The Prodigal Son (ballet)

The Prodigal Son, or Le Fils prodigue, Op. 46 (Russian: Блудный сын) is a ballet created for Diaghilev's Ballets Russes by George Balanchine to music by Sergei Prokofiev (192829). The libretto, based on the parable in the Gospel of Luke, was by Boris Kochno, who added a good deal of drama and emphasized the theme of sin and redemption ending with the Prodigal Son's return.

Susan Au writes in Ballet and Modern Dance that the ballet was the last of the Diaghilev era, choreographed the year the great impresario died. She continues: "Adapted from the biblical story, it opens with the prodigal's rebellious departure from home and his seduction by the beautiful but treacherous siren, whose followers rob him. Wretched and remorseful, he drags himself back to his forgiving father."[1]

History

Serge Lifar created the role.[2] The premiere took place on Tuesday, 21 May 1929 at the Théâtre Sarah Bernhardt, Paris, with décor by Georges Rouault and lighting by Ronald Bates, in what was to be the Ballets Russes's last Paris season: "Balanchine's choreography upset Prokofiev, who conducted the premiere. The composer had envisioned a production that was 'real'; his concept of the Siren, whom he saw as demure, differed radically from Balanchine's. Prokofiev refused to pay Balanchine royalties for his choreography."[3]

Balanchine's American Ballet danced The Prodigal Son at its first public performance in 1934.

The New York City Ballet premiere was on Thursday, 23 February 1950 at City Center of Music and Drama, New York, the title role danced by Jerome Robbins, with lighting by Mark Stanley. Hugh Laing and Francisco Moncion also danced it before it lapsed from the performance rota for a decade. It was restaged in 1960 with Edward Villella in the title role (Villella recounts his work in recreating the role in his autobiography of the same name).[2]

Mikhail Baryshnikov danced it with City Ballet in 1979 and Damian Woetzel danced it at his farewell performance on Wednesday, 18 June 2008.[4]

Prokofiev used the music from the ballet to form the basis of the two versions of his Symphony No. 4 composed in 1929 and 1947, respectively.

Cast

Premiere cast

New York City Ballet revivals

  • 2008 Winter
  • 2008 Spring

Notes

  1. Au, Susan (1988). Ballet and Modern Dance. Thames & Hudson. pp. 112. ISBN 978-0-500-20352-1.
  2. Villella, E., "Prodigal Son," University of Pittsburgh Press, 1998, p. 80. ISBN 0-8229-5666-7, ISBN 978-0-8229-5666-2
  3. NYCB website repertory index
  4. NYCB 2008 Spring Repertory Archived 2008-06-12 at the Wayback Machine
  5. SF Ballet Program 4, 2017
gollark: I can just do it every few milliseconds.
gollark: So I can remotely convert any of your webservers into a teapot?
gollark: But what if I have a URL longer than that?
gollark: Actually, your URLs being infinite makes them incompatible with most webservers.
gollark: I own all URLs and images, because I wrote a program to iterate over all finite bytestrings a while ago and ran it on my supertask executor.

References

  • Playbill, New York City Ballet, Thursday, June 19, 2008
  • Repertory Week, New York City Ballet, Spring Season, 2008 repertory, week 8

Articles

Obituaries

Reviews

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.