The Two Stars (ballet)
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The Two Stars (AKA The Stars or The Two Little Stars) is a Anacreontic ballet in 1 Act, with choreography by Marius Petipa, and music by Cesare Pugni. Libretto by Marius Petipa, based on an ancient Greek myth.
First presented by the Imperial Ballet on January 31/Feruary 6 (Julian/Gregorian calendar dates), 1871 at the Imperial Bolshoi Kamenny Theatre, St. Petersburg, Russia. Principal Dancers- Ekaterina Vazem (as the First Star), Alexandra Virginia (as The Second Star), and Pavel Gerdt (as Apollo)
[edit] Revivals/Restagings
- Restaging by Marius Petipa for the Ballet of the Moscow Imperial Bolshoi Theatre as The Two Little Stars. First presented on February 25/March 3, 1878 in Moscow, Russia.
- Revival by Ivan Clustine for the Ballet of the Moscow Imperial Bolshoi Theatre as The Stars. First presented on January 14/26, 1897 in Moscow, Russia. Principal Dancers - Ekaterina Geltzer (as the First Star), Adelaide Giuri (as the Second Star), and Vasily Tikhomirov (as Mars).
- Revival by Enrico Cecchetti for the Imperial Ballet, with Riccardo Drigo making additions and revising Cesare Pugni's original score. First presented at the Imperial Mariinsky Theatre on November 1/14 1900 in St. Petersburg, Russia. Principal Dancers - Olga Preobrajenskaya (as the First Star), Nadezhda Bakerkina (as the Second Star), Nikolai Legat as Apollo, and Sergei Lukianov (as Mars)
[edit] Notes
- The Two Stars was the final work of the composer Cesare Pugni before he died on January 26, 1870, and was considered by all associated to be among his finest scores for the ballet. It is also sited as his 312th score for the ballet, making him the most prolific composer of ballet music that has ever lived.
- The 1870 premiere of The Two Stars was given as a benefit performance for the Imperial Ballet's Jeune Premiere Danseur Pavel Gerdt.
- The Two Stars was performed for the last time by the Imperial Ballet on October 9/22, 1917, with the Ballerinas Elena Smirnova and Elsa Vill in the lead roles. As a result of the hardships brought upon the Russian Ballet by the October Revolution that followed only two weeks later, many of the works of the Imperial Ballet's repertory left the stage forever, including The Two Stars (the work was performed for the last time in Moscow in 1925 by the Ballet of the Moscow Imperial Bolshoi Theatre).