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Tchaikovsky, Bach, Stravinsky

Evening of George Balanchine's Choreography

The ballets of George Balanchine are presented by arrangement with The George Balanchine Trust and have been produced in accordance with the Balanchine Style© and Balanchine Technique© service standards established and provided by the Trust.

 

Pyotr Tchaikovsky

MOZARTIANA

Staged by Bart Cook, Maria Calegari, Ben Huys

Conductor: Zaza Kalmakhelidze

Costume designer: Ruben Ter-Arutunian

Costume design executed by Natia Sirbiladze

              Premiered on June 4, 1981 New York State Theater

Tbilisi premiere on November 20, 2005

Pyotr Tchaikovsky

Serenade

Staging Ballet Masters Bart Cook, Maria Calegari, Ben Huys

Conductor Zaza Kalmakhelidze

Special thanks to Ms.Marilyn Burbank, President of Mirella Dancewear,

for costumes of Serenade

Premiered on March 1, 1935 Adelphi Theatre New York City, United States

Tbilisi premiere on May 20, 2005

 

 

Concerto Barocco

Music by Johann Sebastian Bach, Concerto in D minor for Two Violins, BWV 1043

Staging Ballet Masters Bart Cook, Ben Huys

Conductor Davit Mukeria

Premiered on June 27, 1941, Rio de Janeiro

 Tbilisi premiere on May 23, 2014

 

 

 Igor Stravinsky

Apollo

Choreography by George Balanchine

Staging Ballet Masters Bart Cook, Maria Calegari, Ben Huys

Staging ConductorZaza Kalmakhelidze

 

Permission to perform the piece has been granted

by Boosey & Hawkes Music Publishers Limited

The Company would like to express gratitude to Marilyn Burbank,

President of Mirella Dancewear, for providing costumes for Apollo

 

World Premiered on 12 June 1928, Théâtre Sarah Bernhardt in Paris

 Tbilisi premiere on May 20, 2005

 

 Tbilisi Opera and Ballet State Theatre Orchestra

Conductor Levan Jagaev

 

 

 Director of the Ballet Company

Nina Ananiashvili

 *The late-comers will not be allowed in until the first interval

Plot

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"A SERENADE IS A DANCE IN THE LIGHT OF THE MOON"

 

"Serenade was my first ballet in the United States. Soon after my arrival in America, Lincoln Kirstein, Edward M. M. Warburg, and I opened the School of American Ballet in New York. As part of the school curriculum, I started an evening ballet class in stage technique, to give students some idea of how dancing on stage differs from classwork. Serenade evolved from the lessons I gave.

… Many people think there is a concealed story in the ballet. There is not. There are, simply, dancers in motion to a beautiful piece of music. The only story is the music's story, a serenade, a dance, if you like, in the light of the moon".

(From 101 Stories of the Great Ballets by George Balanchine & Francis Mason )

 

 

 Concerto Barocco

 

This work began as an exercise by Balanchine for the School of American Ballet and was performed by American Ballet Caravan on its historic tour of South America and later entered the repertory of the Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo. In 1951, Balanchine permanently eliminated the original costumes and dressed the dancers in practice clothes, probably the first appearance of what has come to be regarded as a signature Balanchine costume for contemporary works. On October 11, 1948, Concerto Barocco was one of three ballets on the program at New York City Ballet's first performance.

 

 

 

 

Apollo

 

George Balanchine created Apollo to Igor Stravinsky’s music for Diaghilev’s Company in 1928.The ballet praises the power of art and beauty. It was with this work set to the music of Stravinsky, that Balanchine, at age 24, achieved international recognition and began his lifelong partnership with the composer. And he later described the choreography of Apollo as the turning point in his creative life.

 

 

Mozartiana

 

The first “Paris” version of the ballet Mozartiana to Tchaikovsky's Suite No 4 for Orchestra, of the same name, for which the composer adopted four short piano pieces by Mozart, was staged by George Balanchine in 1933 for his short-lived, Ballet 1933 Company. It was the first of Balanchine's ballets to music by Tchaikovsky. In his early Mozartiana, stylized in imitation of the eighteenth century, the choreographer used to only classical dance, but also some devices of the commedia dell'arte, as well as bright and colorful costumes by Christian Berard.

In 1981, Balanchine created a second version of the ballet. His new Mozartiana was a chamber and very intimate work, intended for the connoisseur of late twentieth century classical dance. For all its outer elegance and stylistic subtlety, it is openly spiritual. Mozartiana, after all, is 77-year old Balanchine's spiritual testament, like the Requiem was Mozart's and the 6th Symphony was Tchaikovsky's.