La Esmeralda (ballet)

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Important Ballets & *Revivals of Marius Petipa

*Paquita (1847, *1881)
*Le Corsaire (1858, 1863, 1868, 1885, 1899)
The Pharaoh's Daughter (1862, *1885, *1898)
Le Roi Candaule (1868, *1891, *1903)
Don Quixote (1869, *1871)
La Bayadère (1877, *1900)
*Giselle (1884, 1899, 1903)
*Coppélia (1884)
*La Fille Mal Gardée (1885)
*La Esmeralda (1886, 1899)
The Talisman (1889)
The Sleeping Beauty (1890)
The Nutcracker (1892)
Cinderella (1893)
The Awakening of Flora (1894)
*Swan Lake (1895)
*The Little Humpbacked Horse (1895)
The Cavalry Halt (1896)
Raymonda (1898)
The Seasons (1900)
Harlequinade (1900)

La Esmeralda is a ballet in 3 acts, 5 scenes, inspired by Notre Dame de Paris by Victor Hugo, originally choreographed by Jules Perrot; with music by Cesare Pugni and design by William Grieve (scenery), D. Sloman (machinery), Mme. Copere (costumes).

It was first presented by the Ballet of her Majesty's Theatre, London on March 9, 1844 with the Ballerina Carlotta Grisi as Esmeralda, Jules Perrot as Gringoire, Arthur Saint-Leon as Phoebus, Adelaide Frassi as Fleur de Lys, and Antoine Louis Coulon as Quasimodo.

Today the ballet is presented in its full-length form only in Russia and parts of Eastern Europe. Outside of Russia and Eastern Europe only excerpts are given - the La Esmeralda Pas de Deux and the Pas de Six, but mostly the Diane and Actéon Pas de Deux is given, which in all actuality is not originally from the ballet (it is often miscredited as having been added by Petipa to his 1886 revival of La Esmeralda).

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[edit] Important revivals

  • Marius Petipa for the Imperial Ballet in 4 acts and 5 scenes. Imperial Mariinsky Theatre, St. Petersburg, 17 December 1886. Revived especially for the Ballerina Virginia Zucchi. Musical revision and additional pas by Riccardo Drigo — the Danse bohème for Act I; a Grand adage for act 2-scene 1; the Danse pour quatre danseuses and a Grand coda for the Pas de six of act 2-scene 2.) Petipa added additional numbers in 1866 (a Pas de deux for the Ballerina Claudina Cucchi that became known as the Pas Cucchi to the music of Pugni), 1871 (a Pas de dix for the Ballerina Eugenia Sokolova to the music of Yuli Gerber), and 1872 (a Pas de cinq for the Ballerina Adèle Grantzow to music by an unknown composer).
  • Marius Petipa for the Imperial Ballet in 4 acts and 5 scenes. Imperial Mariinsky Theatre, St. Petersburg, 21 November 1899. Revived especially for the Prima Ballerina Assoluta Mathilde Kschessinskaya. Petipa added a new Pas d'action for Kschessinskaya to the music of Riccardo Drigo and Cesare Pugni that became known as the La Esmeralda Pas de Deux.
  • Agrippina Vaganova for the Kirov Ballet in 3 acts. Kirov Theatre of Opera and Ballet, Leningrad, 3 April 1935. Revived especially for the Ballerina Tatiana Vecheslova. Vaganova added a "new" Pas d'action for the Ballerina Galina Ulanova and the Danseur Vakhtang Chabukiani, which she arranged from the Pas de Diane from Petipa's 1868 ballet Tsar Kandavl (a.k.a. Le Roi Candaule) to music by Pugni and Drigo, which is known today as the Diane and Actéon Pas de Deux.
  • Pyotr Gusev for the Kirov Ballet in 3 acts. Kirov Theatre of Opera and Ballet, Leningrad, 1949.
  • Tatiana Vecheslova and Nicolai Boyarchikov for the Mussorgsky Ballet. Mussorgsky State Academic Theatre of Opera and Ballet, 1981. A revival of Petipa's revival of 1899.

[edit] La Esmeralda Pas de Deux

Fanny Elssler in the title role of the Pugni/Perrot La Esmeralda, Berlin, circa 1845
Fanny Elssler in the title role of the Pugni/Perrot La Esmeralda, Berlin, circa 1845

For his revival of La Esmeralda in 1899 Petipa arranged a new Pas d'action for the Ballerina Mathilde Kschessinskaya. The Pas d'action consisted of an Entrée, adage, a variation for Kschessinskaya, and a coda. The music was arranged by Drigo, kapellmeister to the St. Petersburg Imperial Theatres. The Entrée and 'adage were set to music Drigo had originally composed for Petipa's revival of La Esmerlada in 1886.

The variation danced by Kschessinskaya, is today referred to as the tambourine variation, and is quite popular on the competition and gala circuit. The variation is taken from the composer Romualdo Marenco's score for Luigi Manzotti's 1877 ballet Sieba, and first danced in La Esmeralda when the ballerina Virginia Zucchi performed the title role in St. Petersburg in 1886.

The coda was set to music taken from the Marche du pharaon from Pugni's score for Petipa's 1862 ballet The Pharaoh's Daughter.

Long after the full-length La Esmeralda left the repertory of the Mariinsky Theatre, the La Esmeralda Pas de Deux continued being performed. By the 1930s the great Danseur Vakhtang Chabukiani was performing in the Pas de deux, for which he added a new variation set to the music for the Entrée d'Esmeralda from act I of Pugni's original score. This is the variation danced by all male dancers in the La Esmeralda Pas de Deux today.

Today the La Esmeralda Pas de Deux is a popular repertory piece with companies all over the world, and is often performed on the ballet competition circuit. The standard version danced by most companies today is by the choregrapher Ben Stevenson, who arranged the pas for the dancers Janie Parker and William Pizzuto, who performed it for the first time at the International Ballet Competition in Jackson, Mississippi, on July 3, 1982.

[edit] Diane and Actéon Pas de Deux

[edit] See also

[edit] Video