CAST:
Svetlana Zakharova
Sergey Filin
Gennady Yanin
Maria Aleksandrova
Anastasia Yatsenko
PRODUCTION:
Music:
Cesare Pugni
Libretto:
From Theophile
Gauthier’s
novel “Le roman de la momie”
Choreographer:
Pierre Lacotte
from
Marius Petipa
Conductor:
Alexander Sotnikov
Sets:
Pierre Lacotte
Costumes: Pierre Lacotte
Running time: 102
minutes
Photos:
© N. Razina
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The Pharaoh’s Daughter was
created by Marius Petipa in 1862 for
the Bolshoi Theatre in St.
Petersburg. The ballet was immensely
popular with the public and adored
by the ballerinas. After the
composer, Pugni, in a fit of anger,
destroyed the piano score, Petipa
began to stage the ballet without
music; the music was added later.
Petipa, who addressed the members of
the corps-de-ballet as “ma belle”,
was convinced that music existed
just for dancing and dancing, for
ballerinas. Pierre Lacotte, in his
restoration for the Bolshoi Theatre
Company in Moscow, recreated all the
dances, giving highly complex
variations and adagios to both
ballerinas and male dancers.
Petipa’s choreography was
reconstructed by Pierre Lacotte for
a lavish production into which the
Bolshoi threw all its resources;
lavish ancient Egyptian scenery and
costumes, brilliant performances by
the corps de ballet and the
orchestra, and above all spectacular
performances by the leading dancers
Svetlana Zakharova and Servei Filin.
(Washington Post)
The
Story:
The
ballet tells the story of Lord
Wilson, an Englishman, who falls
asleep after smoking opium with
merchants in a pyramid, where he has
taken refuge from a storm. He dreams
that he is an ancient Egyptian in
love with Aspicia, a Pharaoh’s
daughter who has been promised to
the King of Nubia. She throws
herself into the Nile to avoid the
marriage, where she is welcomed by
the God of the River Nile. All is
resolved and Aspicia is finally
united with her love.
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