hamburg as his first full-length ballet with the company.
In 1977, Rudolf Nureyev created a new version of Romeo and Juliet for the London Festival Ballet, today's English National Ballet. He performed the lead role of Romeo with British ballerinas Eva Evdokimova and Patricia Ruanne creating the role of Juliet. As a partnership, they toured the production internationally. Eva Evdokimova danced the leading role Juliet in London and Paris, and it continues to be a popular ballet in the ENB repertoire, with its most recent revival in 2010 staged by Patricia Ruanne and Frederic Jahn of the original 1977 cast. This production was also staged by La Scala Theater Ballet in 1980 and Paris Opera Ballet in 1984 and has been a renowned performance in the POB repertoire.
In 1979, Yuri Grigorovich created a new version for the Bolshoi, "which did away with most of the stage properties and stylized the action into an all-danced text." This was revived in 2010 and remains in the Bolshoi repertory.[9]
In 1985, choreographer László Seregi's production premiered at the Hungarian National Ballet, Budapest.
In 1990, director Armondo Linus Acosta used Prokofiev's score, performed by the London Symphony Orchestra, to create a motion picture adaptation of Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet. Acosta's Romeo.Juliet was conceived as a film-in-concert with a live orchestra performing the soundtrack, and was performed as such to international acclaim with by conductors such as André Previn, Barry Wordsworth, and Nicholas Cleobury.[citation needed]
In 1991, Christopher Gable directed his own production for the Northern Ballet Theatre. It was choreographed by Massimo Moricone and featured William Walker as Romeo and Jayne Regan as Juliet.
In 1996, choreographer Jean-Christophe Maillot premiered his version of Roméo et Juliette at Les Ballets de Monte Carlo. Taking formal inspiration from the episodic character of Sergei Prokofiev's classic score, Maillot structured the action in a manner akin to cinematic narrative. Rather than focusing on themes of political-social opposition between the two feuding clans, this Romeo and Juliet highlights the dualities and ambiguities of adolescence.
In 2007, Peter Martins made Romeo + Juliet on New York City Ballet to the Prokofiev music.
In 2008, Krzysztof Pastor presented his version by the Scottish Ballet at the Edinburgh Festival Theatre. The Polish premiere of this version was by the Polish National Ballet in Warsaw, and the United States premiere was by the Joffrey Ballet in 2014.
On July 4, 2008, with the approval of the Prokofiev family and permission from the Russian State Archive, the original Prokofiev score was given its world premiere. Musicologist Simon Morrison, author of The People's Artist: Prokofiev's Soviet Years, unearthed the original materials in the Moscow archives, obtained permissions, and reconstructed the entire score. Mark Morris created the choreography for the production. The Mark Morris Dance Group premiered the work at the Fisher Center for the Performing Arts at Bard College in New York state. The production subsequently began a year-long tour to include Berkeley, Norfolk, London, New York, and Chicago.
In 2011, the National Ballet of Canada premiered a new choreography of Romeo and Juliet by Alexei Ratmansky in Toronto, with plans to take it on tour in Western Canada in early 2012.
Also in 2011, Graeme Murphy created his version of Romeo and Juliet for The Australian Ballet.[10]
In 2015, Stanton Welch premiered his version of Romeo and Juliet for Houston Ballet.
In 2019 at the Curve Theatre, Leicester Matthew Bourne choreographed an alternative adaptation of Romeo and Juliet set in a mental hospital called 'Verona Institute'. It was filmed with Cordelia Braithwaite as Juliet, Paris Fitzpatrick as Romeo and Dan Wright as Tybalt.
In addition to a somewhat standard instrumentation, the ballet also requires the use of the tenor saxophone. This voice adds a unique sound to the orchestra as it is used both in solo and as part of the ensemble. Prokofiev also used the cornet, viola d'amore and mandolins in the ballet, adding an Italianate flavor to the music.
Full instrumentation is as follows:
|
|
The score is published by Muzyka and the Russian State Publisher.
List of acts, scenes and musical numbers.[11]
Scene | No. | Original title in Russian | English title | Tempo indication | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Act 1 | |||||
1 | Вступление | Introduction | Andante assai | ||
Scene 1 | 2 | Ромео | Romeo | Andante | |
3 | Улица просыпается | The Street Awakens | Allegretto | ||
4 | Утренний танец | Morning Dance | Allegro | ||
5 | Ссора | The Quarrel | Allegro brusco | ||
6 | Бой | The Fight | Presto | ||
7 | Приказ герцога | The Prince Gives His Order | Andante | a.k.a. The Duke's Command. Introduction of Montagues and Capulets in Suite No. 2 | |
8 | Интерлюдия | Interlude | Andante pomposo (L'istesso tempo) | ||
Scene 2 | 9 | Приготовление к балу (Джульетта и Кормилица) | Preparing for the Ball (Juliet and the Nurse) | Andante assai. Scherzando | a.k.a. At the Capulets' (Preparations for the Ball) |
10 | Джульетта-Девочка | Juliet as a Young Girl | Vivace | a.k.a. The Young Juliet | |
11 | Съезд гостей (Менуэт) | Arrival of the Guests (Minuet) | Assai moderato | ||
12 | Маски (Ромео, Меркуцио и Бенволио в масках) | Masks (Romeo, Mercutio and Benvolio in Masks) | Andante marciale | ||
13 | Танец рыцарей | Dance of the Knights | Allegro pesante | The main part of Montagues and Capulets in Suite No. 2 | |
14 | Вариация Джульетты | Juliet's Variation | Moderato (quasi Allegretto) | ||
15 | Меркуцио | Mercutio | Allegro giocoso | ||
16 | Мадригал | Madrigal | Andante tenero | ||
17 | Тибальд узнает Ромео | Tybalt Recognizes Romeo | Allegro | ||
18 | Гавот (Разъезд гостей) | Gavotte (Departure of the Guests) | Allegro | Gavotte (movement III) from "Classical" Symphony, Op. 25 | |
19 | Сцена у балкона | Balcony Scene | Larghetto | ||
20 | Вариация Ромео | Romeo's Variation | Allegretto amoroso | ||
21 | Любовный танец | Love Dance | Andante | ||
Act 2 | |||||
Scene 3 | 22 | Народный танец | Folk Dance | Allegro giocoso | |
23 | Ромео и Меркуцио | Romeo and Mercutio | Andante tenero | ||
24 | Танец пяти пар | Dance of the Five Couples | Vivo | Dance in Suite No. 2 | |
25 | Танец с мандолинами | Dance with Mandolins | Vivace | ||
26 | Кормилица | The Nurse | Adagio scherzoso | ||
27 | Кормилица передает Ромео записку от Джульетты | The Nurse Gives Romeo the Note from Juliet | Vivace | a.k.a. The Nurse and Romeo | |
Scene 4 | 28 | Ромео у патера Лоренцо | Romeo at Friar Laurence's | Andante espressivo | |
29 | Джульетта у патера Лоренцо | Juliet at Friar Laurence's | Lento | ||
Scene 5 | 30 | Народное веселье продолжается | The People Continue to Make Merry | Vivo | a.k.a. Public Merrymaking |
31 | Снова народный танец | The Folk Dance Again | Allegro giocoso | a.k.a. Further Public Festivities (Снова народный праздник) | |
32 | Встреча Тибальда с Меркуцио | Tybalt Meets Mercutio | Moderato | a.k.a. Meeting of Tybalt and Mercutio | |
33 | Тибальд бьётся с Меркуцио | Tybalt and Mercutio Fight | Precipitato | a.k.a. The Duel | |
34 | Меркуцио умирает | Death of Mercutio | Moderato | ||
35 | Ромео решает мстить за смерть Меркуцио | Romeo Decides to Avenge Mercutio's Death | Andante. Animato | a.k.a. Death of Tybalt | |
36 | Финал второго действия | Finale of Act II | Adagio dramatico | ||
Act 3 | |||||
37 | Вступление | Introduction | Andante | reprise of No. 7 | |
Scene 6 | 38 | Ромео и Джульетта (Спальня Джульетты) | Romeo and Juliet (Juliet's bedroom) | Lento | |
39 | Прощание перед разлукой | Farewell before Parting | Andante | a.k.a. Romeo Bids Juliet Farewell, or The Last Farewell | |
40 | Кормилица | The Nurse | Andante assai | ||
41 | Джульетта отказывается выйти за Париса | Juliet Refuses to Marry Paris | Vivace | ||
42 | Джульетта одна | Juliet Alone | Adagio | ||
43 | Интерлюдия | Interlude | Adagio | ||
Scene 7 | 44 | У Лоренцо | At Friar Laurence's | Andante | a.k.a. At Friar Laurence's Cell |
45 | Интерлюдия | Interlude | L'istesso tempo | ||
Scene 8 | 46 | Снова у Джульетты | Again in Juliet's Bedroom | Moderato tranquillo | |
47 | Джульетта одна | Juliet Alone | Andante | ||
48 | Утренняя серенада | Morning Serenade | Andante giocoso | a.k.a. Aubade | |
49 | Танец девушек с лилиями | Dance of the Girls with Lilies | Andante con eleganza | ||
50 | У постели Джульетты | At Juliet's Bedside | Andante assai | ||
Act 4: Epilogue | |||||
Scene 9 | 51 | Похороны Джульетты | Juliet's Funeral | Adagio funebre | Romeo at the Tomb of Juliet in Suite No. 2 |
52 | Смерть Джульетты | Death of Juliet | Adagio (meno mosso del tempo precendente) |
Note that for compositional reasons the titles of the numbers in all three suites do not always correspond exactly to those in the complete ballet.
Prokofiev reduced selected music from the ballet as Romeo and Juliet: Ten Pieces for Piano, Op. 75, which were performed in 1936 and 1937.[12]
Sergei Prokofiev himself made the first recording of music from the ballet, with the Moscow Philharmonic Orchestra in 1938. Since then, there have been recordings of the full score, as well as various excerpts such as the orchestral suites the composer prepared. Leopold Stokowski conducted the NBC Symphony Orchestra in an early stereo recording in 1954. Gennady Rozhdestvensky and the Symphony Orchestra of the Bolshoi Theatre recorded the full score in 1959. André Previn with the London Symphony Orchestra and Lorin Maazel with the Cleveland Orchestra both made recordings of the complete score in 1973; these landmark recordings meant wider Western audiences could hear the full score on disc for the first time. Michael Tilson Thomas conducted the San Francisco Symphony Orchestra in 1995, in selections from the score, for RCA Victor. Georg Solti conducted the Chicago Symphony Orchestra in a recording coupled with the Classical Symphony. Valery Gergiev made two recordings, with the Kirov Orchestra in 1990 and with the London Symphony Orchestra in 2011.
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Every time you click a link to Wikipedia, Wiktionary or Wikiquote in your browser's search results, it will show the modern Wikiwand interface.
Wikiwand extension is a five stars, simple, with minimum permission required to keep your browsing private, safe and transparent.