Giselle Student Guide - Milwaukee
Transcription
Giselle Student Guide - Milwaukee
MARCH 2015 MILWAUKEE BALLET COMPANY G I S E L L E : AU D I E N C E G U I D E Photo: Rick Brodzeller Michael Pink's Giselle moves the ballet forward 100 years from the Luz San Miguel Photo: Timothy O'Donnell & Rachel Malehorn The idea for Giselle originated with French poet and novelist Théophile Gautier, who took an interest in German poet Heinrich Heine’s retelling of a Slavic legend concerning the Wilis, ghostly spirits of girls who died before their wedding day. Gautier imagined a version where a girl betrayed by her beloved dies of a broken heart but returns as a spirit to save him from retribution by the CARLOTA GRISI, GISELLE, 1841 Romantic period to be set in war-torn Europe of the 1940s. vengeful Wilis. Her merciful act saves her from becoming a Wili herself. Gautier took his idea to the Paris Opéra, where a new Italian dancer, Carlotta Grisi, had recently been so well received that the management wanted to feature her in a ballet as soon as possible. Adolphe Adam was quickly recruited to compose the music, having written for the Paris Opéra before. Work on the score and its ANNA PAVLOVA, GISELLE, 1931 choreography - by Jean Coralli and Jules Perrot - began at once; Giselle made its debut two months later. The world premiere of Giselle, one of the oldest continually performed ballets, occurred at the Theatre de l’Academie Royale de Musique in Paris on June 28, 1841, danced by Carlotta Grisi as Giselle and Lucien Petipa as Albrecht. Giselle was a great artistic and commercial success. NATALIA OSIPOVA, GISELLE, 2014 L OV E A N D H AT E , L I F E A N D D E AT H , BETRAYAL AND FORG IV E NE SS . The classic story of Giselle is as relevant now as it was in the 1840s. Michael Pink’s Giselle references the Jewish ghettos the Nazis created during World War II. Art is often used to raise questions about human experience, history, and significant moral issues and this B ANKSY A new mural in Gaza by the anonymous artist Banksy features a kitten seeming to play with a ball of tangled metal rods as if it were yarn. The playful kitty is a jarring contrast to the destruction that surrounds him, but that's Banksy's point. On his website, Banksy says, "A local man came up and said 'Please - what does this mean?' I explained I wanted to highlight the destruction in Gaza by posting photos on my website - but on the internet people only look at pictures of kittens." production certainly aims to do all of these things. Setting a story with such universal themes into a time where we can clearly see ‘good and evil’ makes much BRAZIL WO R L D CU P sense. In another telling, Giselle could Murals like this one popped up in be set in the Middle East, it could be Brazil during the World Cup 2014 set in our own Civil War. depicting the conflict between the There is art that incredible amount of spending and high poverty rates in Rio de Janeiro. happens because of something horrible that has occurred and there is art that happens in the midst of the horror. Both are at play in michael Pink's version of Giselle. CHARLIE HEBDO The New Yorker's cover illustration for its January 19 issue on the terrorist attack on French satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo showed a pencil pointing upward — in this The beauty of the historical version is case, in the shape of the Eiffel Tower. woven through the embroidered fabric It has become an important symbol of this new version of Giselle – a tale of the protests following the of a girl who wants what all of us do – Charlie Hebdo attack. It's meant to love, health, safety. tell the world that artists and writers will not be silenced by any violent threats to free speech. "My father told me that whatever happens, we must remain human, so that we do not die like cattle. And I think that the will to create was an expression of the will to live, and survive, as human beings." Helga Weissova-Hoskova, Terezin survivor. DISCUSSION POINTS It is difficult to speak about “life” in remonstrance of – and often in the ghettos of Nazi-Occupied hiding from – the SS, which ran the Europe. The lack of basic means of camp. Among the inhabitants, was survival ultimately resulted in Hans Krása, the composer of What do you think of hundreds of deaths a day in the Brundibar, a children’s opera that Michael Pink's decision to larger ghettos. would eventually be performed 55 set the story in this time The Terezín ghetto near Prague was times in the ghetto. – the cast of period? Discuss the following children perpetually changing, as or ask yourself these questions: they were transported to Auschwitz • How did Albrecht disguise himself? Were you surprised home to a remarkable array of renowned Czech musicians, composers and theatrical artists, writing and performing as they and their fellow Jewish inmates awaited an unknown fate in Auschwitz. Terezín is a complex story of and replaced onstage by others. With time, the concerts, cabarets, plays, schooling and adult lectures came to be tolerated by the Nazis, as a means of pacification; then, when you found out who he really was? • After finding out who Batilde is and how she treated dichotomies, a ghetto camp of around 1943, even encouraged. which survivors have curiously ‘There were four phases in the happy – as well as nightmarish and cultural life of Terezín,’ said Helga painful memories; Terezín was a Weissová-Hošková, a survivor of place of resilience and art in Terezín. ‘First, that of great creative defiance of death, and does not fit resistance; second, that of the Nazi into any simplistic narrative of the toleration of the cultural life; third, Third Reich or Holocaust. …In the manipulation of our art by the November 1941, Terezín’s cultural Nazis; and finally, when it was all life sprang from the irrepressibility over, the mass killing of almost and the Wilis aren’t just of talent imprisoned there, in everyone involved.’” women, what do you think of everyone in the community, do you think the betrayal was worse? • What do you think about Michael putting live musicians onstage? • In Act II, the movement becomes very contemporary that choice? • Did you like the combination of classical and contemporary choreography as a means to tell this story? • Do you feel this is more than a love story between Giselle and Albrecht? Photo: Rick Brodzeller • Did this way of telling the story work for you? The original Giselle In the original telling of this most Photo Rick Brodze ller renowned romantic ballet, we meet FAMOUS FOR... THIS BALLET IS KNOWN FOR MANY THINGS – THE WELLKNOWN HE-LOVES-ME-HELOVES-ME-NOT MOMENT, THE PEASANT DANCES, THE MAD SCENE IN WHICH GISELLE LITERALLY LETS HER HAIR DOWN AS SHE GOES CRAZY, THE WHITE, FLOWING, ROMANTIC TUTUS WORN BY THE WILIS CORPS AND THE GORGEOUS VARIATIONS AND DANCING THEY DO THROUGHOUT ACT II. Giselle in Rhineland. She is beautiful but frail, with a heart condition that causes her mother a lot of worry. A nobleman named Albrecht has disguised himself as a common huntsman and falls in love with Giselle. Hilarion, a gamekeeper, is also in love with her and he is furious that this stranger has waltzed in and wooed his love. During a break in the hunting party, Bathilde comes in to the village and is taken with Giselle’s sweetness and courtesy. Albrecht rushes away – AL B R EC HT this is the woman he is betrothed to and he doesn’t want Giselle to find out. ALBRECHT IS SENTENCED TO DEATH BY THE WILIS AND HE IS FORCED TO DANCE UNTIL SUNRISE TO ATONE FOR HIS BETRAYAL OF GISELLE. LUCIEN PETIPA ORIGINATED THE ROLE OF ALBRECHT. FAMOUS DANCERS TO PERFORM THIS ROLE INCLUDE VASLAV NIJINSKY, RUDOLF NUREYEV AND MIKHAIL BARYSHNIKOV. Meanwhile, Hilarion has uncovered the ruse and he presents his evidence, a sword that only a nobleman would possess, to Giselle. Her weak heart cannot survive this betrayal. She is beside herself with sadness and she goes mad, then dies, tragically in Albrecht’s arms. In Act II, we find Hilarion mourning at Giselle’s grave. He is frightened at the Davit Hovhannisyan Photo: Timothy O'Donnell & Rachel Malehorn appearance of the Wilis, a ghostly group of women, trapped in between this world and the next by their heartbreak and unrequited love. Led by Myrtha, these spirits seek revenge on any man who crosses into their dominion – causing death by forcing them to dance until their last breath. Giselle is initiated into this afterworld and when confronted with a heartbroken Albrecht at her tombstone, she forgives him and pleads with the Wilis to do the same. Her love is greater than their curse and Albrecht spared, as is Giselle. She can finally rest in peace. LIVE MUSIC ETHNIC MUSIC, DANCE AND COSTUME WERE A LARGE PART OF ROMANTIC BALLET. MICHAEL PINK INCORPORATES THESE TRADITIONAL ELEMENTS LIVE ON STAGE WITH A PIANO, A VIOLIN, TRUMPET, CLARINET & PICCOLO. ADOLPHE ADAM'S ORIGINAL SCORE, ARRANGED BY GAVIN SUTHERLAND, IS PLAYED BY MILWAUKEE BALLET ORCHESTRA. The Romantic Era of Ballet: The development of pointe work and the rise of the ballerina... Giselle was originally choreographed some of her fans once cooked up during the Romantic Era of ballet in her pointe shoes and ate them! the early 1800s. Romanticism in Once, she even got stopped by a ballet is still how we tend to think bandit who wanted to rob her – but of it today when we conjure up an when he saw who she was, he just image of a ballerina – fantastical asked for a dance and then let her stories of folk legends, fairies go. It was during the Romantic Era dancing in the woods wearing long, that pointe shoes and dancing en soft net tutus – like something out pointe was developed. Prior to this, of a dream. This is the first time girls wore a leather shoe with a CHRISTOPHER GABLE (1 9 4 0- 1 99 8 ) girls had shoes that allowed them to small heel. These new ballet shoes dance on the tips of their toes. At were called pointe shoes because that time, dancing was a dangerous they allow the girls to literally stand job. The girls could be suspended in on the very tips, or the points, of WHEN BALLET WAS INVENTED, GIRLS WEREN'T EVEN ALLOWED TO PARTICIPATE! IT WAS FOR BOYS ONLY! their toes. These shoes were invented to make the dancers look taller, lighter and almost like they were flying and with them the dancing got more complicated, challenging and intricate. Some the air by wires that made them people think there are blocks of look like they were flying across the wood or metal inside the shoes to stage, they had to disappear in and give the dancers something to stand out of trap doors and their on – but there isn’t. Actually, the costumes could easily catch fire on dancers spend years practicing rising the candlelights that lit up the up to the tips of their toes and as theatre. Dancers like Marie Taglioni their muscles and bones get in Michel Fokine’s La Sylphide made stronger, pretty soon they can jump it look so beautiful the hazards and land on their toes, turn on their were forgotten. For the audiences toes and do things that seem nearly it was otherworldly, ethereal and impossible to us mere mortals (i.e. incredibly magical. Marie’s father non-dancers!) A ballet like Giselle is Filippo wanted her to be a star and still so impressive now, but try to he worked her so hard that some imagine yourself in a theatre in the days, after six hours of practice, she early 1800s, watching Carlota Grisi would faint from exhaustion. She flitting across the stage on tiptoe – could dance on her toes in a way it would have seemed like she really that looked like magic and people was a dancing Wili – ghostly, delicate loved her so much it was said that and from another world. Giselle is filled with strong emotional memories for Michael Pink. It was originally created with his dear, departed friend and colleague, Christopher Gable, in 1997. Christopher was an English ballet star who made an unusually successful transition to film and theater. He began his ballet career in the late 1950s and by the early 60s was well on his way to becoming one of the most gifted dancers of his generation. He was made a Commander of the British Empire in 1996. IN ASHTON'S THE TWO PIGEONS