Ad not shown

Performance

VenueRoyal Opera House
Also: Linbury Studio, Ballet Studio, Clore Studio,Floral Hall
TownWest End
CountyGreater London
From11th March 2009
To21st March 2009
WhenMar09 11, 12, 18, 20 at 19:30. Mar09 21 at 19:00
Royal Opera House (V377)
Current/Future Listings
Listings Archive

The Royal Ballet - Isadora/Dances at a Gathering

The Royal Ballet

Work:: The Royal Ballet (S909)


Production:: Isadora/Dances at a Gathering (T1750610588)

Deborah MacMillan has devised a new one act production of Kenneth MacMillan's rarely performed ballet Isadora. The original two act ballet premiered in April 1981 as part of The Royal Ballet's 50th Anniversary Season and the title role was performed by Merle Park and actress, Mary Miller. 20th Century dancer Isadora Duncan was an innovator and free-spirit, a hippy before her time who wanted the whole world to dance in the interests of peace, harmony and love Deborah MacMillan has completely revised the original ballet. In this new production the leading role belongs wholly to a dancer who is accompanied by the recorded voice of an actress, the original score of Richard Rodney Bennett, and video montage by Christopher Bird and Lynn Wake which includes archive film from Isadora's heyday. Isadora is paired in a double bill with Jerome Robbins' one act ballet, Dances at a Gathering, last performed as part of the 2007/08 Season alongside The Dream. Jerome Robbins originally conceived Dances at a Gathering as a Pas de deux. Developing his theme he widened his musical selection to include etudes, waltzes, mazurkas, a nocturne and a scherzo. The ballet follows a group of friends and lovers exploring their past and present through a series of dances that respond to Frederic Chopin's music, changes in the surrounding landscape and the mood of the ever-changing sky.
Producer Royal Ballet
Conductor Barry Wordsworth
Music Richard Rodney Bennett (Isadora)
Choreographer Kenneth MacMillan (Isadora)
Other Julie Lincoln (staging - Isadora)
Choreographer Deborah MacMillan (this production - Isadora)
Lighting John B Read (Isadora)
Design Christopher Bird (video - Isadora)
Design Lynn Wake (video - Isadora)
Music Frederic Chopin (Dances at a Gathering)
Choreographer Jerome Robbins (Dances at a Gathering)
Costume Joe Eula (Dances at a Gathering)
Lighting Jennifer Tipton (Dances at a Gathering)
Other Susan Hendl (staging - Dances at a Gathering)
Other Ben Huys (staging - Dances at a Gathering)

Listing:: L1706721511




Current production:Work

Isadora/Dances at a Gathering

Deborah MacMillan has devised a new one act production of Kenneth MacMillan's rarely performed ballet Isadora. The original two act ballet premiered in April 1981 as part of The Royal Ballet's 50th Anniversary Season and the title role was performed by Merle Park and actress, Mary Miller. 20th Century dancer Isadora Duncan was an innovator and free-spirit, a hippy before her time who wanted the whole world to dance in the interests of peace, harmony and love Deborah MacMillan has completely revised the original ballet. In this new production the leading role belongs wholly to a dancer who is accompanied by the recorded voice of an actress, the original score of Richard Rodney Bennett, and video montage by Christopher Bird and Lynn Wake which includes archive film from Isadora's heyday. Isadora is paired in a double bill with Jerome Robbins' one act ballet, Dances at a Gathering, last performed as part of the 2007/08 Season alongside The Dream. Jerome Robbins originally conceived Dances at a Gathering as a Pas de deux. Developing his theme he widened his musical selection to include etudes, waltzes, mazurkas, a nocturne and a scherzo. The ballet follows a group of friends and lovers exploring their past and present through a series of dances that respond to Frederic Chopin's music, changes in the surrounding landscape and the mood of the ever-changing sky.

Reviews

No UKTW or User reviews available.
CORONAVIRUS: All venues in the UK were shut down on March 16, 2020, and the restrictions were finally lifted on July 19, 2021. It is important to mention that the UK Theatre Web archive listings (iUKTDb) from March 2020 to July 2021 might not be accurate due to the lack of information regarding rescheduled and cancelled shows.

Mastodon X - Twitter © Dynamic Listing Ltd, UK. 1995-2024