Romeo and Juliet (Op. 64) (Russian: Ромео и Джульетта) is a ballet by Sergei Prokofiev based on William Shakespeare's play Romeo and Juliet. It is one of the most enduringly popular ballets. Music from the ballet was extracted by Prokofiev as three suites for orchestra and as a piano work.
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Based on a synopsis created by Adrian Piotrovsky (who first suggested the subject to Prokofiev)[1] and Sergey Radlov, the ballet in its original form was completed by Prokofiev in September 1935, on commission by the Kirov Ballet, since when he first presented the music to the Bolshoi Ballet that year, they claimed it was "undanceable". The original version had a "happy" ending, but was never publicly mounted, partly due to increased fear and caution in the musical and theatrical community in the aftermath of the two notorious Pravda editorials criticising Shostakovich and other "degenerate modernists" including Piotrovsky.[2] 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. It is better known today from the significantly revised version that was first presented at the Kirov Ballet in Leningrad on 11 January 1940, with choreography by Leonid Lavrovsky and with Galina Ulanova and Konstantin Sergeyev in the lead roles.
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 production for the Royal Ballet premiered at the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden. Margot Fonteyn and Rudolf Nureyev brought new life to the characters, as did the set and costume designs by Nicholas Georgiadis; Fonteyn, considered to be near retirement, embarked upon a rejuvenated career with a partnership with Nureyev.
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 ballerina Patricia Ruanne creating the role of Juliet. As a partnership, they would tour the production internationally, and it continues to be a popular ballet in the ENB repertoire, with its most recent revival in 2010 being staged by Patricia Ruanne and Frederic Jahn, of the original 1977 cast.
The Joffrey Ballet presented the first American production in its 1984–1985 season, including performances in New York City at the New York State Theater and in Washington, D.C. at the Kennedy Center.
In 1985 choreographer László Seregi's production premiered at the Hungarian National Ballet, Budapest.
In 2007 Peter Martins made Romeo + Juliet on New York City Ballet to the Prokofiev music.
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.
- Act I
- Scene 1
- No 1 Introduction
- No 2 Romeo
- No 3 The street awakens
- No 4 Morning Dance
- No 5 The Quarrel
- No 6 The Fight
- No 7 The Prince gives his order
- No 8 Interlude
- Scene 2
- No 9 Preparing for the Ball (Juliet and the Nurse)
- No 10 Juliet as a young girl
- No 11 Arrival of the guests (Minuet)
- No 12 Masks
- No 13 Dance of the Knights (or Montagues and Capulets)
- No 14 Juliet's Variation
- No 15 Mercutio
- No 16 Madrigal
- No 17 Tybalt recognizes Romeo
- No 18 Departure of the guests (Gavotte) (This number is an adaptation of the third movement of Symphony No. 1 (Prokofiev))
- No 19 Balcony : Scene
- No 20 Romeo's Variation
- No 21 Love Dance
- Act II
- Scene 1
- No 22 Folk Dance
- No 23 Romeo and Mercutio
- No 24 Dance of the five couples
- No 25 Dance with the mandolins
- No 26 The Nurse
- No 27 The Nurse gives Romeo the note from Juliet
- Scene 2
- No 28 Romeo with Friar Laurence
- No 29 Juliet with Friar Laurence
- Scene 3
- No 30 The people continue to make merry
- No 31 A Folk Dance again
- No 32 Tybalt meets Mercutio
- No 33 Tybalt and Mercutio fight
- No 34 Mercutio dies
- No 35 Romeo decides to avenge Mercutio's death
- No 36 Finale
- Act III
- Scene 1
- No 37 Introduction
- No 38 Romeo and Juliet (Juliet's bedroom)
- No 39 The last farewell
- No 40 The Nurse
- No 41 Juliet refuses to marry Paris
- No 42 Juliet alone
- No 43 Interlude
- Scene 2
- No 44 At Friar Laurence's
- No 45 Interlude
- Scene 3
- No 46 Again in Juliet's bedroom
- No 47 Juliet alone
- No 48 Morning Serenade
- No 49 Dance of the girls with the lilies
- No 50 At Juliet's bedside
- Epilogue
- No 51 Juliet's funeral
- No 52 Death of Juliet
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 a Russian publisher.
Prokofiev reduced selected music from the ballet in 1937 as Romeo and Juliet: Ten Pieces for Piano, Op. 75, which he premiered himself later that year.
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