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ADAM, A.: Giselle [Ballet] (Royal Ballet, 2016)


Giselle (arr. J. Horovitz)
Composer: Adam, Adolphe
Arranger: Horowitz, Joseph
Ballet Company: Royal Ballet, Covent Garden
Choreographer: Petipa, Marius
Choreographer: Wright, Peter

Bathilde: Arestis, Christina
Berthe: McGorian, Elizabeth
Count Albrecht: Muntagirov, Vadim
Giselle: Nunez, Marianela
Moyna: Cowley, Olivia
Myrtha: Mendizabal, Itziar
The Duke of Courland: Avis, Gary
Wilfred: Gartside, Bennet
Zulme: Stix-Brunell, Beatriz

Orchestra: Royal Opera House Orchestra, Covent Garden
Conductor: Wordsworth, Barry
Television Director: MacGibbon, Ross
Lighting Designer: Finn, David
Set Designer: Macfarlane, John
Costumer Designer: Macfarlane, John

Date of Production: 06-04-2016
Venue: Royal Opera House, Covent Garden, London
Playing Time: 01:54:50
Catalogue Number: OA1230D
UPC: 809478012306

In this 2016 production of Giselle, the etoiles Marianela Nunez and Vadim Muntagirov join forces with Barry Wordsworth and the Royal Opera House Orchestra to bring the work that Tchaikovsky considered to be "a poetic, musical, and choreographic jewel" to life.

"Lovely in their wedding clothes and crowned with flowers and ribbons, glittering rings on their fingers, the Willis dance in the moonlight as though they were elves. Their countenance, whiter than snow, glows with youth, they laugh with such perverse cheer, such entrancing gaiety (...) that no-one can withstand these dead Bacchants..." This is how Heinrich Heine described the willis, the fantastical creatures of mythology that are at the heart of Giselle, and who would become an archetypal character of Romantic ballet. Dead before their wedding days, the sinister maidens carry away any men they run across in a dance that leads to death.

The willis inspired Theophile Gautier to suggest a plot to Henri de Saint-Georges, author of the libretto that Adam would set to music. The choreography established by Jean Coralli and Jules Perrot is employed here by Marius Petipa, the brother of Lucien, who was the dance partner of Carlotta Grisi, the Italian etoile dancer for whom the role of Giselle was written. The premiere of this choreography at the Imperial Mariinsky Theater in 1887 marked the arrival of the modern approach to this ballet, an interpretation that is still employed and beloved today.

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