Swing. Steps

Dansa  Swing   [esborrany]


LINDY

Shim sham

  • 8 double shuffle /pes esquerre R L R R) 8,1234567 (pes esquerre)
  • break obrir R junt obrir L junt 4 passos enrere
  • 8 push, cros over
  • 8 tackie Annie
  • half break falling of the log kick ball change R L kick ball change / full break

tornem-hi fent freeze al full break

video


 

 

Dansa urbana

Dansa  |  [ esborrany]


[especulatiu]

[recordo els moviments alegres i sempre diferents que mostraven els noiets que vaig veure en el viatge a Etiòpia]

[ de fet, el tap dance era a vegades una dansa de carrer, on un noi mostrava l’habilitat fent uns passos a veure si obtenia unes monedes]

[ es podria dir que en el swing hi trobem el ball de saló de parella modificat per la creativitat de passos que vindrien de street dance com el charleston]

[amb els canvis de la música cap el RnB, soul, motown i funk, desapareixeria el ball de parella de lindy i rock, desapareix també el claqué, i entren una sèrie de moviments:

[es pot dir, com en el swing, que música i dansa evolucionen alhora?]

[la dansa urbana és al dansa del carrer, el que es fa en una cantonada del Bronx o davant el MACBA]


[moviments als ’60]

James Brown: Camel Walk, Funky Chicken, Bogaloo, Mashed Potato, The robot

Wilson Pickett a the Land of 1000 dances esmenta:  the Pony, Mash Potato, the alligator, the Watusi.

Els Contours a Do you Love me (now that i Can Dance), tenen el twist i el mashed potato.


Hip hop

[és una combinació de moviments ràpids de les extremitats, aturats en sec per definir una pose, lliscar , i acrobàcies a terra girant sobre l’esquena o les mans]

Hip-hop dance refers to street dance styles primarily performed to hip-hop music or that have evolved as part of hip-hop culture. It includes a wide range of styles which was created in the 1970s and made popular by dance crews in the United States. The television show Soul Train and the 1980s films Breakin’, Beat Street, and Wild Style showcased these crews and dance styles in their early stages; therefore, giving hip-hop mainstream exposure. The dance industry responded with a commercial, studio-based version of hip-hop—sometimes called “new style”—and a hip-hop influenced style of jazz dance called “jazz-funk”. Classically trained dancers developed these studio styles in order to create choreography from the hip-hop dances that were performed on the street. Because of this development, hip-hop dance is practiced in both dance studios and outdoor spaces.

Hip hop dance is a fusion dance genre that incorporates elements of popping, locking, jazz, ballet, and tap dancing. It is a fusion dance genre. It primarily consists of choreography that is not improvised. Hip hop dancing is separate from popping, locking, and other dance styles that are characterized by specific movements.

Breaking, Breaking was created in the South Bronx, New York City during the early 1970s. It is the first hip-hop dance style. At the time of its creation, it was the only hip-hop dance style because Afrika Bambaataa classified it as one of the five pillars of hip-hop culture along with MCing (rapping), DJing (turntablism), graffiti writing (bombing), and knowledge. // Breaking includes four foundational dances: toprock, footwork-oriented steps performed while standing up; downrock, footwork performed with both hands and feet on the floor; freezes, stylish poses done on your hands; and power moves, complex and impressive acrobatic moves.

https://youtu.be/hi-dMUCj2N0

https://youtu.be/AHoxZB1acD0
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LaRywNL333c
Brodas Bros al sismògraf

Prince   |    Michael Jackson


TURF FEINZ RIP RichD Dancing in the Rain Oakland Street

Pensar la dansa

La Dansa  |   esborrany


[A les festes majors, o a vegades en una jam de swing, podem observar com els nens se senten enduts per la música, i salten, mouen els braços amb entusiasme][Tal com ens recorda Merleau Ponty o la meditació budista, som sobretot un cos, i el nostre estat general, d’energia, tensió, s’expressa sobretot amb el cos en moviment. Tenim també un ritme, amb les pulsacions del cor, la respiració, el caminar o córrer regular. La dansa transmet si exultem saltant amunt, si fem saltirons d’alegria, si correm, si ens arrosseguem, si ondulem, si som introvertits i no volem ocupar lloc, si ens expandim obrint els braços, si mirem amunt orgullosos, si ens enfonsem] [ aquest impuls a vegades s’especialitza en ballarins entrenats i el gaudim com a espectadors, igual que ens identifiquem amb els personatges del cinema o el teatre.]

EB: Dance, the movement of the body in a rhythmic way, usually to music and within a given space, for the purpose of expressing an idea or emotion, releasing energy, or simply taking delight in the movement itself.

L’etimologia no remet al llatí, és clar l’ús a França de danser. Coromines suggereix que podria venir de l’àrab donat el prestigi de les ballarines andaluses. Ballare sí que ve del llatí. En els dos cassos primer tenia una acepció vulgar que després es refinà.

Els moviments es fan per que sí, no tenen a veure amb dur a terme una tasca, o amb desplaçar-se. És el que deia Valéry en comparar la poesia amb la dansa. Sovint, els moviments miren d’ampliar el rang del que fem normalment, saltar més amunt, obrir més els braços, flexionar-nos més. (EB) La dansa canvia l’experiència que tenim del propi cos, per l’esforç i la tensió de les articulacions, i també del temps, pel ritme de la música o moviment, i l’espai.

[La dansa pot tenir funcions militars, per animar els guerrers, religioses, de festeig. No diríem que ho és un combat, però en canvi als films es parla de coreografiar una lluita. Les marxes i processons, el gimnàs artístic, el patinatge sobre gel, les acrobàcies de circ, no diríem que són dansa. ]


FORMA ABSTRACTA O EXPRESSIÓ DRAMÀTICA?

(EB) Al llarg de la seva història, el ballet ha estat, o bé al servei de la narració, o bé una exhibició de perfecció tècnica. Per exemple, pot ser un fragment insertat en una òpera sense relació amb l’argument, només per admirar els ballarins. Alguns coreògrafs com Marta Graham diran que la dansa ha de servir per expressar emocions mentre que Balanchine dirà que el ballet “is such a rich art form that it should not be an illustrator of even the most interesting, even the most meaningful literary primary source. The ballet will speak for itself and about itself”.

[Segurament el ballet pur expressa emocions, aspectes de la condició humana – que viu com a cos – de manera diferent que la literatura, per això segurament els dos tenen raó; el ballet no estaria totalment subordinat a un argument lliterari, presenta característiques pròpies. Però al mateix temps no es pot dir que no tingui a veure amb les emocions. En una coreografia de Balanchine o d’Àngels Margarit, podem atribuir emocions i interaccions als balladors, si estan plens d’energia i alegria, o derrotats, en un duet, si hi ha una interacció d’afecte i complicitat, o d’oposició i combat].

[ la dansa és autoexpressió quan es balla lliurement, en primera persona. És narrativa quan el ballarí explica una història als espectadors. Quan és espectacle es pot donar el cas, com en el teatre, que l’intèrpret mostra alegria i despreocupació quan en realitat interiorment està tens i patint per fer un pas difícil i no equivocar-se.  Cal recordar aquí, la distinció que es fa entre la música composta per que la gaudeixi l’intèrpret, com els primers quartets de Haydn, i la composta per que els intèrprets la presentin a un públic. La situació més “autèntica” seria quan l’intèrpret es pot identificar amb la narrativa, i balla allò que sent, i l’espectador, per reflex, ho viu de la mateixa manera; és com si entressin en ressonància els tres, narrativa, intèrpret i espectador].

Podem intentar   classificar música i dansa segons els emocions ?

La dansa, és exclusivament humana? Els animals, ballen? Podem veure com a dansa moviments dels núvols o de les espigues d’un camp? Dues fulles en moviment: Ariel Schlesinger. Two Good Reasons . Els robots de Boston Dynamics.


Altres notes sobre dansa:

Passes i tècnica jazz, lindy, tap, ballroom

La dansa |  [ esborrany ]


LINDY HOP,  (balboa) , shag, blues, tap dance,

El Ballroom de concurs de dues categories:


Jazz dance

Jazz Dance

Phyllis Eckler – Instructor

General Vocabulary

* Choreographer: A person who composes a dance

* Choreography: A dance composition

* Downbeat: An accented beat which begins a musical measure

* Downstage (Dwnst): Toward the front of the stage or room

* Floor pattern: A path followed during a movement combination

* Line of dance (LOD): For locomotor movement, moving or facing in a forward path

* Lyrical: Smooth, sustained movement

* Stage left (St. L.): The left side of the stage or room as one faces the audience or front

* Stage right (St. R.): The right side of the stage or room as one faces the audience or front

* Synchopated: a temporary displacement of the regular accent in music caused by stressing the upbeat

*Upstage (Upst.): Toward the back of the stage or room

* Where You Came From (WYCF): Opposite of Line of dance (see above). The moving  or facing the direction from which you started.

*Upbeat: the unaccented mid-point between beats

Positions

* Contraction: Position or movement in which the center of the torso retreats

* First position parallel (1st pll): Feet about 8″ apart with toes facing front

* First position turned out (1st TO): Heels together, toes facing the diagonal (“letter V”)

* First position arms (Arms in 1st): Hands on the chest, elbows out to the sides

* Fifth position arms (Arms in 5th): Both arms straight up in a V

* Flexed: Feet and toes are retracted back and heels are pressed forward

* Forced arch: on ball of the foot with heel off the floor and knee bent

* Fourth position parallel (4th pll): Standing with one foot in front of the hips and one behind the hips with @ 10″ between them . Toes facing the front

* Fourth position turned out (4th TO): Standing with one foot in front of the hips and one behind the hips with @ 10″ between them with toes facing the diagonal

* Fourth position arms (Arms in 4th): One straight arm up and one arm to the side (the “up” arm determines if it is a right or left 4th position)

* Lunge: Position in either 2nd or 4th where only one knee is bent and the other straight

* On the walk: Starting position for locomotor movement. Back foot is lightly resting on the ball of the foot

* Parallel (pll): Stance where toes face forward

* Plié: A knee bend with careful alignment of the knees and torso

* Point: Feet are fully extended forward from the ankles

*Pretzel: A sitting position where one leg is crossed over the other and the bottom one is tucked in bent

* Relevé: A lift onto the toes

* Retiré or passé parallel: Position in which the toe of one leg touches the knee of the standing leg, knee cap faces forward

* Retiré or passé turned out: Position in which the toe of one leg touches the knee of the standing leg, knee cap faces side

* Second position parallel (2nd pll): Feet side by side @ 24″ apart, toes face forward

*Second position turned out (2nd TO): Feet side by side @ 24″ apart, toes face the corners

*Second position arms (Arms in 2nd): Arms to the side at just below shoulder height

* Standing leg: The weight bearing leg

* Third position arms (Arms in 3rd): One arm extended in front of the chest and one arm to the side  (the “front” arm determines if it is a right or left 3rd position)

* Turnout (TO): The outward rotation of the feet and legs from the hips. Toes to the diagonal.

* Working leg: The non-load bearing leg

Steps

*Ball Change: Syncopated weight shift onto the ball of the rear foot and back to the flat front foot

(Can be done as a travelling step)

* Chassé: Step together step

*Cut: Quick displacement of one standing leg by the other while remaining on the same spot

*Fan kick: A kick in which the working leg makes a sweeping arc in front of the body

*Fondue: A bending of one’s standing leg all the way into plie

*Grapevine: A series of steps that move sideways with a side, back, side, front pattern

*Hitchkick: A scissor-like movement where one leg is in the air while the other leg kicks up to pass it

*Isolations: Movement of only one part of the body

*Jazz walk: Many varieties but generally a turned out low walk using shoulder opposition

*Jazz pas de bourree (Jazz PDB): A back-side-front three step move in the floor pattern of an isosceles triangle

*Jazz square: A crossed front-back-back-front four step move in the floor pattern of a square

*Mambo: A front/back, back/front step with hips swiveling in a figure 8

* Piqué: A step onto half toe with a straight leg from a plie standing leg

* Relevé: A lift onto the toes

*Step: Transferring weight fully onto a foot

*Touch: A placement of the working toe or foot on the floor without shifting weight to it

Turns

* Chainés: Consecutive half turns traveling and rotating in a single direction

* Inside turn: forwards turn; A turn toward the standing leg

* Outside turn: Backwards turn; A turn away from the standing leg

*Paddle turn: Several small pivot turns that take one 360 degrees

*Pencil turn: Pirouette with both legs straight

* Piqué turn: Inside turn which begins with a step onto half-toe with an already straight leg

* Pirouette: Turn on one leg that begins in plie and goes to releve from a plie

* Pivot turn: Half-Turn on two legs with weight transfer from one leg to the other ; Feet stay stationary but swivel

* Soutenu: Full-Turn on two legs which begins with legs crossed, legs unwind and wind up crossed the other way; Feet stay on the same spot but swivel

* Spotting: Focusing on one spot while turning to prevent dizziness

Jumps

* Chassé: Step one foot, together in the air, land on the other foot; A gallop or slide

* Hitchkick: Kicking one leg in the air while it is up there jumping off the other one to join it to the first and landing on the first leg

* Hop: Taking off from one foot and landing on the same one

* Jump: Taking off of two feet and landing on two feet

* Leap: A jump from one foot to the other foot usually with an opening of the legs in the air

* Skip: Alternating hops from one to the other or with steps in between


 

Jerome Robbins

La Dansa  |  El musical  |  posts musical per categoria


Jerome Robbins

1944 On the Town – Jerome Robbins and the originator of the idea for the show
1945 Billion Dollar Baby – Jerome Robbins
1947 High Button Shoes – Jerome Robbins – Tony Award for Best Choreography
1948 Look, Ma, I’m Dancin’! – Jerome Robbins
1949 Miss Liberty – Jerome Robbins
1950 Call Me Madam – Jerome Robbins
1951 The King and I – Jerome Robbins
1954 Peter Pan – and Jerome Robbins
1957 West Side Story – Jerome Robbins – Tony Award for Best Choreography
1959 Gypsy – Jerome Robbins – Tony Award Nomination for Best Direction of a Musical
1964 Fiddler on the Roof – Jerome Robbins – Tony Award for Best Direction of a Musical, and Best Choreography

Musicals 1980-20xx


MUSICALS 1980

The public ruled heavily in favor of the mega-musicals, so the 1980s brought a succession of long-running “Brit hits” to Broadway – Cats, Les Miserables, Phantom of the Opera and Miss Saigon were light on intellectual content and heavy on special effects and marketing.

  • 1980 Lullaby of Broadway. The first musical super-hit of the 1980s was a musical comedy based on a classic Busby Berkeley film. 42nd Street (1980 – 3,486 performances) re-united producer David Merrick and director Gower Champion. Both had suffered a few failures and very much needed a hit to restore their reputations. The backstage plot about a chorus girl who takes over for the lead actress on opening night (“You’re going out there a nobody, but you’ve got to come back a star!”) was left in place, while the film score was augmented with other vintage songs by composer Harry Warren and lyricist Al Dubin.
  • 1981 Woman of the Year (1981 – 770 performances) boasted a fine John Kander- Fred Ebb score and Lauren Bacall in the title role. However, the most memorable thing in this sophisticated musical comedy was Marilyn Cooper, whose mousy housewife character stole the comic duet “The Grass is Always Greener” from the glamorous Bacall.
  • 1982 Nine (1982 – 732 performances) – Composer/lyricist Maury Yeston won acclaim with this adaptation of Fellini’s semi-autobiographical film 8 1/2. Tommy Tune’s innovative production cast Raul Julia as an eccentric Italian director trying to make a film while facing his mid-life crisis. Nine won all the major Tonys, including one for Liliane Montevecchi, who stopped the show with a seductive (though barely relevant) paen to the “Folies Bergere.”
  • 1982 Little Shop of Horrors (1982 – 2,209 performances) was a hilarious Off-Broadway sci-fi spoof by composer Alan Menken and lyricist Howard Ashman. Based on Roger Corman’s low-budget 1960 film about a man-eating plant from outer space, its fresh score and witty script made the show an immediate hit. It toured the country for years and became a standard part of the musical theatre repertory. The serio-comic ballad “Suddenly Seymour” remained a favorite in piano bars for years to come.
  • 1982 Cats. Andrew Lloyd Webber and director Trevor Nunn reshaped the theatrical landscape with Cats (1982 – 7,485 performances), a musical based on T.S. Eliot’s Old Possum’s Book of Practical Cats. They emphasized aerobic dance, high-tech effects and heavy-duty marketing tactics. Cats premiered in London, then came to New York – where it forced 42nd Street out of the Winter Garden and over to the Majestic Theatre. Lloyd Webber was so certain of the show’s success that he co-produced it with Cameron Macintosh, a move which made both men millionaires.  More a revue than a book musical, Cats depicted a gathering of felines in a garbage-strewn alley where one cat will be allowed to ascend (on an oversized hydraulic tire) “the heavy-side layer” – i.e., kitty heaven. The first and last fifteen minutes were so dazzling (thanks to heavy-duty lighting effects and prancing pussies) that few complained about the two tedious hours that yawned in-between. Cats cleaned up at the Tonys, with Best Book going to the long-dead Eliot, and Best Featured Actress going to Betty Buckley as the bedraggled feline Grizzabella.
  • 1983 My One and Only (1983 – 767 performances) set vintage songs by George and Ira Gershwin in a new plot about a 1920s romance between an aviator and an aquacade star. The show almost sank in Boston, but star Tommy Tune took over the direction with an assist from A Chorus Line alumni Thommie Walsh. After exhaustive revisions and some rocky New York previews, My One And Only opened to surprise raves. Audiences cheered as Tune and Twiggy splashed through a watery barefoot version of “S’Wonderful,” and legendary tap star Charles “Honi” Coles won a Tony as the whimsical “Mr Magix.” After almost two years on Broadway, it proved even more popular on national tour. número conjunt, Honi Coles
  • 1983 La Cage Aux Folles, Jerry Herman was a defiantly old-fashioned book musical that broke new ground by focusing on a gay couple dealing with their son’s marriage into a bigoted politician’s family. Playwright Harvey Fierstein provided a hilarious book, and Arthur Laurents helmed one of the most entertaining musicals Broadway had seen in years. Numerous Tony awards (including Best Musical and Best Score) ended years of creative frustration for Herman, the composer of Hello Dolly and Mame. George Hearn won a well-deserved Tony for his performance as the loveable drag queen Albin, and won cheers with his renditions of “I Am What I Am” and “The Best of Times is Now.”
  • 1984 Sunday In the Park With George, Stephen Sondheim’s took an innovative look at the commercial and emotional challenges of being an artist, starring Many Patinkin as pointillist painter Georges Seurat and Bernadette Peters as his lover Dot. The action then switched to modern times, with Seurat’s grandson facing the same issues while an aging Dot looks on. Audiences cheered for a breathtaking first act finale that recreated Seurat’s “Sunday Afternoon on the Island of the Grand Jatte” while the cast sang the ravishing chorale “Sunday.”

 

The other “Brit hits” of this decade were all brand new. Relying on pop rhythms, stage hydraulics and high-tech special effects, these shows came to be known as mega-musicals. In these behemoths, substance took a backseat to spectacle, and occasional hints of humor were buried in oceans of soap opera sentiment. Although these tech-heavy presentations came with a high price tag, the best mega-musicals ran for decades, selling tickets to millions of people — particularly tourists who had long since fallen out of the habit of going to the theatre.

  • 1984 Starlight Express, Andrew Lloyd Webber’s  was a tremendous hit in London (1984 – 3000+ performances), with hydraulic ramps that allowed roller-skating actors to careen through the Apollo Victoria Theatre. It fared less well on Broadway (1987 – 761 performances), where critics dismissed it as a minor children’s show blown out of proportion. No one really cared who was in the cast. For the first time since the Hippodrome shows of the early 1900s, it was all about the spectacle. But Starlight Express did well on tour, enjoyed a long run in Las Vegas, and was revived with tremendous success in London.
  • 1985 Les miserablesThe French team of Claude-Michel Schonberg & Alain Boubil first offered their musical version of Victor Hugo s epic novel Les Miserables as a recording, then as a Parisian stage spectacle, with a sung-through score that sounded like a pop version of grand opera. British producer Cameron Mackintosh became involved, teaming with the Royal Shakespeare Company and Cats director Trevor Nunn to revamp it into an international sensation. Mackintosh brought Les Miserables to the West End (1985 – London), Broadway (1987 NY – 6,680 performances), and most of the other cities in the civilized world. The English translation was no work of art, but the strong plot and hydraulic sets wowed most theatergoers. The logo, with little, bedraggled Cosette set against the French tri-color, became familiar on every imaginable sort of souvenir – including pricey re-prints of Hugo’s novel.
  • 1988 The Phantom o fthe Opera. The following season brought Andrew Lloyd Webber s The Phantom of the Opera (1988 – 11,000+ performances, still running), with the composer and Cameron Mackintosh co-producing. The lush score featured uninspired, babbling lyrics set to lush pop-operetta melodies, and an ending that departed completely from Gaston Leroux’s classic novel. Harold Prince’s lavish production made the show another triumph of form over function. Broadway audiences did not mind paying a record-setting $45 a ticket when they could see the money on stage in scene after lavish scene. Stellar performances by Michael Crawford and Sarah Brightman helped.

Pressed for new ideas, but as the 1980s ended, two Broadway musicals broke through to popular success:

  • 1989 Grand Hotel (1989 – 1,077 performances) was a resurrected George Forrest & Robert Wright project that had closed on the road in 1958. Based on the classic novel, play and MGM film, it told of the intertwined fates of guests at a posh Berlin hotel in the early 1930s. To the dismay of the original composers, director Tommy Tune called in Nine’s Maury Yeston to replace about half of the score. The revised show got mixed reviews, but a combination of limited competition, good word of mouth and strong marketing kept the show running for several years. Big-name cast replacements – including screen dance legend Cyd Charisse – helped make Grand Hotel the first American musical since La Cage Aux Folles to top 1,000 performances on Broadway.
  • 1989 City of Angels (1989 – 878 performances) won the 1989 Tony for Best Musical thanks to an occasionally hilarious Larry Gelbart libretto about a screenwriter interacting with the fictional characters in his latest script. The Cy Coleman-David Zippel score was pleasant, but some of the songs echoed numbers from previous Coleman shows — and the tech-heavy production (including computer animation sequences) left little room for profit.

FILM 1980

Several big-budget screen musicals lost millions in the early 1980s, leaving behind a litany of titles that still cause heads to shake in Hollywood. Some were hopelessly bad ideas, but two were stage hits demolished by acclaimed directors who simply had no idea how to film a musical: Can’t Stop the Music (1980) featured the Village People, a posse of non-singing celebrities, a disco score and a production that repeatedly overstepped the line between camp and sheer idiocy. Pink Floyd – The Wall (1982) was a hit with a limited audience, but this series of rock songs was more a precursor of music videos than a musical. Legendary dramatic director John Huston decided to try his hand at musicals, turning the international stage smash Annie (1982) into a costly embarrassment. He had beloved comedienne Carol Burnett play Miss Hannigan as a hateful, humorless villain, just one of several serious misjudgments. Sir Richard Attenborough’s adaptation of A Chorus Line (1985) drained every ounce of inspiration from one of the most dynamic Broadway musicals of its time.

  • 1980 Jim Henson’s Muppets had been entertaining Americans on television since the 1950s, winning their greatest acclaim on Sesame Street and The Muppet Show (1976-81). By 1980, the Muppets could claim an audience of 235 million viewers in over 100 countries. Henson took things a step further and brought the Muppets to the big screen, with the most successful new screen couple since Mickey Rooney and Judy Garland. That the couple in question was a frog and a pig only added to their appeal.
    The Muppet Movie (1979) featured the loveable frog Kermit and the irrepressible Miss Piggy as the romantic leads. It was an international success and the song “Rainbow Connection” became a standard. Two more Muppet musicals followed. The Great Muppet Caper (1981) and The Muppets Take Manhattan (1984) did well, appealing to both kids and adults with a stylish blend of comedy, melody and sentiment. Henson focused his energies on non-musical fantasy films until his untimely death in 1990. His son Brian directed a new series of successful musicals including The Muppet Christmas Carol (1992) and The Muppet Treasure Island (1996).
  • 1982 Victor/Victoria (1982) was the best original screen musical since Gigi. It told the story of “a woman pretending to be a man pretending to be a woman” in the nightclubs of Paris in the 1930s. That the film dealt with the touchy issue of sexual identity made its success all the more remarkable. Director Blake Edwards (best remembered for his Pink Panther films) provided a witty screenplay and memorable visual gags. Even without songs, Victor/Victoria would have been a first-rate comedy, but a wonderful score by composer Henry Mancini and lyricist Leslie Bricusse made the film all the grander. Julie Andrews (Edwards’ wife) provided the star power, giving one of the funniest performances of her career. From the uproarious “Le Jazz Hot” to the introspective “Crazy World,” she was in top form. When Robert Preston joined Andrews for “You and Me” or took center screen for an uproarious drag finale, the result was pure magic. This marked the final musical screen roles for both stars, It was also the last great live-action musical film of the 20th Century.
  • 1989 The Little Mermaid (1989) was the finest animated musical in decades. The classic Hans Christian Andersen fairy tale was given a Disney twist with singing sea creatures, a spunky title heroine and a humanoid octopus as the evil witch. Ashman and Menken’s score had a lush, traditional Broadway sound, and seasoned stage performers were brought in to make the most of every number. The ballad “Part of Your World” was worthy of any stage hit, and “Under the Sea” was the bounciest old-school “showstopper” in a generation. Disney’s Little Mermaid became the surprise hit of the year, grossing over 100 million dollars — and several times that figure when it hit home video. It received Oscars for Best Song (“Under the Sea”) and Best Original Score, won Grammys for its best-selling soundtrack CD, and inspired a successful animated TV series. Ashman and Menken were given the go ahead for more projects. Their efforts would make animated musicals one of the most profitable genres in the decade ahead.

MUSICALS 1990

En general res remarcable, per un cop el món al revés i The Lion King procedent del cinema va triomfar.

By the 1990s, new mega-musicals were no longer winning the public, and costs were so high that even long-running hits (Crazy for You, Sunset Boulevard) were unable to turn a profit on Broadway. New stage musicals now required the backing of multi-million dollar corporations to develop and succeed – a trend proven by Disney’s Lion King, and Livent’s Ragtime. Even Rent and Titanic were fostered by smaller, Broadway-based corporate entities.

  • 1996 Rent is a rock musical with music, lyrics, and book by Jonathan Larson,[1] loosely based on Giacomo Puccini’s 1896 opera La Bohème. It tells the story of a group of impoverished young artists struggling to survive and create a life in Lower Manhattan’s East Village in the thriving days of bohemian Alphabet City, under the shadow of HIV/AIDS. The musical was first seen in a workshop production at New York Theatre Workshop in 1993. This same off-Broadway theatre was also the musical’s initial home following its official 1996 opening. The show’s creator, Jonathan Larson, died suddenly of an aortic dissection, believed to have been caused by undiagnosed Marfan syndrome, the night before the off-Broadway premiere. The musical moved to Broadway’s larger Nederlander Theatre on April 29, 1996. On Broadway, Rent gained critical acclaim and won several awards, including the Pulitzer Prize for Drama and the Tony Award for Best Musical. The Broadway production closed on September 7, 2008, after 12 years, making it one of the longest-running shows on Broadway.

Revivals de Chicago, Kiss me Kate i Cabaret

  • 1996 Bring in Da’ Noise, Bring in Da’ Funk, The most successful black musical of the decade used a series of contemporary tap numbers to look dramatize and reflect on the history of Africans in America. The score was new, but the key issue was the dancing, which expressed every emotion from despair to rage to triumph. Savion Glover headed a spitfire cast and received a Tony for his groundbreaking choreography.
  • 1997 Titanic. The best musicals of the late 1990s came from corporate producers that aimed for artistic integrity as well as profit. Composer/lyricist Maury Yeston (Nine, Grand Hotel) and librettist Peter Stone (1776), had built their reputations on making unlikely projects sing. When their Titanic (1997 – 804 performances) sailed off with five Tonys, including Best Musical, the theatrical community was shocked. The best new American musical in over a decade, it put creative aspects ahead of the marketing concerns. Over a dozen key characters were defined through songs which invoked various period or ethnic styles: the hopeful immigrants dreaming of life “In America,” the arrogance of the rich exclaiming “What a Remarkable Age This Is,” and the elderly Isador & Ida Strauss reaffirming that they “Still” love each other as they face death. A stronger director or solo producer might have sharpened the dramatic focus, but corporate thinking let matters lie. Whatever its imperfections, Titanic deserved its success.
  • 1998 Ragtime (1998 – 861 performances) was another example of the corporate musical at its best, thanks to a spectacular score by American composers Lynn Ahrens and Stephen Flaherty. The epic story told of a crumbling white middle class family, a black musician seeking justice, and a Jewish immigrant fulfilling the American dream for himself an his child. As with Titanic, a huge cast of characters was brought into focus by a score that invoked musical styles from the early 20th century and a book that wove disparate lives into a common pattern – the concept musical blown up to epic proportions. Ragtime was not afraid to use satire (“Crime of the Century”) or raunchy humor (“What A Game”) along with soaring chorales, ballads and rags. When Brian Stokes Mitchell (as musician Coalhouse Walker) and Audra McDonald (as his beloved Sarah) sang of how they would ride into the future “On the Wheels of a Dream,” it was pure, potent musical theatre. Though overproduced and under-directed, Ragtime was a musical with brains, heart, and a touch of courage.

FILMS 1990

Poca cosa, a part d’Evita (1996)amb Madonna i Antonio Banderas (que cantava força bé), i un refregit de clàssics de Tin Pan Alley per Woody Allen,  Everyone Says I Love You.(1996).
The long-delayed screen version of Evita (1996), stylishly directed by Alan Parker, starred Madonna (who proved to be no actress) but was stolen by the surprisingly good singing of Antonio Banderas.

Els musicals seran de dibuixos de Disney:

  • 1991 Beauty and the Beast was one of the best musical films ever made. The screenplay by Linda Woolverton made Belle a gutsy heroine, and the Beast became more touching than in any previous version of the classic tale. The Howard Ashman and Alan Menken score was worthy of Broadway, performed by a cast of voices that included Angela Lansbury as a teapot and Jerry Orbach as a Chevalier-esque candelabra. Standout numbers included the hilarious spoof of masculinity “Gaston,” the Busby Berkley-style “Be Our Guest” and the endearing title tune. When the unfinished Beauty and the Beast was previewed at the New York Film Festival, the audience responded with a wild standing ovation. Many (including this author) were overwhelmed to see musical film looking as big and lovable as ever, and heartbroken that lyricist Howard Ashman had not lived to see it happen. His death from AIDS a few weeks before had silenced a genius just reaching his creative peak. If anyone could have guaranteed that musicals would thrive into the 21st Century, it was Ashman. Beauty and the Beast won the musical Oscars (Best Song went to the title tune), and was even nominated for Best Picture. It earned hundreds of millions of dollars in worldwide box office sales, a figure that further skyrocketed when the film became available on home video. It became the first Disney film adapted into a smash hit Broadway show, running well into the next century and recreating its success in productions all over the world. At a time when stage musicals were in a serious decline, Beauty and the Beast proved that the musical could live on profitably in animated films.
  • 1992 Aladdin Ashman had partially completed one more project with Menken. Lyricist Tim Rice helped to finish Aladdin (1992), which was even more of a box office sensation than Beauty. Robin Williams gave an inspired performance as the voice of the Genie, singing the Ashman & Menken showstoppers “Friend Like Me” and “Prince Ali.” In what was becoming a tradition, the Rice/Menken ballad “A Whole New World” received the Academy Award for Best Song.
    1994 The Lion King with a pop-style score by Tim Rice and Elton John and a story that mixed Hamlet with a generous dash of Bambi. Broadway clowns Nathan Lane and Ernie Sabella sang the lighthearted “Hakuna Matata,” and many loved the soaring chorale “Circle of Life,” but the Oscar-winning score was otherwise mediocre. Even so, The Lion King became the highest grossing musical film ever, and its 1997 Broadway adaptation became one of the biggest stage hits of all time.
  • 1995 Pocahontas, Alan Menken teamed up with veteran Broadway lyricist Stephen Schwartz. It won Academy Awards for Best Original Score and Best song (“Colors of the Wind”), but many felt that the film took itself too seriously.
  • 1996 The Hunchback of Notre Dame. Menken & Schwartz did not receive any Oscars but damn well should have. “Out There” and “God Help the Outcasts” were first rate songs, and the opening sequence was a masterpiece of musical narrative. Although the dark Victor Hugo story seemed a surprising choice for an animated musical, Hunchback was the most mature animated musical yet. Parents who thought nothing of letting their children see blood-drenched action films complained that Hunchback was “too intense.” (Go figure!) Despite limited domestic attendance in the US, Hunchback brought in over a hundred million dollars in worldwide box office and video sales – proving that America is not always the most perceptive audience for great animated musicals.
  • 1999 South Park: Bigger, Longer and Uncut (1999) – an independent animated feature that would have left Walt Disney’s ghost quivering in disbelief. Based on a popular cable television series, this foul-mouthed, artistically primitive and altogether brilliant satire spoofed obscene pop lyrics, overprotective parents, and the widespread obsession with blaming others for one’s problems. When American children start spewing profanities, their parents “Blame Canada” and the United States goes to war with its northern neighbor. Some of the songs were so explicit that several cannot be quoted (or even named) on this family-friendly site, but the score was one of the funniest ever used in a feature film. A few viewers found the film offensive, but it proved that screen musicals could still entertain. It also proved that animated musicals are not just for tots.

MUSICALS 00

As the 20th century ended, the musical theatre was in an uncertain state, relying on rehashed numbers (Fosse) and stage versions of old movies (Footloose, Saturday Night Fever), as well as the still-running mega-musicals of the previous decade. But starting in the year 2000, a new resurgence of American musical comedies took Broadway by surprise. The Producers, Urinetown, Thoroughly Modern Millie, Hairspray — funny, melodic and inventively staged, these hit shows offered new hope for the genre.

[ Altres Witches Eastwick d’Andrew Lloyd Weber, Hairspray, Wicked, Jersey Boys sobre Franki VAlli, Woman in white

  • 2001 The Producers is a musical adapted by Mel Brooks and Thomas Meehan from Brooks’s 1967 film of the same name, with lyrics written by Brooks and music composed by Brooks and arranged by Glen Kelly and Doug Besterman. As in the film, the story concerns two theatrical producers who scheme to get rich by fraudulently overselling interests in a Broadway flop. Complications arise when the show unexpectedly turns out to be successful. The humor of the show draws on ridiculous accents, caricatures of homosexuals and Nazis, and many show business in-jokes. After 33 previews, the original Broadway production opened at the St. James Theatre on April 19, 2001, starring Nathan Lane and Matthew Broderick, and ran for 2,502 performances, winning a record-breaking 12 Tony Awards. It spawned a successful West End production running for just over two years, national tours in the US and UK, many productions worldwide and a 2005 film version.
  • 2003 Never Gonna Dance, revival de Swing Time
  • 2003 Taboo (originalment a Londres, música de Boy George)
  • 2010 Adams Family
  • 2011 Book of the Mormon
  • 2015 An American in Paris
  • 2015 Hamilton, incorpora el rap a una història sobre un dels fundadors dels Estats Units.

FILMS 2000

2001 Moulin Rouge. Rent (2005) and The Producers (2005) made their way to the big screen with most of their original Broadway cast members on hand, but the results were missing most of the magic of the original stage versions. Rent cost a modest $40 million and grossed $31 million — the more lavish Producers cost $45 million and grossed a pathetic $19 million.

What lies ahead in the future? It’s hard to say, but there will most assuredly be new musicals. The musical may go places some of its fans will not want to follow, but the form will live on so long as people like a story told with songs.


 


 

 

Musicals 1970

MUSICALS 1970

Composer/lyricist Stephen Sondheim and director Hal Prince refocused the genre in the 1970s by introducing concept musicals – shows built around an idea rather than a traditional plot. Company (1970), Follies (1972) and A Little Night Music (1973) succeeded, while rock musicals quickly faded into the background. The concept musical peaked with A Chorus Line (1974), conceived and directed by Michael Bennett. No, No, Nanette (1973) initiated a slew of popular 1970s revivals, but by decade’s end the battle line was drawn between serious new works (Sweeney Todd) and heavily commercialized British mega-musicals (Evita).

  • 1971 Jesus Christ Superstar. Broadway’s first full-fledged rock opera came from two British newcomers, composer Andrew Lloyd Webber and librettist Tim Rice. . began life as a best-selling British studio recording. The intriguing premise was to examine the role popular fame played in Christ’s fate. At times fresh and impertinent, and ponderous at others, JCS was a world away from the rock musicals of the late 1960s. With all dialogue set to music, this work qualified as the first rock opera.
  • 1972 Grease won America’s heart with a 1950s rock n’ roll pastiche score and a hokey story about white trash high school kids finding friendship and romance (“rama lama lama, ka dingy dee ding dong!”) during their senior year. It had enough low comedy, coarse language and general goodwill to entertain millions. After opening to good reviews at the Eden Theatre on Manhattan’s Lower East Side, the show soon moved to Broadway, becoming the most commercially successful 1970s rock musical.
  • 1972 Pippin used the story of Charlemagne’s forgotten son as a flimsy excuse to examine jealousy, sex, war, sex, love, sex, life, sex . . . and sex. When composer Stephen Schwartz disagreed with changes made to his score, Fosse barred him from rehearsals and made more changes. Thanks to Fosse’s erotically charged choreography and teasing TV ad, Pippin ran long and toured far. Critics complained about the uneven book, but Ben Vereen scored a personal triumph as the show’s sensuous narrator, and John Rubenstein – who introduced Schwartz’s ballad “Corner of the Sky” – charmed audiences in the title role.
  • In time, Broadway producers and theatre-goers turned against rock. This may have been at least partly because of personal musical tastes, but mainly because too many rock musicals were amateurish embarrassments. Few rock composers had a clue as to how to write a coherent musical, or how to give a raw idea professional polish. Composer Galt MacDermot had succeeded with Hair and Two Gentlemen of Verona, but his shortcomings as a craftsman became apparent when he penned two expensive disasters that opened within weeks of each other.
    Five years after his bitter experience working as lyricist on Do I Hear A Waltz (1965 – 220 performances), Stephen Sondheim returned to Broadway as a composer/lyricist. He formed a creative partnership with producer/director Harold Prince, and the duo saw their innovative concept musicals become the most acclaimed hits of the early 1970s. They worked with a series of librettists on shows built around a “concept” (ie – single life vs. marriage, historic culture clashes, bittersweet reunions, etc.). Through this central issue, each show examined numerous interrelated characters and relationships. Sondheim and Prince were assisted in their first two efforts by choreographer Michael Bennett, who would independently create the most successful concept musical of all.
  • 1975 A chorus line. The concept musical reached its peak with A Chorus Line (1975 – 6,137 performances), the brainchild of Michael Bennett. He had Broadway chorus dancers (known in the business as “gypsies” because they migrate from show to show) share memories while a tape recorder ran. Working with these tapes, Bennett built a libretto with writers Nicholas Dante and James Kirkwood. Concurrently, composer Marvin Hamlisch and lyricist Edward Kleban developed a vibrant score. The concept involved a Broadway chorus audition where a director demands that his dancers share their private memories and inner demons. Some dismissed this as staged group therapy, but most found the results riveting. A Chorus Line glorified the individual fulfillment that can be found in ensemble efforts. When the entire cast sang of being “One” while dancing and singing in rigid group formation, the effect was dazzling. Veteran chorus dancers Donna McKechnie, Carol Bishop and Sammy Williams won Tonys, as did the entire creative team. A Chorus Line’s popularity crossed all lines of age and musical taste, smashing every other long-run record in Broadway history. Many who came of age during its run dubbed it the best musical ever.
  • 1975 Chicago, Fosse’s sexy choreography was also evident in the saga of two 1920s flappers seeking fame through marital homicide. This concept musical cast a cynical, merciless spotlight on social hypocrisy and media-based celebrity. Fosse helped shape the libretto, staged the scenes as a series of vaudeville-style acts. Gwen Verdon (in her final musical role) and Chita Rivera were the stellar killers, and Jerry Orbach played their “razzle dazzle” attorney. The John Kander and Fred Ebb score offered a parade of showstoppers, including “All That Jazz.” One of the most brilliant and biting musicals Broadway would ever produce, Chicago was overshadowed by the success of A Chorus Line (discussed on the next page of this site) and did not win a single Tony. It took a 1996 Broadway revival and a 2002 film version to bring this masterwork the popularity it deserved.
  • 1976 Annie, Both critics and audiences melted for a shamelessly old-fashioned musical inspired by the comic strip Little Orphan Annie. It told how a penniless tyke met and captured the heart of billionaire Daddy Warbucks, finding love, adventure and a loveable mutt named Sandy along the way. Newcomer Andrea McArdle gave a disarming performance as the title orphan in search of “Tomorrow,” and Dorothy Loudon copped the Tony with a hilarious performance as Miss Hannigan, the harried orphanage director who has come to loathe “Little Girls” and wants to enjoy life on “Easy Street.” Composer Charles Strouse, lyricist Martin Charnin and librettist Thomas Meehan made Annie’s success seem deceptively simple, but it was so skillfully written and produced that few could follow in its creative footsteps. This multiple Tony winner became an international sensation, proving that the traditional musical could still win audiences. Annie was the first Broadway musical to gross over $100 million, astounding for a show which opened with orchestra seats at a mere $16. (Note: By the time it closed six years later, the same seats went for $45.)
  • 1978 With Dancin’ Fosse took concept shows a step further and dispensed with a script and original score, building an entire evening of unrelated dance sequences around nothing more than a gifted cast, a title and pre-existing, non-theatrical musical sources like Benny Goodman’s jazz classic “Sing, Sing, Sing.” Alan Jay Lerner wired Fosse, “Congratulations. You finally did it. You got rid of the author, ” but the public and critics adored the results, making this one of Fosse’s most profitable productions. With demanding choreography that small theatre companies and amateurs could never hope to recreate, Dancin’ had almost no life beyond its Broadway run and national tour.
  • 1978 The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas was inspired by the real-life political shenanigans that forced the closing of an infamous bordello. It became lasting hit thanks to Tommy Tune’s energetic staging, a bawdy libretto, and some catchy country-style tunes by Carol Hall. TV ads for the show had to bleep out the word “whore” in the title to meet federal broadcast standards — but as a lyric put it, there was “nuthin’ dirty goin’ on,” and audiences embraced the show.
  • In musical theatre, revivals had been commonplace ever since the repeated success of the The Black Crook in the late 19th Century. But as an epidemic of nostalgia swept through American culture in the 1970s, theatergoers embraced revivals with unprecedented enthusiasm. Shows and stars of the past appealed to the growing number of older tourists who felt alienated by the cultural changes taking place around them — changes all too apparent in the increasingly harsh environment of midtown Manhattan. The surprise hit that set the nostalgia trend rolling on Broadway was a revival of 1925’s No, No, Nanette (1971 – 861 performances). Ain’t Misbehavin’ (1978 – 1,604 performances) revitalized the revue format with an all-black cast in beguiling vignettes built around songs either written or performed by jazz legend Fats Waller. Created by lyricist/director Richard Maltby, it brought stardom to rotund comedienne Nell Carter. She and Maltby won Tonys, and the show received the the award for Best Musical.

Canvis: It’s not so much that the public disapproved of these well-written but imperfect shows. Most Americans were not paying attention to the musical theatre anymore. Rock and disco were the predominant sounds in popular music, and neither genre had more than a token presence in most Broadway scores. Musicals had become a sort of subculture, and the potential sales for cast albums fell so low that major labels stopped recording them altogether.

[ comencen musicals amb produccions molt cares, com les que farà Hal prince, i shows que semblen tenir més a veure amb l’òpera que amb el jazz, amb Stephen Sondheim i Andrew Lloyd Weber]

  • 1978 Eubie ! Recopila 23 cançons de Eubie Blake amb els germans Hines i grans números. Daddy, Hines bros
  • 1979 Sweeney Todd de Stephen Sondheim. While Stephen Sondheim’s Sweeney Todd (1979 – 557 performances) used a conventional plot structure, its operatic score was Sondheim’s most ambitious effort to date. Going further, this blood-soaked tale of an unjustly persecuted man’s all-consuming quest for revenge in Victorian London explored emotional territory no musical had ever touched before. Not since Shakespeare had a poet of the theatre taken such an unflinching look into the darkest corners of the human soul. When Sweeney’s cast pointed at audience members and insisted that they had a murderous hate like Sweeney’s hiding inside them, it was bound to leave many theatergoers uneasy. Tony-winning performances by Angela Lansbury and Len Cariou added to the impact, as did a massive production helmed by Hal Prince. (Prince framed the action in the actual ruins of an old factory, trucked in from Rhode Island.) But this lofty accomplishment came at a crippling price. Despite a healthy run and numerous awards, the show was unable to turn a profit.
  • 1979 By the time it reached Broadway, Evita (1979 – 1,567 performances) was a slick and stylish smash hit, with breakthrough performances by Patti Lupone as Evita and Mandy Patinkin as Che. A disco version of “Don’t Cry For Me Argentina” became a hit single – one of the last showtunes to reach the pop charts in any form. Evita was a calculated triumph of stagecraft and technology, undeniably entertaining but in some ways as vapid as any of Ziegfeld’s Follies. Webber and Rice depicted Eva as a whore with flair and ruthless ambition, but gave no clue as to what made her complex character tick. Meaningful or not, people liked it. Running three times longer than Sweeney Todd, it made a massive profit from productions all over the world. With this flashy victory of matter over mind, the mega-musical was born.

FILM 1970

  • 1971 Director Norman Jewisohn filmed Fiddler on the Roof with enough sensitivity to make audiences overlook a butt-numbing three hour running time. Israeli actor Chaim Topol energized the film with a sensitive performance as Tevye, the milkman who sees his traditional Russian Jewish village shaken by the forces of change.
  • 1972 Bob Fosse’s searing version of Cabaret turned a stage hit into a screen classic. The often harsh story of people caught in the political turmoil that gripped Germany in the early 1930s featured memorable performances by Liza Minnelli as amoral vocalist Sally Bowles and Joel Grey as the leering Emcee. Fosse, Minnelli and Grey took home Academy Awards

However, most of this decade’s Hollywood musicals – originals as well as adapted stage works – were mishandled. With millions of dollars poured into poorly produced projects, the early 1970s became the golden age of bad big-budget movie musicals. The commercial failure of several animated musicals, including the enchanting Charlotte’s Web (1973), coupled with the dismantling of the Disney Studio’s animation unit, seemed to spell the end of screen animation of any kind. Attempts to revive the genre drew tepid results until the 1990s, when animation would make an industry-shaking comeback. More on this in the chapters to come. Rock movie musicals had a mixed record in the 1970s. Jesus Christ Superstar (1973) and the Who’s Tommy (1975) appealed to youthful audiences despite overblown productions. Mindless mistakes like Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band (1978) were dismissed by critics and the public. Hollywood’s most successful original rock musical was The Rose (1979), the story of a Janis Joplin-like rock diva who’s professional success sends her into a self-destructive spiral. Overcoming a melodramatic screenplay, pop diva Bette Midler made a dynamic screen debut.

  • 1975 Despite a poor critical reception, The Rocky Horror Picture Show developed a one-of-a-kind cult following. Teenagers came back to see the film week after week, singing along, talking back to the screen and enacting scenes in costume. The film became a camp classic. Late night screenings for Rocky Horror buffs continued all across America right into the next century.
  • 1977 New York, New York was Martin Scorcese’s attempt to do a dark big-band era musical (excuse me?). While the John Kander & Fred Ebb title tune was a major hit for star Liza Minnelli, the film was a cumbersome bore, made the worse by heavy studio editing. Years later, a home video release restored key footage, making the film easier to follow but still unsatisfying.
  • 1978 Grease. By the late 1970s, the screen musical was considered a dinosaur, but a massive hit proved that the genre had some kick left in it. Grease and its white trash teens coming of age in a 1950s American high school became a world-wide phenomenon. The stage score was augmented by several new songs, including the new interpolated pop hits “Hopelessly Devoted to You” and “You’re the One That I Want.” Where the stage version stressed period spoof, the film stressed the love story involving a mildly rebellious leather jacketed boy and a squeaky-clean “Sandra Dee”-type girl. Ingratiating performances by John Travolta and Olivia Newton-John and a spirited production delighted audiences, making the film a pop-culture landmark. Earning $159 million on its initial relesem it became the highest grossing film musical up to that time.
  • 1979 Bob Fosse’s semi-autobiographical All That Jazz (1979) blended fantastic musical sequences with a self-indulgent story. Based on Fosse’s experiences during rehearsals for Chicago and earlier shows, this was the first musical (and with any luck, there will never be another) to include graphic footage of actual open heart surgery.
  • 1979 Milos Forman adapted the radical Broadway hit Hair (1979) into a sometimes intriguing film, capturing the anti-war, pro-hippie spirit of the original show. But most filmgoers were not yet ready to rehash the often painful memories of the 1960s. This movie would not find a following until decades later.

Gene Kelly

1942 Ballin’ the Jack

  • 1943 A thousand cheer

Mop dance

  • 1944 Cover Girl

  • 1945 Anchors aweigh

Amb Vera Ellen, ballet

When you walk downstreet with me

  • 1950 Summer Stock

Dig dig for your dinner,

  • 1951 An American in Paris

I’ve got Rhythm

Tra la ra

Escena 1, Escena 2, Escena 4escena 7 .

  • 1952 Singin’ in the rain (dirida i coreografiada per Gene Kelly i Stanley Donen)

Fit as a fiddle, Make ’em laugh

Good Morning

Moses Supposes

Amb Cyd Charisse

Singin’ in the rain

  • 1955 It’s Always fair weather

Patins

Split screen,

  • 1954 Brigadoon

Almost like feeling in love

Heather on the Hill

Tamara Tourmatova

 

 

 

Fred Astaire II

El musical   Fred Astaire RKO


1940 Fred Astaire i Paulette Godard

  • 1941 You’ll Never Get Rich (1941), Fred Astaire i Rita Hayworth catapulted Hayworth to stardom. In the movie, Astaire integrated for the third time Latin American dance idioms into his style (the first being with Ginger Rogers in “The Carioca” number from Flying Down to Rio (1933) and the second, again with Rogers, was the “Dengozo” dance from The Story of Vernon and Irene Castle (1939)).

Ball a la presóSo near and yet so far, Boogie Barcarole

  • 1942 You Were Never Lovelier (1942), Fred Astaire Rita Hayworth was equally successful. (Jerome Kern)

The Shorty George, I’m Old Fashioned, Primer número, You never were lovelier, Finale

  • 1943 The Sky’s the Limit. He next appeared opposite the seventeen-year-old Joan Leslie in the wartime drama. In it, he introduced Arlen and Mercer’s “One for My Baby” while dancing on a bar counter in a dark and troubled routine. Astaire choreographed this film alone and achieved modest box office success. It represented a notable departure for Astaire from his usual charming, happy-go-lucky screen persona, and confused contemporary critics.

One for my baby, Ballroom, A lot in Common

  • 1945 The fantasy Yolanda and the Thief, Vicente Minnelli, Fred Astaire, Lucille Bremer featured an avant-garde surrealistic ballet.
  • 1948 Easter Parade, Garland becomes Fred Astaire’s vaudeville dance partner in this romantic comedy set to mostly vintage songs by Irving Berlin. The two stars introduced the memorable hobo duet “A Couple of Swells.”

Stepping out with my baby, Drum crazy, A couple of swells, When the midnight train leaves for Alabama


1948–1957: Productive years with MGM and second retirement

Mr ans Mrs Hoofer at home, Test Solo, Thinking of you, Where did you get that girl

  • 1950 Let’s Dance with Betty Hutton was on loan-out to Paramount. While Three Little Words did quite well at the box office, Let’s Dance was a financial disappointment.

Piano dance

  • 1951 Royal Wedding had Fred Astaire dancing on the ceiling, partnering a hat rack (and making it look good), and joining Jane Powell for the knock-about duet “How Could You Believe Me When I Said I Loved You When You Know I’ve Been A Liar All My Life?” Stanley Donen directed, composer Burton Lane and lyricist Alan Jay Lerner wrote the score, and Lerner penned the story of what happens to a brother/sister dance team when sis wants to marry a British nobleman and big bro falls for a West End dancer (played by Winston Churchill’s real life daughter). This serviceable plot was inspired by Astaire’s real life story – his sister Adele had ended their long partnership in order to marry a British nobleman in 1932. (MGM).

You’re all the world to me (dansa al sostre), How could you believe me, Sunday Jumps, Open your eyes

I wanna be a dancing man (sand dance), Oops, Seeing is believing

  • 1953 The Band Wagon  received rave reviews from critics and drew huge crowds. But because of its high cost, it failed to make a profit on its first release. Soon after, Astaire, like the other remaining stars at MGM, was let go from his contract because of the advent of television and the downsizing of film production. 953, The Bandwagon, MGM, Comden and Green wrote this brilliant backstage story of a stage musical struggling on its way to Broadway. Vincente Minnelli directed and Michael Kidd provided the witty choreography. Using songs from several Arthur Schwartz and Howard Dietz stage scores (plus the newly composed “That’s Entertainment”), it featured Fred Astaire, Cyd Charisse, Nanette Fabray, Oscar Levant and British stage star Jack Buchannan. Astaire and Charisse shared a stunning pas de deux in “Dancing In The Dark,” Fabray, Astaire and Buchannan were riotous as “Triplets,” and the suave Astaire-Buchannan duet “I Guess I’ll Have To Change My Plan” is a rarely hailed moment of pure cinematic gold.

Girl Hunt ballet, Dancing in the dark, That’s entertaintment

  • In 1954, Astaire was about to start work on a new musical, Daddy Long Legs (1955) with Leslie Caron at 20th Century Fox. Then, his wife Phyllis became ill and suddenly died of lung cancer. Astaire was so bereaved that he wanted to shut down the picture and offered to pay the production costs out of his pocket. However, Johnny Mercer, the film’s composer, and Fox studio executives convinced him that work would be the best thing for him. Daddy Long Legs only did moderately well at the box office.

Sluefoot, A la bateria, Something is gonna give

  • 1957 His next film for Paramount, Funny Face, teamed him with Audrey Hepburn and Kay Thompson. Despite the sumptuousness of the production and the good reviews from critics, it failed to make back its cost.// 1957 Funny Face was conceived at MGM, but when Paramount refused to loan out Audrey Hepburn, several key members of the Freed unit (who knew they were in the process of being disbanded) made the film at Paramount. Arthur Freed’s longtime associate Roger Edens produced, Stanley Donen directed, and singer-composer Kay Thompson (Edens’ longtime MGM colleague) gave a film-stealing performance as a ruthless fashion magnate. Fred Astaire made everything from a raincoat to an umbrella come alive as dance partners in “Let’s Kiss and Make Up.” The score consisted of four classic George and Ira Gershwin songs, with several new numbers by Edens and Leonard Gershe. Hepburn gave a disarming performance as an intellectual beauty wooed by photographer Astaire while doing photo spreads for Thompson’s magazine. Impressive as the cast and score are, Donen’s unique sense of cinematic flow makes this film a standout. Every song flows out of the action surrounding it, and unforgettable images abound. Film buffs have long treasured Hepburn’s exuberant descent down a staircase in the Louvre, trailing a red tulle wrap in imitation of the sculpture “Winged Victory” (seen in the photo just above). Although visually stunning and thoroughly entertaining, Funny Face was such a box office disappointment that Paramount stopped making musicals altogether, and MGM allowed the Freed unit to fade away. However, the film developed a dedicated following over time.

funny face song

  • 1957 Silk Stockings, MGM, musical film adaptation, filmed in CinemaScope, of the 1955 stage musical of the same name,[2] which itself was an adaptation of the film Ninotchka (1939).[3] Silk Stockings was directed by Rouben Mamoulian, produced by Arthur Freed, and starred Fred Astaire and Cyd Charisse. The supporting cast includes Janis Paige, Peter Lorre, Jules Munshin, and George Tobias repeating his Broadway role.[4][5] It was choreographed by Eugene Loring and Hermes Pan.//Similarly, Astaire’s next project – his final musical at MGM, Silk Stockings (1957), in which he co-starred with Cyd Charisse, also lost money at the box office.

All of you, Ritz rock and roll, All of you, The Red blues

Afterward, Astaire announced that he was retiring from dancing in film. His legacy at this point was 30 musical films in 25 years.

Musicals 1960

dansa


At first, the 1960s were more of the same, with Broadway turning out record setting hits (Hello, Dolly!, Fiddler on the Roof). But as popular musical tastes shifted, the musical was left behind. The rock musical “happening” Hair (1968) was hailed as a landmark, but it ushered in a period of confusion in the musical theatre.


  • 1960The Fantasticks. told the story of two well-meaning fathers who manipulate their idealistic children into a storybook romance, only to learn that living “happily ever after” has its darker side. The score by composer Harvey Schmidt and lyricist Tom Jones includes “Soon It’s Gonna Rain” and “They Were You.” “Try to Remember” was introduced by Jerry Orbach, who narrated the show as the dashing El Gallo — the first of many leading roles that he would originate over the next two decades.
  • 1960 Oliver! With a heartfelt libretto and glorious score (“Consider Yourself,” “Where is Love,” “Oom-Pah-Pah,” “As Long As He Needs Me”) by newcomer Lionel Bart, and an ingenious double turntable set by designer Sean Kenny,stressed the lighter elements in Charles Dickens novel Oliver Twist.
  • 1960 The Unsinkable Molly Brown, Meredith Willson, was very loosely based on the true story of a scrappy country girl who rose from poverty and eventually became a semi-legendary figure when she survived the sinking of The Titanic. A disarming performance by newcomer Tammy Grimes and the catchy march “I Ain’t Down Yet” were well received.
  • 1960 Camelot, Loewe i Lerner The Once and Future King. Richard Burton played the legendary King Arthur, with Julie Andrews as Guenevere and newcomer Robert Goulet as Sir Lancelot. The luscious score featured “If Ever I Would Leave You,” “How to Handle A Woman” and a catchy title song, but the pressure to write another major hit proved too much for the creative team. During the pre-Broadway tour, both Loewe and director Moss Hart suffered near-fatal heart attacks. In desperation, the ailing Lerner was forced to take over direction, and an unfinished Camelot opened on Broadway. Many came expecting another lighthearted My Fair Lady — instead, they found a romantic tragedy. Although brilliant, it was unlike any previous Broadway musical. Most critics were not impressed, but some post-opening revisions by Hart made a profitable run possible. Camelot is a perennial favorite with audiences, thanks to the timeless appeal of the Arthurian legend and the show’s identification with President John F. Kennedy, who had frequently listened to the original cast recording. Whatever its shortcomings, Camelot has more melody and heart than most shows could ever hope for, and its original cast recording remains an all-time best seller. It has been revived once in London and four times on Broadway.
  • 1960 Bye Bye Birdie, dirigida per Gower Champion.This youthful farce depicted the hype generated when an Elvis-like rock star kisses a contest-winning teenage fan before being drafted into the army.Champion’s all-encompassing sense of stage movement involved every cast member, set piece and prop. A memorable comic ballet had Chita Rivera — as sexy secretary Rose Grant — seducing a stage full of astounded (but ultimately enthusiastic) Shriners. Composer Charles Strouse and lyricist Lee Adams gave Broadway its first taste of genuine rock and roll in “One Last Kiss” and “Telephone Hour,” but traditional showtunes like “Put On A Happy Face” and “Kids” made up the bulk of the score.
  • 1961 Carnival. Love makes the world go round, Based on the MGM movie Lili (1953 – MGM), it told the story of a naive French orphan who learns about love and life when she becomes human co-star of a circus puppet show. Champion sent roustabouts and circus acts through the audience, using the entire auditorium as a performance space, but he recognized that the true power of the show lay in the title character’s enchanting scenes with the hand puppets. Audiences of all ages melted when Anna Maria Alberghetti performed “Love Makes the World Go Round” with the little charmers — and Alberghetti won a Tony for this, her only appearance in a Broadway show. Bob Merrill’s score included the ballad “Her Face,” sung by Jerry Orbach as the tormented puppeteer.
  • 1961 How To Succeed in Business Without Really Trying, Frank Loesser. It told of a ruthless window cleaner manipulating his way into the chairmanship of a major corporation. This wicked satire of big business boasted dances by Bob Fosse, hilarious performances by Robert Morse & old-time crooner Rudy Valee, and the hit song “I Believe in You.” Fosse’s dances included “Coffee Break” and “Brotherhood of Man,” giving a quirky look to this sharp satire of America’s corporate culture.
  • 1962 Little Me was based on a best-selling comic novel by Patrick Dennis, offering the fictional tell-all autobiography of “Belle Poitrine,” a poor young woman who uses sex appeal to find fame and fortune as a trashy film star. Fosse’s dances included a memorable “Rich Kids Rag,” and his direction made the most of a hilarious book by Neil Simon. The Cy Coleman-Carolyn Leigh score included the hits “Real Live Girl” and “I’ve Got Your Number.”
  • 1964 Hello Dolly, (2,844 performances) a musical version of Thornton Wilder’s comedy The Matchmaker. With a giddy score by composer-lyricist Jerry Herman and a superb libretto by Michael Stewart, it told the story of a shrewd widow who brings young lovers together and finds a husband for herself (irascible Yonkers store owner, Horace Vanderguilder) in 1890s New York. Champion’s staging gave Hello Dolly! a stunning visual fluidity, evoking the gaslight era in a thrilling whirl of dancers and sets, capped by Channing’s luminous Dolly. Herman’s score caught the period to perfection, with “It Only Takes a Moment” as the standout ballad. The catchy title number became one of Broadway’s all-time great showstoppers, with Channing descending a staircase to lead a line of waiters through a rollicking cakewalk. The number was considered a problem on the road, but Broadway’s opening night audience demanded (and got) an encore. Choruses of apron-clad waiters have been escorting women of a certain age around runways ever since.
  • 1964 Fiddler on the Roof, was Robbins’ ultimate Broadway triumph, weaving story, song and dance together to tell the story of a Jewish milkman facing change in his family and his shtetl community. He staged unforgettable images – the Jews of Anatevka forming a circle of community, the wedding dancers with wine bottles perched precariously on their hats, and the circle finally breaking apart as the Jews flee Russian oppression. As the philosophical milkman Tevya, Zero Mostel overcame personal differences with Robbins and gave the most memorable performance of his career.
  • 1964 Funny Girl – After torturous previews, multiple directors and extensive rewrites, this fictionalized biography of comedienne Fanny Brice was given some much needed polish by Jerome Robbins. The results made a star of Barbra Streisand, who wisely avoided imitating Brice, building her own fresh characterization and relying on her own distinctive vocal stylings. Composer Jule Styne and lyricist Bob Merrill’s brassy score included the hit songs “People” and “Don’t Rain on My Parade.” The gifted Streisand went off to Hollywood for the screen version, winning an Academy Award for Best Actress. She never appeared in another stage musical.
  • 1964 Man of La Mancha
  • 1966 Mame,  Jerry Herman followed up his smash Hello Dolly by teaming with playwrights Jerome Lawrence and Robert E. Lee for an adaptation of their long-running comedy Auntie Mame. Angela Lansbury wowed audiences in the title role, winning her first Tony for Best Actress playing the eccentric heiress who liberates her orphaned nephew from a stodgy upbringing. Beatrice Arthur’s hilarious performance as the bitchy actress Vera Charles brought her a Tony for Best Featured Actress. Herman’s score included the show-stopping title tune, the moving “If He Walked Into My Life,” and the hilarious Lansbury-Arthur duet “Bosom Buddies.” Mame proved a worldwide favorite, enjoying successful productions into the next century.
  • 1966 Cabaret,- Composer John Kander and lyricist Fred Ebb worked with librettist Joe Masteroff on this searing adaptation of Christopher Isherwood’s play I Am a Camera. As a young American writer falls in love with a cabaret singer, we meet seedy chorus girls, Nazi storm troopers, and other denizens of the demi-monde in early 1930s Berlin. Joel Grey gave an electrifying performance as the leering Master of Ceremonies, a role he repeated in the acclaimed 1972 film version – becoming one of the very few actors to win the Tony and Academy Awards for the same role. The score included “Wilkommen” and the hit title song. Three decades later, an innovative Broadway revival would rack up an even longer run (1998 – 2,398 performances). (direcció i coreografia Bob Fosse)
  • 1966 Sweet Charity, the touching story of a taxi-dancer who refuses to stop believing in love. Her limber, jubilant renditions of “If They Could See Me Now” and “I’m a Brass Band” became the stuff of theatrical legend. (Bob Fosse)

[ a partir d’aquí el musical clàssic va perdre el favor d’un púbic més inclinat cap a la TV i el rock n roll]

  • 1968 Hair had only a shadow of a plot, involving a young rock man who revels in rock and rebellion until he is drafted into the army. He falls in with a tribe-like group of hippies who sing about such pointed social issues as poverty, race relations, the Vietnam war and more. This explosion of revolutionary proclamations, profanity and hard rock shook the musical theatre to its roots. After brief runs off-Broadway (first at Joseph Papp’s Public Theatre and then a dance club) composer Galt MacDermot and librettists Gerome Ragni and James Rado revised their “happening” before moving to Broadway. “Aquarius” and “Let the Sunshine In” became chart-topping hits, and Hair’s counter culture sensibility (including a draft card burning, simulated sex, and a very brief ensemble nude scene) packed the Biltmore Theatre for almost five years.

1969 Oh Calcutta [ dolent]


FILM 1960

  • 1961 West Side Story (United Artists) allowed Jerome Robbins to adapt his unforgettable stage choreography for the camera — until his costly demands for retakes forced the producers to let him go. Producer and co-director Robert Wise did the rest. Rita Moreno received an Academy Award for her knockout performance as Anita, and the film received Best Picture.
  • 1964 Mary Poppins, a magical nanny who brings joy to a family in Edwardian London. With a delightful score by Richard and Robert Sherman and a supporting cast that included Broadway veterans Dick Van Dyke, Ed Wynn and Glynis Johns, Mary Poppins was the best live-action musical Disney ever made. Its inventive musical sequences include Andrews magically cleaning house during “Spoonful of Sugar,” being serenaded by every animal in an animated barnyard, and cavorting about with Van Dyke on a “Jolly Holiday” with several animated penguins. Mary Poppins won five Academy Awards, the most ever for a Disney production. “Chim, Chim Chiree” won for best song. Andrews won for Best Actress, and had much to celebrate as her next project made her the hottest star in Hollywood.
  • 1964 – My Fair Lady, retained Broadway star Rex Harrison and costume designer Cecil Beaton, and added stylish direction George Cukor. It also added Audrey Hepburn, who is so luminous that few have ever minded that her singing voice was dubbed by soprano Marni Nixon. The result is a delightful (if slightly overlong) film that garnered eight Academy Awards, including Best Picture. The film does reasonable justice Alan Jay Lerner and Frederick Loewe’s masterpiece. At $17 million, it was the costliest film made in the US up to that time, but it grossed over $60 million in its initial release.
  • 1964 – The Unsinkable Molly Brown (1964 – MGM) turned out well thanks to solid direction by MGM veteran Charles Walters (his final musical) and a career-best performance by Debbie Reynolds. The only follow-up vehicle Hollywood could come up with for this talented star was the entertaining but saccharine semi-musical The Singing Nun (1966).
  • 1965 The Sound of Music. 20th Century Fox had driven itself into bankruptcy spending $40 million on the historical epic Cleopatra. Fox moguls Darryl and Richard Zanuck slashed expenditures and searched for a hit to restore their fortunes. They had done well filming Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein II’s stage hits in the 1950s, and already owned the screen rights to the final R&H show. Fox filmed The Sound of Music as their last hope, with a tight $8.2 million budget. It proved to be one of the most popular films of all time, grossing hundreds of millions and garnering five Academy Awards – including Best Picture. The Sound of Music remained in general release for an unprecedented four years. Decades later, it remains a classic, with a wonderful score, critic-proof performances and breathtaking cinematography. Julie Andrews and Christopher Plummer kept the sentiment in check, and many underrate the crucial, edgy performances of Eleanor Parker as the acerbic Baroness and Richard Haydn as Uncle Max.
  • 1967 Doctor Dolittle gave Hollywood a painful indication of how costly a mismanaged production could be. Budgeted at a then-generous $6 million, casting changes and behind the scenes ego clashes gradually sent costs skyrocketing to over $17 million. Reasonably well received, the film garnered Academy Awards for its special effects and the catchy song “Talk to the Animals.” But the overlong film sold few tickets, and its $9 million gross spelled the end of several musical screen careers — including that of temperamental leading man Rex Harrison.
  • 1969 – Sweet Charity (1969 – Universal) marked Bob Fosse’s first directorial assignment on the big screen, adapting his hit stage musical about a dance hall girl looking for love in Manhattan. The result is a gem of a film that is often inexplicably overlooked by scholars and film buffs. Shirley MacLaine dazzled in the title role, with delicious supporting performances by musical stage veterans Chita Rivera and Stubby Kaye.
  • 1968 Acclaimed director William Wyler used Barbra Streisand’s screen debut as Fanny Brice in Funny Girl (1968 – Columbia) to reshape this stage hit in vibrant cinematic terms. The popular star gave a luminous performance, earning an Academy Award for Best Actress. The “Don’t Rain On My Parade” sequence, beginning in a Baltimore train station and ending with Streisand belting her way across New York Harbor on a tugboat, was particularly magical.
  • 1969 The British film version of Oliver! (1969 – Columbia) was superb in every department, but Ron Moody (Fagin) and Jack Wild (The Artful Dodger) were standouts.. Choreographer Onna White staged some of the most believable ensemble dances ever filmed. What was enjoyable on stage became dazzling on screen, and Oliver! richly deserved its Academy Award for Best Picture.
  • 1969 Hello Dolly (Fox) received such a massive production that much of the show’s charm was compromised. Director Gene Kelly and choreographer Michael Kidd managed some good moments, but Barbara Streisand was far too young to play the title role, and occasionally reverted to an uneasy Mae West impersonation. While there is much to enjoy — most notably Streisand’s brief but iconic duet with Louis Armstrong — this film all too often wastes material that deserved far better treatment. Tens of millions were lost on each of these projects. They were expensive – and scary – harbingers of what lay ahead in the 1970’s.
  • Elvis Presley, the hip-gyrating King of Rock ‘n’ Roll, starred in thirty musical movies between 1956 and 1970 — more musicals than any other screen star during the same period. The most memorable titles on the list include Jailhouse Rock (1956), Girls! Girls! Girls! (1962) and Viva Las Vegas (1964). By grafting Presley pop songs onto routine plots (his films made no attempt to integrate song & story), these relatively low budget projects made truckloads of money. Presley’s original film songs include the charming ballads “Love Me Tender” and “Can’t Help Falling in Love.” While these films may not be artistic landmarks, they attracted millions of movie goers – no small accomplishment at a time when musicals were fading from the scene.

 

Musicals 1950

La Dansa  |    El musical


During the 1950s, the music of Broadway was the popular music of the western world. Every season brought a fresh crop of classic hit musicals that were eagerly awaited and celebrated by the general public. Great stories, told with memorable songs and dances were the order of the day, resulting in such unforgettable hits as The King and I, My Fair Lady, Gypsy and dozens more. These musicals were shaped by three key elements:

Composers: Rodgers & Hammerstein, Loesser, Bernstein
Directors: George Abbott, Jerome Robbins, Bob Fosse
Female stars: Gwen Verdon, Mary Martin, Ethel Merman

  • 1950 Call Me Madam, Irving Berlin for Ethel Merman, providing her with Broadway’s first musical hit of the decade. Merman’s character was based on Perle Mesta, a real-life Democratic party fundraiser who was named ambassador to Luxembourg. The musical was set in mythical “Lichtenburg,” and spoofed America’s penchant for lending billions to other countries. Merman stopped the show with Russell Nype singing one of Berlin’s best counterpoint duets, “You’re Just In Love.” Dirigit per George Abbot. eorge Abbott was so revered that even longtime colleagues addressed him as “Mr. Abbott.” He had more than twenty years experience as an actor, playwright and comedy director when he staged his first musical, Jumbo (1935 – 233 performances). Over the next 27 years, he directed 26 Broadway musicals, 22 of which were moneymakers. He also wrote all or part of the librettos for many of those shows. Abbott’s swift pacing and instinct for dramatic construction did much to shape the American musical comedy as we know it. He urged composers to tailor songs to specific characters and situations long before anyone else was interested. Many a show facing trouble on the road to Broadway benefited from Abbot’s unaccredited doctoring – which came to be known as “the Abbott touch.”
  • 1950 Guys and Dolls, Frank Loesser (1950 – 1,200 performances), considered by many to be the finest American musical comedy ever written. Abe Burrows adapted the script from journalist Damon Runyon’s fictional stories about the denizens of Times Square, and Loesser wrote an extraordinary score that included “I’ve Never Been In Love Before,” “Fugue For Tinhorns,” and “Luck Be A Lady Tonight.” Vivian Blaine won a Tony as the love-hungry showgirl Miss Adelaide, and Stubby Kaye stopped the show with the raucous gambler’s anthem “Sit Down, You’re Rockin’ the Boat.” The show won the Tony for Best Musical.
  • 1951 The King and I, Rodgers & Hammerstein was based on Anna Leonowens real life experiences tutoring the royal family of Siam in the 1860s. The clash of Eastern and Western cultures sets Anna and the King on a collision course, further complicated by their unspoken feelings for each other. Gertrude Lawrence, who had suggested the project, played the Welsh schoolteacher. At Mary Martin’s urging, the little-known Yul Brynner was cast as the King. The score included “Whistle a Happy Tune,” “Hello Young Lovers,” “I Have Dreamed,” and “Something Wonderful.” In the show’s most memorable moment, “Shall We Dance,” depicted an impromptu dance lesson between Anna and the King that exploded with romantic tension. The musical theater lost one of its most luminous stars when Lawrence succumbed to cancer during the run. Brynner made a career of playing the King, appearing in the acclaimed 1956 film version and numerous revivals until his death in 1985. Robbins combined arrative dance and oriental technique “Small House of Uncle Thomas Ballet.” He also staged the “March of the Siamese Children” and the showstopping “Shall We Dance.
  • 1951 Paint Your Wagon, Loewe Lerner, a rustic love story set during the California Gold Rush. Featuring “I Talk To The Trees” and “They Call The Wind Mariah,” [d’on van fer la peli que recordo]
  • 1953 Wonderful Town, starred Rosalind Russell as a reporter seeking love and success in Greenwich Village. The score featured music by Leonard Bernstein, with lyrics by his On the Town collaborators Betty Comden and Adolph Green – including “Ohio” and “A Little Bit in Love.” Dir. George Abbot.
  • 1953 Can-Can, Cole Porter, a comic story of do-gooders and high-kicking cabaret dancers battling over the scandalous 1890s dance craze. French cabaret star Lilo got star billing and the chance to introduce the hit songs “I Love Paris” and “C’est Magnifique,” but newcomer Gwen Verdon stole the evening playing an uninhibited chorine.
  • 1954 The Pajama Game (1954 – 1,063 performances) focused on a pajama factory superintendent and a union rep falling in love as a strike looms. Bob Fosse’s dances gave the show electrifying drive, and the score by newcomers Richard Adler and Jerry Ross included three pop hits — “Hey There” (introduced by leading man John Raitt), “Steam Heat” and “Hernando’s Hideaway.” Dir George Abbot. Fosse built on what choreographers Robbins and Agnes DeMille had begun, adding a touch of show biz razzle-dazzle and a generous dose of unapologetic sex appeal. He found the perfect vehicle for his style in Gwen Verdon, a gifted dancer and actress who combined vulnerability with sleek sensuality.
  • 1954 Peter Pan, Los Angeles-based producer Edwin Lester secured the American rights to James Barrie’s Peter Pan and reconceived it as a musical for Martin. (Because of the flying apparatus used at the time, it was physically necessary to cast women as Peter.) Despite having Cyril Ritchard as a comically effete Captain Hook, staging by Jerome Robbins, and a Carolyn Leigh-Moose Charlap score that included “I’m Flying” and “I Won’t Grow Up,” more was needed. Lyricists Betty Comden and Adolph Green joined composer Jule Styne to add “Neverland,” “Hook’s Waltz” and several other numbers that showcased the two stars. Martin and Ritchard gave their all, and Peter Pan (1954 – 152 performances) became a critically acclaimed hit.
  • 1955 Silk Stockings, Cole Porter, a Cold War love story based on Greta Garbo’s MGM comedy Ninotchka.
  • 1955 Damn Yankees, had a Washington baseball fan sell his soul to the devil for a chance to lead his favorite team to a championship over the New York Yankees. Fosse’s dances and a knockout performance by Gwen Verdon made it the hottest ticket on Broadway. The brilliant score by Adler and Ross (“Heart,” “Whatever Lola Wants”) has kept the show a perennial favorite. Ross died early in the run due to leukemia, ending one of the most promising collaborations of the decade. Dir George Abbot. Verdon played a demonic temptress, stopping the show with the raunchy “Whatever Lola Wants.” The show, choreographer and actress all collected Tonys, and Fosse made the connection permanent by marrying Verdon during the run.
  • 1956 The Most Happy Fella, Frank Loesser, an operatic version of Sidney Howard’s drama They Knew What They Wanted. An aging Napa Valley vintner (played by Metropolitan Opera bass Robert Weede) falls in love with a lonely young waitress, and both must learn to forgive each other for selfish mistakes. The waitress was played by the gifted soprano Jo Sullivan, who became Mrs. Loesser soon after this production. Loesser blended arias (“My Heart Is So Full of You”) with pop songs (“Standing On The Corner”), and this unlikely mix proved remarkably effective. Overshadowed by the acclaim lavished on My Fair Lady, this masterpiece never got the credit it deserved. Revivals have proven that Fella is like caviar – fans adore it, but much of the general theatre going public somehow does not get the point.
  • 1956 My Fair Lady, Loewe, Lerner. Some were surprised when this team announced that their next project would be a musical version of George Bernard Shaw’s comedy Pygmalion. No less an authority than Oscar Hammerstein II warned Lerner this project could not possibly work. It seems that even the greatest genius can be wrong. To many (this author included), this is the finest work the musical theatre has ever produced, with a remarkable blend of eloquence, melody, intelligence and heart that has never been surpassed. Rex Harrison, Julie Andrews and Stanley Holloway headed the cast, Cecil Beaton designed the distinctive Edwardian costumes, and playwright Moss Hart directed. The book mixed some of Shaw’s original dialogue with wonderful new scenes by Lerner, all deftly interwoven with an exquisite score, which included “With A Little Bit of Luck,” “I Could Have Danced All Night,” “On The Street Where You Live,” and “I’ve Grown Accustomed to Her Face.”
    My Fair Lady is filled with examples of flawless story-song integration. In one scene, Professor Higgins and Colonel Pickering try for weeks to train cockney flower girl Eliza Doolittle to speak like a lady. Late one night, the caustic Higgins speaks gently to an exhausted Eliza about the beauty and majesty of the English language, reassuring her that she will conquer it. After a breathless moment, Eliza makes the phonetic connection and correctly pronounces, “The rain . . . in Spain . . . stays mainly in the . . . plain.” Disbelief turns to jubilation as the three characters break into a celebratory tango, collapsing onto a sofa at the final note. It is one of the most exhilarating moments the theatre has ever produced. Another standout is the wordless moment when Eliza first appears in a dazzling Edwardian ball gown. As she descends a staircase to the melody of “I Could Have Danced All Night,” Higgins and the audience sees the “squashed cabbage leaf” complete her transformation into an elegant lady. This wordless moment has moved theatergoers in countless productions. It is worth noting that both of these exquisite scenes discussed above do not exist in Shaw’s Pygmalion – Lerner created them for My Fair Lady. From its first performance on the road, it was clear that the show was a phenomenon. It opened to unanimous raves, won every major award, became Broadway’s longest running musical up to that time (a record that stood for a decade), and played to acclaim in numerous languages all around the world. It has been revived several times in both New York and London, remaining a worldwide favorite after almost half a century.
  • 1957 The Music Man, Meredith Willson. Robert Preston played a phony traveling salesman who’s plans to flim-flam an Iowa town in 1912 are thwarted by his love for the local librarian, a role that made Barbara Cook Broadway’s premiere ingénue. The score was a disarming potpourri of period styles including the Sousa-style march “Seventy-Six Trombones,” the revival tent exhortation “Trouble,” several barbershop quartets and the soaring ballad “Till There Was You.” The book captured a time of innocence with both humor and charm, and director Morton DaCosta’s staging was so deft that no one complained about the show’s shameless sentimentality. The Music Man remains one of the world’s most popular musicals, an all-American explosion of hokum and heart. Many forget that this show beat out West Side Story for the Best Musical Tony in 1957. It became the longest-running Broadway musical up to that time with book, music and lyrics written by one person (well, there have been rumors that Willson’s pal Frank Loesser helped with “My White Knight”).
  • 1957 West Side Story, Leonard Bernstein i Stephen Sondheim, director/choreographer Jerome Robbins and librettist Arthur Laurents. Inspired by Shakespeare, it set a Polish-American Romeo and a Puerto Rican Juliet in the middle of a New York City street gang war. This show combined glorious music, a finely wrought libretto and unforgettable dancing. Bernstein’s melodies had a steamy vitality that gave the score tremendous appeal. “Maria” and “Somewhere” soared with operatic grandeur, “Dance at the Gym” was a jazz explosion, “America” had an irresistible Latin sound, and “Gee Officer Krupke” was a variation on classic vaudeville. The original cast included Chita Rivera, the first in a string of show-stealing performances that she would offer right into the next century. Carol Lawrence and Larry Kert played the doomed lovers and introduced the hit ballad “Tonight.”
  • 1957 New Girl In Town, was songwriter Bob Merrill’s musicalization of Eugene O’Neill’s drama Anna Christie. Abbott shaped the story of a prostitute finding love on the waterfront of 1912 New York into a workable musical vehicle for Gwen Verdon, but ongoing battles with choreographer Fosse made this his last collaboration with Abbott.
  • 1958 Flower Drum Song, Rodgers & Hammerstein, taking a genial look at generations clashing in a Chinese family in San Francisco. With direction by Gene Kelly, its score included “I Enjoy Being a Girl” and “Love Look Away.”
  • 1959 Redhead,  the tale of a 1907 London girl who helps her boyfriend catch a Jack the Ripper-type serial killer, was a so-so show that relied heavily on Verdon’s charms and Fosse’s sensational choreography. The dances included “The Uncle Sam Rag” and “The Pickpocket Tango.” Redhead picked up Tony Awards for best musical, actress and choreography, among others. With Verdon’s first four Broadway roles, she had become the first performer ever to win four Tonys — an accomplishment very few have matched since that time. Fosse and Verdon took their relationship a step further, secretly marrying soon after Redhead opened.
  • 1959 The Sound of Music, Rodgers & Hammerstein was inspired by the story of Austria’s Trapp Family Singers and their escape from the Nazis in the 1930s. The score included “Do Re Mi,” “Edelweiss,” “My Favorite Things,” and the title tune. Oscar Hammerstein II died due to stomach cancer a few months after The Sound of Music opened, ending a career that spanned the golden age of musical theatre and film. ( la meravella del jazz, versió de Coltrane: https://youtu.be/qWG2dsXV5HI)
  • 1959 Gypsy, was not a dance show, but Robbins added much to it by re-creating the dance styles of vaudeville and burlesque. When three strippers assured young Louise (about to blossom as Gypsy Rose Lee) that “You Gotta Get a Gimmick” to succeed in burlesque, Robbins turned their bumps and grinds into one of the funniest showstoppers in theatrical history.

CINEMA

  • 1950 Tea for Two amb Doris Day, Warner (estrenat a Broadway el 1925)

  • 1950 Cinderella, Disney
  • 1951 Alice in Wonderland, Disney
  • 1951 Royal Wedding had Fred Astaire dancing on the ceiling, partnering a hat rack (and making it look good), and joining Jane Powell for the knock-about duet “How Could You Believe Me When I Said I Loved You When You Know I’ve Been A Liar All My Life?” Stanley Donen directed, composer Burton Lane and lyricist Alan Jay Lerner wrote the score, and Lerner penned the story of what happens to a brother/sister dance team when sis wants to marry a British nobleman and big bro falls for a West End dancer (played by Winston Churchill’s real life daughter). This serviceable plot was inspired by Astaire’s real life story – his sister Adele had ended their long partnership in order to marry a British nobleman in 1932. (MGM)
  • 1951 An American in Paris, MGM, An ex-GI turned painter played by Gene Kelly avoids seduction by a wealthy heiress and falls in love with Parisian shop girl Leslie Caron, all while pianist Oscar Levant provides sardonic commentary. Director Vincente Minnelli used Alan Jay Lerner’s screenplay to showcase classic George and Ira Gershwin songs. “By Strauss” and “I Got Rhythm” became giddy sidewalk production numbers, and a 17-minute fantasy ballet (which took more than two months to rehearse and shoot) turned the tone poem “American in Paris” into the most ambitious use of dance ever attempted in a feature film. This amazing film has pretentious moments, but they usually go unnoticed thanks to the sheer style, energy and genius the Freed unit brought to every frame. An American in Paris received six Academy Awards including Best Picture, Best Screenplay (for newcomer Alan Jay Lerner) and a special award for Gene Kelly’s contribution to dance on screen.
  • 1952 Singin in The Rain MGM, Gene Kelly and Stanley Donen co-directed this hilarious screenplay written by Betty Comden and Adolph Green, inspired by the insanity that reigned in Hollywood when sound was introduced. The plot involves a swashbuckling silent movie star (Kelly) turning a silent flick into a song & dance spectacular with the assistance of his best friend (Donald O’Connor) and soon-to-be girlfriend (Debbie Reynolds), and all despite the machinations of a vicious silent screen diva (Jean Hagen). The cast performed a parade of producer Arthur Freed’s vintage MGM songs with one new comedy number by Comden and Green (“Moses Supposses”), and a derivative new song by Freed (“Make ‘Em Laugh,” painfully similar to Cole Porter’s “Be a Clown”). Few cinematic images are as well known as a rapturous, rain soaked Gene Kelly swinging from a lamppost as he performs the title tune. A modest success in its initial release, the film’s reputation as a classic grew over time. Singin’ in the Rain is now hailed as one of the best films ever made, and is justifiably called the greatest musical comedy created for the big screen.
  • 1953 Peter Pan, Disney
  • 1953, The Bandwagon, MGM, Comden and Green wrote this brilliant backstage story of a stage musical struggling on its way to Broadway. Vincente Minnelli directed and Michael Kidd provided the witty choreography. Using songs from several Arthur Schwartz and Howard Dietz stage scores (plus the newly composed “That’s Entertainment”), it featured Fred Astaire, Cyd Charisse, Nanette Fabray, Oscar Levant and British stage star Jack Buchannan. Astaire and Charisse shared a stunning pas de deux in “Dancing In The Dark,” Fabray, Astaire and Buchannan were riotous as “Triplets,” and the suave Astaire-Buchannan duet “I Guess I’ll Have To Change My Plan” is a rarely hailed moment of pure cinematic gold.
  • 1954 A Star is Born, Warner Brothers most masterful 1950s musical was built by another stellar team of MGM alumni: director George Cukor, screenwriter Moss Hart, composer Harold Arlen, lyricist Ira Gershwin and performer Judy Garland. The magnificent A Star is Born (1954) was based on a classic 1937 tearjerker about an unknown actress surviving Hollywood stardom and personal heartbreak. After months of long and tortured filming, Garland gave the most unbridled and powerful screen performance of her career, while Cukor and company made “The Man That Got Away” and other songs emotional highpoints that fit seamlessly into the story.
  • 1954 White Christmas, Bing Crosby i Danny Kaye
  • 1955 Oklahoma, 1956 Carousel, 1956 The King 1958 South Pacific, revivals de la 20th Century Fox revivals de Rodgers i Hamerstein.
  • 1955 The Lady and the Tramp, disney
  • 1957 Seven Brides for Seven Brothers, MGM, This is the only film in this MGM quartet that was not created by the Freed unit. Produced by Jack Cummings and directed by Stanley Donen, this gem featured singing stars Jane Powell and Howard Keel, but it s fame rests in several hearty ensemble dance sequences choreographed by Michael Kidd. The plot involves a mountain woodsman (Keel) whose marriage to a wholesome town girl (Powell) inspires his six spirited brothers to kidnap six town girls of their own – and all of them are so gosh-darn honorable that the film winds up with seven happily married couples. Even a fine Johnny Mercer-Gene dePaul score (“Wonderful Day,” “Sobbin’ Women”) has trouble outshining Kidd’s rousing barn-raising challenge dance and the ax-wielding machismo fest “Lonesome Polecat.” Overlooked by studio executives, Seven Brides received a well-deserved Academy Award for Best Score. Although the film cost a hefty $2.5 million, it grossed several times that to bring MGM a handsome profit of $3.2 million.

  • 1957 Funny Face was conceived at MGM, but when Paramount refused to loan out Audrey Hepburn, several key members of the Freed unit (who knew they were in the process of being disbanded) made the film at Paramount. Arthur Freed’s longtime associate Roger Edens produced, Stanley Donen directed, and singer-composer Kay Thompson (Edens’ longtime MGM colleague) gave a film-stealing performance as a ruthless fashion magnate. Fred Astaire made everything from a raincoat to an umbrella come alive as dance partners in “Let’s Kiss and Make Up.” The score consisted of four classic George and Ira Gershwin songs, with several new numbers by Edens and Leonard Gershe. Hepburn gave a disarming performance as an intellectual beauty wooed by photographer Astaire while doing photo spreads for Thompson’s magazine. Impressive as the cast and score are, Donen’s unique sense of cinematic flow makes this film a standout. Every song flows out of the action surrounding it, and unforgettable images abound. Film buffs have long treasured Hepburn’s exuberant descent down a staircase in the Louvre, trailing a red tulle wrap in imitation of the sculpture “Winged Victory” (seen in the photo just above). Although visually stunning and thoroughly entertaining, Funny Face was such a box office disappointment that Paramount stopped making musicals altogether, and MGM allowed the Freed unit to fade away. However, the film developed a dedicated following over time.
  • 1957 Silk Stockings, MGM, musical film adaptation, filmed in CinemaScope, of the 1955 stage musical of the same name,[2] which itself was an adaptation of the film Ninotchka (1939).[3] Silk Stockings was directed by Rouben Mamoulian, produced by Arthur Freed, and starred Fred Astaire and Cyd Charisse. The supporting cast includes Janis Paige, Peter Lorre, Jules Munshin, and George Tobias repeating his Broadway role.[4][5] It was choreographed by Eugene Loring and Hermes Pan.
  • 1957 The Pajama Game, dirigida per George Abbot i Stanley Donen, Doris Day i Carol Heaney.”I’ll Never Be Jealous Again” (20′) i Steam Heat (56′).
  • 1959 Gigi MGM was dismissing it’s contract employees, but a defiant Arthur Freed pulled together one last triumph. At the urging of director Vincente Minnelli, Freed called in My Fair Lady’s Alan Jay Lerner and Frederick Loewe to musicalize French novelist Colette’s story of a young girl who is raised to be a courtesan but manages instead to fall in love with (and marry!) a millionaire. The result was Gigi (1959). The cast included Leslie Caron as the title character, Hermoine Gingold as her protective grandmother and Louis Jourdan as the millionaire. Maurice Chevalier, his roguish charm as irresistible as ever, made a triumphant return to the musical screen as Jourdan’s aging but irrepressible playboy uncle. Gigi had minimal choreography, but the score (“Thank Heaven For Little Girls,” “The Night They Invented Champagne,” “Gigi”) and ingenious screenplay made the potentially unsavory subject matter into a sophisticated yet family-friendly hit. Where other film makers settled for a standard postcard vision of Paris, Minnelli shows the city from the everyday perspective of Parisians. Instead of gazing at the Eiffel Tower from a distance, we travel beneath it; instead of a glittering hotel or romanticized garret, we see such wildly contrasted residences as a dazzling palace interior and a frowsy bourgeois apartment. Minnelli also makes amazing use of light and shadow. In one sequence, a pensive Jourdan is silhouetted against illuminated fountains, communicating a key moment of revelation with a few mute movements – the sort of pure cinematic effect that could never be accomplished on a Broadway stage.
    Despite Gigi’s tremendous critical and commercial success, MGM’s Freed unit passed into history. Producer Arthur Freed and his associates would not receive their full due until the release of That’s Entertainment (1974) reminded the world what a rich legacy they had left behind.

 

 

Musicals 1940

La Dansa  |    El musical


The 1940s started out with business-as-usual musical comedy, but Rodgers & Hart’s Pal Joey and Weill and Gershwin’s Lady in the Dark opened the way for more realistic musicals. Rodgers and Hammerstein’s Oklahoma (1943) was the first fully integrated musical play, using every song and dance to develop the characters or the plot. After Oklahoma, the musical would never be the same – but composers Irving Berlin (Annie Get Your Gun – 1946) and Cole Porter (Kiss Me Kate – 1947) soon proved themselves ready to adapt to the integrated musical.

With the world at war and America still suffering echoes of the Great Depression, most Broadway professionals felt that audiences of the early 1940s wanted an escape from reality, the more lighthearted the better.

  • 1940 Cabin In The Sky, Vernon Duke i John Latouche, the parable of an angel and a demon in a tug of war for a black man’s soul. The fine score (including “Taking a Chance On Love”) was integrated with the book, but the show had a limited appeal. The superb 1943 MGM film version had a similar fate — rave reviews, weak box office response.
  • 1940 Pal Joey, Richard Rodgers and Lorenz Hart, took some creative risks, first musical to center on an anti-hero. The title character is a sleazy nightclub hoofer who hustles his way to success by manipulating a wealthy mistress, only to lose everything when she comes to her senses and dumps him. The score ranged from the innocent romance of “I Could Write A Book” to the sexual bite of “Bewitched, Bothered and Bewildered.” Newcomer Gene Kelly played the title character, with Vivienne Segal as his mistress and June Havoc (vaudeville’s former “Baby June”) as one of the nightclub showgirls. Of course, it helped that veteran director George Abbott was on hand to pull all these elements together.
  • 1942 This is the Army, Irving Berlin, a revue with an all-Army cast poking lighthearted fun at the trials of military life. Musical highlights included “I Left My Heart at the Stage Door Canteen.”, “Oh, How I Hate to Get Up in the Morning”
  • 1940 Panama Hattie, Cole Porter, starred Ethel Merman as a brassy Canal Zone bar owner who tries to polish up her act when she falls in love with a Philadelphia socialite.
  • 1941 Let’s Face It, Cole Porter featured Eve Arden and Danny Kaye in a tale of three wealthy wives who get revenge on their cheating husbands by taking on three soldiers as gigolos. The score included “Let’s Not Talk About Love” and “You Irritate Me So.”
  • 1941 Lady in the dark, Kurt Weil i Ira Gershwin, the story of a magazine editor who uses psychoanalysis to explore her romantic insecurities. The music was restricted to several dream sequences in which the main character saw herself at events representing her inner turmoil — a party, a trial, and a circus. Newcomer Danny Kaye’s winning performance as an effeminate fashion photographer (and his lightning fast delivery of the patter song “Tschaikowsky”) made him an immediate star, but even he could not steal the show from Gertrude Lawrence. With the ballad “My Ship” and the show-stopping “Jenny,” this masterful stage star kept audiences cheering for the longest run of her career.
  • 1942 By Jupiter, Rodgers and Hart,which told of a conflict between ancient Greeks and female Amazon warriors. Hilarious role reversals between men and women (“You swear like a longshorewoman!”) stretched the creative boundaries. A stellar performance by Ray Bolger and a score that included “Wait Till You See Her” made this Rodgers & Hart’s longest running show. It was also the last new score they would collaborate on. ( Torn by personal demons, including shame over his homosexuality, Hart had become a hopeless alcoholic.) A partir d’aquí treballaria amb Oscar Hammerstein II.
  • 1943 Something For the Boys, Cole Porter is the perfect example of what most musical comedies tried to be in the early 1940s, relying on a major star, an unlikely plot situation, and a few wacky comic twists. Ethel Merman played a wartime factory worker who inherits property adjacent to a military base in Texas. While there, she falls in love with a bandleader/soldier and finds that her dental fillings pick up radio signals. “Hey Good Lookin'” “Something for the boys”.
  • 1943 Oklahoma!, is the first musical written by the duo of Rodgers and Hammerstein. The musical is based on Lynn Riggs’ 1931 play, Green Grow the Lilacs. Set in farm country outside the town of Claremore, Indian Territory, in 1906, it tells the story of farm girl Laurey Williams and her courtship by two rival suitors, cowboy Curly McLain and the sinister and frightening farmhand Jud Fry. A secondary romance concerns cowboy Will Parker and his flirtatious fiancée, Ado Annie. This musical, building on the innovations of the earlier Show Boat, epitomized the development of the “book musical”, a musical play where the songs and dances are fully integrated into a well-made story with serious dramatic goals that are able to evoke genuine emotions other than laughter. In addition, Oklahoma! features musical themes, or motifs, that recur throughout the work to connect the music and story. A fifteen-minute “dream ballet” reflects Laurey’s struggle with her feelings about two men, Curly and Jud. // The new collaborators began with a painstaking assessment of what made the characters tick, where songs would fit and what the style and content of each number should be. They also visualized possibilities for casting, set design, lighting and staging. Once they had agreed on these points, each headed home — Rodgers to his farm in upstate New York, Hammerstein to his farm in Pennsylvania. Oscar fashioned the book and lyrics with great care, laboring for weeks over certain phrases and rhymes. He then either telegraphed or phoned in the results to Rodgers, who had been mulling over melodic options and would sometimes have a completed tune on paper in a matter of minutes. Because the Theatre Guild was bankrupt, its mangers gave Rodgers and Hammerstein extraordinary creative control over the project. With little to lose, R&H took several artistic risks.//Despite strong comic material (“I Cain t Say No”) and a healthy dose of romance (“People Will Say We re In Love,” “Out of My Dreams”) this show was neither a typical musical comedy nor an operetta. This was something new, a fully rounded musical play, with every element dedicated to organically moving the story forward. // The Theatre Guild suggested modern dance choreographer Agnes DeMille. R&H were uneasy about DeMille’s insistence on selecting trained modern dancers in place of the standard chorus kids, but the resulting personality-rich ensemble was a key factor in the show’s eventual fate. All these high-minded choices made Away We Go (as the musical was initially named) a tough sell to investors. Despite their distinguished resumes, Rodgers and Hammerstein had to spend months auditioning the material for potential backers, and the Theatre Guild had to sell off its beloved theater to satisfy anxious debtors. By the time the original run ended, backers saw an astounding 2,500% return on their investment. Before Oklahoma, Broadway composers and lyricists were songwriters – after Oklahoma, they had to be dramatists, using everything in the score to develop character and advance the action. As Mark Steyn explains in Broadway Babies Say Goodnight (Routledge, NY, 1999, p.67), with earlier songs by Lorenz Hart or Cole Porter, you hear the lyricist – with Hammerstein, you hear the characters.
  • 1944 On The Town, Leonard Bernstein & Comden Green, coreo Jerome Robbins used modern dance and song to depict the romantic adventures of three sailors on shore leave in New York. Coming from the world of classical ballet, Jerome Robbins used dance as a story-telling device, making it as intrinsic to the musical as the script and the score. What Agnes DeMille had in initiated in Oklahoma came to fruition in the best Robbins stagings. He worked closely with authors and composers, defining the core stories and taking an active role in shaping much of the material he would bring to life on stage. As a result, his directorial concepts are often woven into the librettos and songs, a permanent element in the fabric of these shows. He directed and/or choreographed a roster of hits, including some of the most memorable musicals of the post-Oklahoma era.
  • 1945 Carousel, Rodgers and Hammerstein, the story of Billy Bigelow and Julie Jordan, young New Englanders who fall into a passionate but abusive marriage. When Julie becomes pregnant, Billy tries to provide for his unborn child by taking part in a robbery – and dies by falling on his own knife. Years later, Billy’s ghost returns from heaven for one day to help his wife and daughter get on with their lives. This often dark story was matched to a glorious score (“If I Loved You,” “You’ll Never Walk Alone”), luminous choreography by Agnes DeMille, and a remarkable cast of newcomers led by John Raitt and Jan Clayton. Although Carousel never matched the amazing popularity of Oklahoma, it has always enjoyed a devoted following.
  • Billion Dollar Baby (1945 – 219 performances) was built around a series of story-telling dances, once again with Abbott directing and Robbins handling the musical numbers.
  • 1946 Annie Get Your Gun, Berlin & Dorothy Fields. When Jerome Kern died suddenly in 1945, librettists Herb and Dorothy Fields needed a new composer for a musical about famed sharpshooter Annie Oakley. Rodgers and Hammerstein were already producing the project and swamped with other commitments, so they turned to friend and colleague Irving Berlin. was uncertain that he could adapt to the new style of fully integrated musical play. Handed the libretto on a Friday, he showed up the following Monday with “Doin’ What Comes Naturally,” “You Can’t Get A Man With A Gun” and “There’s No Business Like Show Business” — great songs that were firmly rooted in character & the plot.
  • 1947 Brigadoon, Loewe, Loerner
  • 1947 High Button Shoes, had a score by Jule Styne and a stellar comic performance by Phil Silvers as a slick 1913 con man, but it is primarily remembered for Robbins’ choreography, most notably a madcap “Mack Sennett Ballet.” Keystone-style cops and bathing beauties were unleashed in a wild chase to nowhere, stopping the show. The director was (who else?) George Abbott.
  • 1948 Kiss Me Kate’s, Cole Porter, The libretto and lyrics kept the original spirit of Shakespeare intact, but added a healthy dose of sophisticated contemporary hilarity. Porter’s score included “Wunderbar,” “So In Love With You Am I,” and the bawdy “Brush Up Your Shakespeare”.
  • 1949 South Pacific, Rodgers i Hammerstein, was unusual in many ways. There was almost no dance, two equally important love stories, and the dramatic tension was not provided by any single antagonist (a.k.a. – a “bad guy”) or “silly misunderstanding.” Both love stories were u against “carefully taught” racial prejudices. These reflex hatreds drive key characters to push away from the people they love. In the case of a young Lieutenant and his native girl, the results are tragic, but Nellie and Emile are finally reunited.

CINEMA

  • 1941 You’ll Never Get Rich (1941), Fred Astaire i Rita Hayworth catapulted Hayworth to stardom. In the movie, Astaire integrated for the third time Latin American dance idioms into his style (the first being with Ginger Rogers in “The Carioca” number from Flying Down to Rio (1933) and the second, again with Rogers, was the “Dengozo” dance from The Story of Vernon and Irene Castle (1939)).
  • 1942 You Were Never Lovelier (1942), Fred Astaire Rita Hayworth was equally successful.
  • 1942 Yankee Doodle Dandy, Warner, the most entertaining musical film bio of all time, which soared thanks to James Cagney’s Oscar-winning performance as Broadway legend George M. Cohan. Top-rank director Michael Curtiz gave the film exceptional overall polish.
  • 1942 For Me And My Gal, Garland and newcomer Gene Kelly star as vaudevillians hoping to play The Palace. The title tune became a major hit.
  • 1943 The Sky’s the Limit. He next appeared opposite the seventeen-year-old Joan Leslie in the wartime drama. In it, he introduced Arlen and Mercer’s “One for My Baby” while dancing on a bar counter in a dark and troubled routine. Astaire choreographed this film alone and achieved modest box office success. It represented a notable departure for Astaire from his usual charming, happy-go-lucky screen persona, and confused contemporary critics.
  • 1943 Stormy Weather, amb Bill Robinson, Fats Waller, Lena Horne i els Nicholas Brothers en una de les escenes més extraordinàries de la història.
  • 1943 A Cabin in the Sky, dirigit per Vicente Minneli, amb Ethel Waters, Duke Ellington, John Bubbles.
  • 1944 Meet Me In St. Louis, directed by Vincente Minnelli (Garland’s future husband) is the most fondly remembered of her wartime films. Garland was the picture of wholesome talent in what she often said was her favorite role. This nostalgic story of a 1903 family facing harmless domestic problems was embraced by a war-torn world. The score blended period tunes with new Hugh Martin-Ralph Blane hits – “The Boy Next Door,” “The Trolley Song” and “Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas.”
  • 1944 Cover Girl, the story of a Brooklyn nightclub dancer who becomes a top magazine model. Designed as a vehicle for screen beauty Rita Hayworth (whose singing was always dubbed), it marked Gene Kelly’s transition to stardom. On loan from MGM, his “alter ego” dance with a reflection of himself in a glass window proved to be the first of many classic screen moments. The number was conceived and staged by Stanley Donen, who would play a major role in Kelly’s career and direct several great MGM musicals over the next ten years. Cover Girl was such a hit that MGM refused to ever again loan Kelly out for a musical role.
    https://youtu.be/jr7-qi7JRtc
  • 1945 The fantasy Yolanda and the Thief, Vicente Minnelli, Fred Astaire, Lucille Bremer featured an avant-garde surrealistic ballet.
  • 1945 Ziegfeld Follies (1945), Astaire danced with Gene Kelly to the Gershwin song “The Babbit and the Bromide,” a song Astaire had introduced with his sister Adele back in 1927. While Follies was a hit, Yolanda bombed at the box office. Always insecure and believing his career was beginning to falter, Astaire surprised his audiences by announcing his retirement during the production of his next film Blue Skies (1946). He nominated “Puttin’ on the Ritz” as his farewell dance. After announcing his retirement in 1946, Astaire concentrated on his horse-racing interests and in 1947 founded the Fred Astaire Dance Studios, which he subsequently sold in 1966.
  • 1945 Anchors Aweigh, Kelly helped pop crooner Frank Sinatra look like a capable hoofer. Ball amb Jerry: https://youtu.be/2msq6H2HI-Y  https://youtu.be/9UhHu0YEj-A
  • 1946 Ziegfield Follies, Gene Kelly Fred Astaire
  • 1948 Easter Parade, Garland becomes Fred Astaire’s vaudeville dance partner in this romantic comedy set to mostly vintage songs by Irving Berlin. The two stars introduced the memorable hobo duet “A Couple of Swells.”
    Garland later insisted that MGM got the most out of her by encouraging studio doctors to prescribe a dangerous array of pills to crank her up by day and force her to sleep at night. But no other performer ever blamed MGM for encouraging chemical dependency. It was Garland’s controlling mother who got her started on pills, and while the studio may have abetted the abuse, it also encouraged and supported Garland through several attempts at rehabilitation that inevitably fell apart due to her crushing workload. Between the pressures and the pills, this gifted young lady was often a physical and nervous wreck. https://youtu.be/J3aUAiLU0TI
  • 1949 On The Town (1949), Gene Kelly codirigit amb Donen, a former Broadway chorus dancer with a remarkable instinct for musical film. Donen, Kelly and producer Arthur Freed would create some superb screen musicals in the art form’s remaining years.
    Although the Hollywood musical was doomed, its last gasps would be among its most glorious.

 

Fred Astaire RKO 1930

RKO

  • 1933 Flying Down To Rio, RKO, Astaire i Rogers en un paper secundari que va encantar el públic. Stanley Donen explica: “I was nine, and I’d never seen anything like it in my life. I’m not sure I have since. It was as if something had exploded inside me. . . I was mesmerized. I could not stop watching Fred Astaire dance. I went back to the theatre every day while the picture was playing. I must’ve seen it at least twenty times. Fred Astaire was so graceful. It was as if he were connected to the music. He led it and he interpreted it, and he made it look so effortless. He performed as though he were absolutely without gravity.”

Primer solo, show aerithe Carioca, Dolores del Rio

  • 1934 The Gay Divorcee (1934), RKO, Astaire i Rogers protagonistes, they danced and romanced, inventing what became their standard formula – in a high society setting, a charming playboy and a sweet girl with spunk get into a tangle of mistaken identities, fall in love on the dance floor (to something like Cole Porter’s “Night and Day”), resolve their misunderstandings in the nick of time, and foxtrot their way to a black and white “happily ever after” ending. [ la majoria de les coreografies serien d’Astaire i Hermes Pan]

The Continental, Night and Day

  • 1935 Top Hat (1935), RKO, Astaire i Rogers, which embodies the series at its best. There is a a variation of the “mistaken identities” plot with stylish comic support from Edward Everett Horton, Eric Blore and Helen Broderick, and a solid-gold score by Irving Berlin. “Isn’t This a Lovely Day To Be Caught In The Rain,” “No Strings,” the title tune and the unforgettable “Cheek to Cheek” are deftly integrated into a story of mistaken identities set in an eye-popping black and white art deco vision of Venice. The dialogue is breezy and clever, and the atmosphere one of sophisticated delight.

Top Hat White tie Tails, Heaven, Cheek to cheek, No strings, Isn’t this a lovely day to be caught in the rain

  • 1935 Roberta, RKO, Astaire i Rogers included Jerome Kern’s “I’ll Be Hard To Handle”

I’ll be hard to handle, Lovely to Look at, I won’t dance

  • 1936 Follow The Fleet, RKO, Astaire i Rogers had Irving Berlin’s “Let’s Face the Music and Dance”

Let’s face the music and dance, I’m putting all my eggs in one basket, I’d rather lead the band, Let yourself go

  • 1936 Swing Time, RKO, Astaire i Rogers boasted Jerome Kern’s Fields “The Way You Look Tonight”, “Pick yourself up”

Pick yourself up, A fine romance, The way you look tonight, Bojangles of Harlem, Waltz in swingtime, The last dance

  • 1937 Shall We Dance, RKO, Astaire i Rogers offered George and Ira Gershwin’s “Let’s Call the Whole Thing Off” and “They Can’t Take That Away From Me”

Shall we dance, Let’s call the whole thing off (you say potato), They can’t take that away from me, Slap that bass

  • 1938 Carefree, RKO, Astaire i Rogers included Berlin’s “Change Partners”

I used to be color blind Romantic dream, Change partners, The Yam

  • 1939 The Story of Vernon and Irene Castle, RKO, Astaire i Rogers

vals


 

Jazz Dance

dansa, antecedents del musical, antecedents


Després dels inicis als minstrel shows i Vaudeville, els ballarins negres van actuar en alguns espectacles a Broadway durant la dècada dels ’20, com Shuffle Along.

La dansa d’espectacle d’inspiració en jazz tal com diu Marshall Stearns (This book deals with American Dancing that is performed to and with the rhythms of jazz – that is, dancing that swings … The characteristic that distinguishes American vernacular dance -as it does jazz music – is swing, which can be heard, felt, and seen, but defined only with great difficulty), serà sobretot tap dancing combinat amb moviments d’acrobàcia i de balls de saló.

[ les complexitats rítmiques i acrobàtiques dels ballarins negres foren insuperables. Acostumats a Fred Astaire però, sovint es troba a faltar una coreografia que expressi un estat d’ànim o les emocions d’una parella, més enllà de l’exhibició tècnica de passos rapidíssims o splits vrtiginosos]


[ El tap dancing va anar evolucionant a partir de l’Irish Jig, que bàsicament té el cos rígid mentre el treball és amb els peus, i poc a poc va anar incorporant moviments vernaculars (Jazz Dance, 189)][ Es distingeix entre “jazz steps”, on els taps no són essencials, i “flash steps”. Originalment eren passos populars senzills, com el shimmy i el charleston, que es van anar barrejant amb el clog en el minstrel i vaudeville . Passos de tap que es van fer populars són el “falling off the log” i “off to buffalo”.  Els flash steps són més acrobàtics, per exemple “Over the top” i “through the trenches”. (JD 190)] [ Una combinació típica és el BS chorus de 32 bars: 8 time step, 8 cross step, 8 buck and wing, 8 Over the top and through the trenches][ El shim sham té double shuffle, cross over, tackie Annie i Falling off the log. (tap i lindy, ]

Llista early tap dance


HOOFERS CLUB (Jazz Dance, 22)

Al costat del teatre Lafayette, durant els ’20, ’30 i una mica dels ’40 , hi havia un magatzem a la 131st amb la 7th on s’hi podia jugar el poker i on l’amo, Lonnie Hicks, durant dues dècades va deixar que qualsevol pogués practicar tap dance. Cada 6-8 mesos en canviaria el terra. Els joves aprenien dels que ja estaven consagrats.

La dansa tenia uns blocs bàsics, els Time Step. Sovint es basava en la simple melodia Buck dancer’s lament que tenia 6 compassos i en deixava dos per a improvisar: two bar break. Un dels millors a l’inici fou King Rastus Brown. [ Una cerca de Buck dancing a youtube dóna com un clake country descendent de la dansa irlandesa ]

diccionari tap dance  |   Tap dancing ressources

Aquí Coles & Atkins mostren els time steps bàsics amb les frases per recordar els accents “Thanks for the BugGy Ride”, AND Thanks for the BugGy ride”, “And thank YOU for the BugGY ride”, “AND when WILL WE Take a buGY ride”.


Bill Robinson (1878 – 1949) va començar al Vaudeville i es va fer molt popular. Va arribar a guanyar 6.500$ la setmana. Va tenir èxit al musical Blackbirds (1928) i Brown Buddies  (1930).  Es va fer cèlebre pel número amb uns graons:

No va ser un innovador però tenia un gran ritme i una claredat cristalina. El 1932 va per películes a Hollywood amb Shirley Temple. El 1932 Harlem is Heaven amb Bill Robinson, 1937 A mile from heaven, 1943 Stormy Weather (Sand dance). 1934, 1934 King for a day1935, 1935 Living a great big way amb Jeni LeGon.

Tenia un caràcter complicat. Anava sempre amb una pistola, pretenia haver ensenyat passos als joves encara que no fos veritat.


ALTRES

Frank Condos, cèlebres pels five-tap wings, James Barton, Harlan Dixon (amb James Cagney).


JOHN BUBBLES (1902 – 1986) i el Rhythm tap.

De molt jove va provar al Hoofer’s club sense sortir-se’n gaire i li deien “you’re hurting the floor”. Quan va tornar dominava tots els passos i en va complicar el ritme, semblant a com el swing posa els tresets en lloc de dues corxeres. En lloc de fer un tema ràpid amb dos accents, es fa més lent amb quatre. VA fer equip amb el pianista Buck formant el tandem Buck and Bubbles. Va aparèixer al Ziegfield Follies de 1931, al Porgy & Bess el 1935 en el paper de Sportin’ Life

1937 Varsity Show

A Cabin in the Sky 1943

 

1955 I can’t give you anything but love, 1965 amb Dean Martin,

 

BILL BAILEY

1943 A Cabin in the Sky

1955 Rhythm and blues Revue

Moonwalk


FRED ASTAIRE (1899 – 1987) (pàgina a part)

(JD fill d’un cerveser d’Omaha va quedar en segon terme rera la seva germana Adéle amb qui havien començat al Vaudeville com a nens 7 i 9 anys. Va rebre classes de ballet i algunes de claqué.  També van fer molt ballroom i una mica d’acrobàcia. Van rebre classes d’Eduardo Coccia.  Tenia un aire com de “realment no m’interessa el que estic fent”. El 1916 van deixar el vodevil i van passar a Broadway.  Van rebre la influència de parelles de ball, Vernon i Rener Castle, i els Cansino, els pares de Rita Hayworth. Des de 1922 Fred va començar a coreografiar passos, i triar els que més s’adaptaven al seu estil.  El 1932 Adéle es va casar amb un Lord anglès i es va retirar.

A Hollywood treballaria amb el coreògraf Hermes Pan (1944,   ), fill d’un inmigrant grec:

[ Astaire no feia passos de claqué o acrobàtics tan difícils com els altres. El que el fa especial és la barreja de claqué, ballet i ballroom que vol “entertain by dancing some sort of “story”. (JD 227).  Ha de girar al voltant d’una idea, un tema, un estat d’ànim, semblar que s’inspira en una escombra, o un penjador. Després de 25 anys ballant amb Adéle tenia molt material acumulat i cada cop que li venia una idea anotava els passos. Honi Coles deia que ven “body motion, not tap.. he’s a descriptive dancer who works painstakingly with his musical accompaniment; he was the first to dance to programme music, describing every note in the dance” ” Astaire has class, poise, charm, nonchalance, sophistication, elegance”  [ no és un hoofer que fa sons complicats sinó algú que expressa emocions ballant, per això ens agrada tant]


ALTRES ESPECIALITATS

Contorsionistes com Jigsaw Jackson, Dotson, Rubberlegs Williams, Earl “Snake Hips Tucker” (1935 fent lindy,

1930

1935 Ken Snakehips Johnson

1933 Cotton Club amb Duke Ellington, Filmed May 23, 1933, Bessie Dudley and Florence Hill show how to move to Duke Ellington’s Bugle Call Rag. Both Dudley and Hill were Cotton Club dancers, though this was not filmed at the Cotton Club. Bessie Dudley died January 16, 1999 at the age of 88. I’ve not yet been able to find information about Florence Hill.

Comedy dancing, Russian dancing [suposo que són passos així: Ball al Cotton Club )


ACROBATICS

A més dels passos de jazz i clauqé van introduir alguns de Russian i els splits

TIP, TAP & TOE

1935, 1937, 1942, 1944

1936 Four Flash Devils a Soft Lights Sweet Music

 

THE FOUR STEP BROTHERS

Van posar en escena la “challenge dance” en que s’anaven com desafiant fent solos mentre els altres aplaudien. Van introduir cant i van estar en actiu fins 1966.

1933

1943

1944


FLASH ACTS

El 1938 els Nicholas Brothers i els Berry Brothers van competir al Cotton Club.

BERRY BROTHERS

Ananias el gran i amb més talent, Jimmy i Warren ( JD 277) nascuts a New Orleans i després es van traslladar a Denver. Van començar a actuar a Hollywood.

1941 You’ll never Know

1944 Panama Hattie

NICHOLAS BROTHERS (pàgina a part)

Nascuts a Fidadèlfia, Fayard (1914–2006) i Harold (1921–2000). El gran aviat va començar a fer splits saltant tanques. Aviat van començar a actuar i amb 8 i 14 anys ballaven al Cotton Club. La mare era pianista i el pare bateria.

“Nick Castle ranks Fayard as having “the most beautiful hands in show business’, with Fred Astaire second and Buddy Ebsen third. [ Cert! ja m’hi havia fixat  l’elegància de quedar-se immobil en una postura i les mans expressives.  De gran en una entrevista els gestos de les mans són preciosos ]

“Although Fayard was the better dancer, Harold, who did imitations of Cab Calloway and Louis Armstrong, received more attention” [ A mi sempre m’ha agradat més Fayard]

Els Nicholas Brothers feien els splits com en ballet, un al davant i l’altre darrera, mentre que els Berry Brothers feien jive splits, amb una cama doblegada al costat, que pot generar més lesions.

Van treballar amb el coreògraf Nick Castle

CLARK BROTHERS


CLASS ACT

(JD 285: The Class Acts, among other things, were an expression of the Negroes’ drive toward equality and respectability. Imitating and embellishing the formal elegance of the more sophisticated white acts, they ran headlong into an old stereotype: a Negro performer had always been an overdressed dandy or a shiftless plantation hand. Bit by bit they refuted the stereotype, first as individuals and then as teams).

Willie Covan a un Class Act 1938 (Sterns l’esmenta com a acrobatic)

The Four Covans

Eddie Rector feia un soft shoe amb un delicat Time Step. Greenlee and Drayton. Pete Nugent.  [ no he trobat clips ]

 

COLES AND ATKINS

Coles ballava amb precisió ritmes complexos ràpids, “Honi was the creator of high-speed rhythm tap”. Coles excels at transitional steps.

Atkins era més innovador i tenia més afinitat amb dansa moderna i ballet. (Una vegada a les Vegas va desafiar un grup de balalrins professionals de ballet que faria els mateixos passos o millor, i que ells no podrien fer el seu claqué)

Swing is really the thing

Aquí demostrant diferents Time Step, i l’extraordinària soft shoe amb ‘Taking a chance on love’ “It had to be slower than anybody’s else’s, at the same time, it has to be really interesting; and finally, it had t be so lyrical that it could stand by itself, that is to sound just as good with or without accompaniment, so we could to it without music”.

Atkins va ser coreògraf de grups de Motown (Supremes, Martha and the Vandellas,  Cadillacs, Cleftones, moonglows, HEartbeats, Solitaires, Bow ties, Temptations )

1979 The New Low Down

1983 My One and Only,


1940

Baby Laurence. Bunny Briggs. GroundHog

El claqué va deixar de ser popular als ’50. La música es va complicar “for the first time in the parallel histories of jazz music and dance, the drumming often became more complicated than the tapping”.

1946 Ray Sneed Ornithology

196? Will Gaines

1967 Jimmy Slide, Buster Brown, Chuck Green, baby Laurence


GREGORY HINES

Eubie 1979 (musical sencer)

1982 I Got Rhythm

1984 Cotton Club


CONTRIBUCIONS MÉS MODERNES

SAVION GLOVER

Sesame Street

MICHELLE DORRANCE

2019 Taptastic

 

Musicals 1930

La Dansa  |    El musical


The Great Depression did not stop Broadway – in fact, the 1930s saw the lighthearted musical comedy reach its creative zenith. The Gershwin’s Of Thee I Sing (1931) was the first musical ever to win the Pulitzer Prize for Drama. Rodgers & Hart (On Your Toes – 1936) and Cole Porter (Anything Goes – 1934) contributed their share of lasting hit shows and songs. [MS, el musical negre va declinar, per la depressió i perquè el claqué va deixar d’estar de moda per un ball més tipus ballet)]  Les revistes de Ziegfield van perdre interès i un dels responsables de renovar-ho fou el director i coreògraf Hassard Short. Taking a cue from the London revues of Charlot and Cochran, Short tossed out the overblown sets and curvaceous chorines of the 1920s, relying instead on stronger scores and innovative visual ideas that could please audiences without bankrupting producers. [contenció de costos en època de depressió]   George Gershwin (d’origen jueu Lituània) moria el 1937, víctima d’un tumor cerebral, als 38 anys.

  • 1930 Hot Rhythm (n), Bill Robinson (n)
  • 1930 Singin’ the blues Four flash devils + lindy hoppers (n)
  • 1930 Brown Buddies (n)
  • 1930 Three’s A Crowd, Schwarts i Dietz. Libby Holman sang “Body and Soul” while Clifton Webb danced. Short kept the production simple and the skits fresh, resulting in a major money maker at the height of the Great Depression. Under Short’s direction, this was the first Broadway musical of the 20th Century to eliminate footlights, replacing them with floodlights suspended from the balcony. The practice soon became an industry-wide standard.
  • 1930 Strike Up the Band, Gershwins, a political satire that had the United States and Switzerland go to war over high chocolate tariffs. The jaunty title march and the ballad “I’ve Got a Crush on You” became popular favorites.
  • 1930 Girl Crazy, Gershwins, told of a rich New York playboy falling in love with an Arizona cowgirl. The show starred Ginger Rogers but was stolen by Ethel Merman, a stenographer from Queens who made a sensational Broadway debut belting out “Sam and Delilah” and “I Got Rhythm.”
  • 1930 The New Yorkers, Cole Porter, had Jimmy Durante as a bootlegger and nightclub owner romancing a wealthy socialite. the score included the controversial “Love for Sale,” in which a prostitute sings of walking the streets and selling herself. Although banned from airplay, the song became a popular hit.
  • 1931 Of Thee I Sing, Gershwins, satirical tale of a President who gets elected (and almost impeached) because he marries the woman he loves. It was the first musical ever to win the Pulitzer Prize for drama.
  • 1931 The Band Wagon, Schwarts i Dietz. This witty revue offered “I Love Louisa,” the sensuous “Dancing in the Dark,” and Adele and Fred Astaire in their last joint appearance. Short staged the show on a pair of gigantic turntables, making swift scene changes in full view of the audience – the first use of this technology in a Broadway musical. Some critics suggested that no revue could top The Band Wagon, but that challenge wouldn’t go unanswered for long.
  • 1931 The Cat and the Fiddle, Kern i Harbach, a romantic operetta with a contemporary setting and score. The story involved two music students (one into classical, the other into jazz) who love each other but cannot abide each other’s compositions. Reflecting this, the score alternated the sweeping passion of “The Night Was Made for Love” with jazzier numbers like “She Didn’t Say Yes.”
  • 1932 Music in the Air, Kern and Oscar Hammerstein II. An idealistic small town school teacher confronts the cynical ways of modern show business when he writes the hit song “I’ve Told Ev’ry Little Star.”
  • 1932 Face the Music, Irving Berlin i Hart, It followed The Band Wagon into the same theatre, so Short was able to use the double turntable stage again, to even more dramatic effect. There was a thin excuse for a plot (a corrupt cop pours graft money into a Broadway revue), but the result was more of a revue. Topical humor in the songs and scenes aimed at such diverse targets as high society, show biz tradition, and Albert Einstein. Berlin’s “Let’s Have Another Cup of Coffee” depicted socialites impoverished by the Depression dining with the poor at the automat.
  • 1932 Gay Divorce, Cole Porter, featured Fred Astaire as a novelist who accidentally gets mixed up in a acrimonious divorce case. Always acclaimed for his dancing, Astaire’s straightforward singing showed off Porter’s songs to extraordinary advantage. Despite a limited vocal range, Astaire had a flawless instinct for delivering a lyric. Radio made his recording of Porter’s throbbing, sensual “Night and Day” a hit, and helped the show overcome tepid reviews. It was Astaire’s last appearance on Broadway; his legendary Hollywood years are discussed elsewhere on this website.
  • 1933 Roberta, Kern i Harbach, which told the unlikely tale of an all-American football fullback who finds love and success when he inherits his aunt’s dress shop in Paris. Most critics dismissed Roberta as a bore, but fueled by the success of “Smoke Gets in Your Eyes,” the show managed a profitable run. Beloved comedienne Fay Templeton made her final Broadway appearance as the aging aunt, introducing the haunting “Yesterdays.”
  • 1933 As Thousands Cheer, Berlin and Hart, the most acclaimed Broadway revue of the decade. They used a newspaper format to satirize current events and celebrities. Marilyn Miller (in her last Broadway appearance) dazzled audiences by playing Joan Crawford, heiress Barbara Hutton, a newlywed, and a little girl – among other roles! Berlin’s masterful score included “Easter Parade” and “Heat Wave.” “Easter Parade,” had the chorus dressed in shades of brown and tan, invoking the look of sepia-toned photo magazines (then known as “rotogravures”). “Suppertime,” a disturbing ballad inspired by racist lynchings in the Southern US, was sung to shattering effect by African American vocalist Ethel Waters.
  • 1934 Anything Goes, Cole Porter was the definitive 1930s musical comedy, but it had a rocky gestation period. Although financially wiped out by the Depression, veteran producer Vinton Freedley managed to sign up William Gaxton, Victor Moore and Ethel Merman for the cast, and convinced Porter to write the score. With that powerhouse line-up, Freedley was able to raise money for this tale of mistaken identities and unlikely romance aboard a luxury liner. The show required ongoing revisions, with former stenographer Merman taking down the changes in shorthand during rehearsals and typing them up for the rest of the team. Anything Goes restored Freedley’s finances, cemented Porter’s place in the front rank of Broadway composers, and became the most frequently revived musical comedy of the 1930s. The score included “I Get A Kick Out Of You,” “You’re The Top,” “Blow Gabriel Blow” and the vibrant title tune.
  • 1935 Jubilee, Cole Porter, was an affectionate send-up of British royalty that introduced Porter’s memorable “Begin the Beguine,” one of many Porter songs that featured his trademark transitions between major and minor keys.
  • 1935 Porgy and Bess, Gershwins, adaptació de la la novel·la de DuBose Heyward, about poor blacks living in the dockside tenements of Charleston. It had passion, infidelity, rape and heartbreak — all the makings of grand opera. George Gershwin’s score offered a singular blend of classical, popular and jazz styles that was possible only on Broadway. Most Depression-era critics and theater goers were less than enthusiastic about such a serious show, so the original production was a financial failure.
  • 1935 Jumbo, Rodgers i Hart
  • 1936 On Your Toes, Rodgers i Hart, amb ballet clàssic coreografiat per George Balanchine, Slaughter On Tenth Avenue Ballet.” The score boasted “There’s a Small Hotel” and “Its Got to Be Love.”
  • 1936 Red Hot and Blue, Cole Porter, involved one of the most idiotic plots in theatrical history — a nationwide search for a woman who sat on a waffle iron when she was four. (Seriously.) Ethel Merman introduced Porter’s “Down in the Depths on the 90th Floor,” and sang the show-stopping “Delovely” with newcomer Bob Hope.
  • 1937, Babes In Arms, Rodgers i Hart, had stage struck teenagers putting on a show to raise money for their impoverished vaudevillian parents. Alfred Drake and The Nicholas Brothers were in the youthful cast, and the hit-drenched score included “My Funny Valentine,” “Where or When,” “Johnny One Note” and “The Lady is a Tramp.”
  • 1937 I’d Rather Be Right, Rodgers i Hart was a political satire starring George M. Cohan as a singing, dancing President Franklin Roosevelt. The most memorable number was “Have You Met Miss Jones?”
  • 1938 Leave It To Me, Cole Porter spoofed international diplomacy, with Victor Moore as a bumbling American ambassador trying to get recalled from Soviet Russia. Mary Martin made her Broadway debut singing the coquettish “My Heart Belongs to Daddy.”
  • 1938 I Married An Angel, Rodgers i Hart.
  • 1938 The Boys From Syracuse, Rodgers i Hart, was an adaptation of Shakespeare’s The Comedy of Errors, with two sets of long-lost identical twins getting caught in hilarious identity mix-ups in ancient Greece. Rodgers & Hart’s superb score included “Sing for Your Supper” and “Falling in Love With Love.” Eddie Albert made his musical debut singing “This Can’t Be Love.”
  • 1938 Hellzapoppin, Sammy Fain i Cahrles Tobias. The longest-running Broadway production of the 1930s, 1404 representacions, a rowdy hodgepodge of skits and routines created by the brash vaudeville comedy team of Ole Olsen and Chic Johnson. They had no previous Broadway hits, and several other attempts by former vaudevillians to create revues had failed. So Olsen and Johnson caught critics and audiences off guard with this insane show. The effect was definitely one of barely controlled insanity. Opening with a mock newsreel in which Hitler spoke with a Yiddish accent, Hellzapoppin’ combined zany slapstick stage acts with wild audience participation gags. Midgets, clowns and trained pigeons added a circus touch. New bits were constantly added to freshen the mayhem, delighting return customers.
  • 1939 DuBarry Was A Lady, Cole Porter, told the story of a nightclub men’s room attendant (Bert Lahr) who pines for the club’s sultry vocalist (Ethel Merman). Knocked out by a drugged cocktail, Lahr dreams that he is King Louis XV of France and that Merman is his infamous but disinterested mistress, Madame DuBarry. The two stars stopped the show with “Friendship” and the bawdy “But In The Morning No”.

CINEMA

  • 1930 Der Blaue Engel amb Marlene Dietrich
  • 1930 Morocco, Marlene Dietrich
  • Samuel Goldwyn amb Eddie Cantor van fer musicals com Whoopee (1930), The Kid From Spain (1932), Roman Scandals (1933), Kid Millions (1934) and Strike Me Pink (1936). In accordance with the Hollywood star system, these films followed a set plot formula, with Cantor playing nervous weaklings who somehow outsmart tough bad guys and gets the girl, along the way offering such hit songs as “Makin’ Whoopee,” “My Baby Just Cares for Me” and “Keep Young and Beautiful.” This series gave Broadway choreographer Busby Berkeley his first opportunity to work on film, developing the techniques he would later perfect at Warner Brothers.
  • 1932 Love Me Tonight, Rodgers Hart, dir Robert Mammoulian, Mauric Chevalier, cançó “Isn t It Romantic?” Cada cançó transporta en l’espai i el temps.
  • 1932 Harlem is Heaven amb Bill Robinson.
  • 1933 Forty-Second Street, amb el coreògraf Busby Berkeley i càmeres mòbils que sabien filmar millor les escenes de dansa. The score had just four songs by composer Harry Warren and lyricist Al Dubin. You’re Getting to Be a Habit With Me,” “Young and Healthy,” “Shuffle Off to Buffalo” and the catchy title tune all became hits. Berkeley was the first to take full advantage of synchronizing a filmed image to a previously recorded musical soundtrack. Since microphones were not needed during the filming of musical sequences, Berkeley realized that cameras no longer had to be imprisoned in sound-proof booths during production numbers. For the first time since the introduction of synchronized sound, fluid camera motion and intricate editing were once more achieveable. Berkeley revolutionized screen musicals by exploiting these possibilities.
    Altres produccions de Berkeley a la Warner serien: The Gold Diggers (1933, “We’re In the Money” “Lullaby of Broadway”), Footlight Parade (1933, By a Waterfall,” “Honeymoon Hotel”), Hollywood Hotel (1937, “Hooray for Hollywood”). Amb cançons de Harry Warren, Al Dubin, Richard Whiting, and Johnny Mercer. La idea no era tant integrar cançons i música en un argument com oferir un seguit de números atractius.
  • 1933 Flying Down To Rio, RKO, Astaire i Rogers en un paper secundari que va encantar el públic. Stanley Donen explica: “I was nine, and I’d never seen anything like it in my life. I’m not sure I have since. It was as if something had exploded inside me. . . I was mesmerized. I could not stop watching Fred Astaire dance. I went back to the theatre every day while the picture was playing. I must’ve seen it at least twenty times. Fred Astaire was so graceful. It was as if he were connected to the music. He led it and he interpreted it, and he made it look so effortless. He performed as though he were absolutely without gravity.”
  • 1934 The Gay Divorcee (1934), RKO, Astaire i Rogers protagonistes, they danced and romanced, inventing what became their standard formula – in a high society setting, a charming playboy and a sweet girl with spunk get into a tangle of mistaken identities, fall in love on the dance floor (to something like Cole Porter’s “Night and Day”), resolve their misunderstandings in the nick of time, and foxtrot their way to a black and white “happily ever after” ending. [ la majoria de les coreografies serien d’Astaire i Hermes Pan]
  • 1935 Top Hat (1935), RKO, Astaire i Rogers, which embodies the series at its best. There is a a variation of the “mistaken identities” plot with stylish comic support from Edward Everett Horton, Eric Blore and Helen Broderick, and a solid-gold score by Irving Berlin. “Isn’t This a Lovely Day To Be Caught In The Rain,” “No Strings,” the title tune and the unforgettable “Cheek to Cheek” are deftly integrated into a story of mistaken identities set in an eye-popping black and white art deco vision of Venice. The dialogue is breezy and clever, and the atmosphere one of sophisticated delight.
  • 1935 Roberta, RKO, Astaire i Rogers included Jerome Kern’s “I’ll Be Hard To Handle”
  • 20th century Fox va trencar una barrera quan el 1935 a The Little Colonel va aplegar Shirley Temple amb Bill “Bojangles” Robinson.
  • La Universal va filmar el 1936 Show Boat amb Paul Robeson cantant Ol Man River. Amb Deanna Durbin va fer Three Smart Girls (1936), 100 Men and a Girl (1937), and Mad About Music (1938).
  • 1936 Born to Dance amb Eleanor Powell (Her “Begin the Beguine” with Fred Astaire in Broadway Melody of 1940 is arguably the best tap duet Hollywood ever filmed. Powell retired in the 1940s to marry and raise a family, making a brief nightclub comeback in the 1950s.)
  • 1936 Follow The Fleet, RKO, Astaire i Rogers had Irving Berlin’s “Let’s Face the Music and Dance”
  • 1936 Swing Time, RKO, Astaire i Rogers boasted Jerome Kern’s Fields “The Way You Look Tonight”, “Pick yourself up”
  • 1937 Shall We Dance, RKO, Astaire i Rogers offered George and Ira Gershwin’s
  • 1937 A mile from heaven, amb Bill Robinson
  • “Let’s Call the Whole Thing Off” and “They Can’t Take That Away From Me”
  • 1938 Carefree, RKO, Astaire i Rogers included Berlin’s “Change Partners”
  • 1939 The Story of Vernon and Irene Castle, RKO, Astaire i Rogers
  • Bing Crosby i Mae West a la Paramount Mississippi (1935), Pennies From Heaven (1936) and Sing You Sinners (1938).

 


Musicals 1900 – 1920

La Dansa  |    El musical


ANTECEDENTS

El teatre grec i romà, els joglars permeten dir que sempre hi ha hagut comèdia amb música i ball. Més tard tenim John Gay’s The Beggar’s Opera (1728), les sàtires de Jacques Offenbach, les comèdies de Johan Strauss, les operetes com Die Lustige Witve de Franz Lehár, la Zarzuela, el music Hall anglès amb les operetes de Gilbert i Sullivan com el Mikado.

Al segle XIX a Amèrica hi havia els humiliants Minstrel Shows, on actor i ballarins tant blancs com negres, amb la cara pintada, feien una caricatura dels negres presentant-los com a ximples ignorants, amb personatges com Jim Crow i Zip Coon. El gènere seguiria fins ben entrat el s.XX amb intèrprets tant famosos com Al Jonson. S’escriurien cançons expressament per a ell. [ el racisme al món de l’espectacle]. A més, alguns negres actuaven als Medicine Shows i en espectacles per a audiència exclusivament negra, de comèdia i circ, que van posar en marxa al sud l’associació T.O.B.A , en particular les Whitman sisters. [MS] . Els negres fusionaven balls ancestrals amb el que es trobaven d’origen europeu, la Mazurka, la polca, el vals i la quadrilla, la irish Jig i el Lancashire Clog. Marshall Stearns va aplegar Al Minns i Leon James del Savoy, i ballarins de Sierra Leone, Àrica Ocidental i trinidad. I van descobrir afinitats de passos, com el charleston.

El gènere de Vaudeville tenia un seguit d’atraccions de circ, equilibristes, jocs de mans, també cantants i ballarins, i escenes curtes. Del Vaudeville en van sortir artistes extraordinaris com Judy Garland, els Nicholas Brothers. Podien tenir blancs i negres actuant. Alguns Vaudevilles , eren d’intèrprets negres per a audiència negra. I d’aquí en van sortir Ethel Waters (a.k.a. “Sweet Mama Stringbean”), Ma Rainey, Bert Williams – Ziegfeld Follies star, Bessie Smith i Bill “Bojangles” Robinson. Hi havia números de blues amb lletres de doble sentit. Va decaure i es va acabar a mitjans dels ’20.

El Burlesque era un seguit d’acudits amb escenes de comèdia i números musicals. Quan va decaure es va intentar reanimar amb números de Strip tease.

https://musicals101.com/1890-1900.htm


1900s http://www.musicals101.com/1900to10.htm  època encara dominada per musicals importats d’Anglaterra. 1907 The Merry widow de Franz Lehar amb el seu vals posaria més de moda els balls de saló

 

1910’s 1920, Tin Pan Alley

Then (1910s) Jerome Kern, Guy Boulton and P.G. Wodehouse took this a step further with the Princess Theatre shows, putting believable people and situations on the musical stage. During the same years, Florenz Ziegfeld introduced his Follies, the ultimate stage revue, gran decoració i noies boniques, que duraria fins als 40s..( exemple amb noies i blackface).  Most of New York’s music publishers had offices on a three block stretch of , West 28th Street between Fifth and Sixth Avenueswhere the din of pianists at work was compared to housewives banging tin pans, earning that area and the music publishing industry the nickname Tin Pan Alley. És l’època dels balls de saló amb Irene i Vernon Castle que consolidarien el foxtrot. [MS  Es balla el cakewalk, el Turkey Trot. D’altres contribucions negres a l’època serien les composisons de W.C. Handy en blues i Perry Bradford que posaria de moda el Black bottom dance, semblant al Charleston] [Bert Williams fou la primera gran estrella negra a triomfar al món de l’espectacle, com a cantant i balla aNobody, una cançó famosa de 1905, en la versió original de Bert Williams  , ( i Cecile McLorin Salvant , Nina Simone) [ Irving Berlin, jueu d’origen rus ]

Cakewalk de Stormy Weather

Vernon i Irene Castle

  • 1911 Irving Berlin, Alexander’s Ragtime Band
  • 1913 Darktown Follies, revista amb Bert Williams, amb música i actors negres, que va tenir un gran èxit, amb història d’amor entre dos negres. Va introduir el Ballin’ the Jack , de Smith & Burris, dos compositors negres, amb passos de ball incorporats ( Gene Kelly i Judy Garland, Gene Kelly 1959). I també el Texas Tommy.
  • 1914 Watch your step, Irving Berlin, Irene i Vernon Castle

In the 1920s, the American musical comedy gained worldwide influence. The 1920s was the busiest decade Broadway would ever know, with as many as fifty new musicals opening in a single season. With employment rates running high and incomes on the increase, record numbers of people could afford $3.50 a seat. With so much demand for entertainment, these years were a time of extraordinary artistic development in the musical theatre. Broadway saw the composing debuts of Cole Porter (Episcopalià d’una família rica, però Rodgers deia que escrivia melodies del mediterrà oriental,  ” He leaned over and said, “I’ll write Jewish tunes.”, “…he eventually did exactly that. Just hum the melody that goes with ‘Only you beneath and moon and under the sun’ from ‘Night and Day,’ or any of ‘Begin the Beguine,’ or ‘Love for Sale,’ or ‘My Heart Belongs to Daddy,’ or ‘I Love Paris.’ These minor-key melodies are unmistakably eastern Mediterranean.” It’s ironic, Rodgers went on, that despite the abundance of Jewish composers (Rodgers, Berlin, Kern, Gershwin), “the most enduring ‘Jewish’ music” was written by a Episcopalian millionaire born on a farm in Peru, Indiana, Cole Porter.”, Rodgers and Hart [Rodgers, d’origen jueu alemany), the Gershwins and many others. The British contributed several intimate reviews and introduced the multi-talented Noel Coward. Kern (Jerome Kern, jueu d’origen alemany) and Oscar Hammerstein II wrote the innovative Showboat (1927) the most lasting hit of the 1920s.

[ MS amb Suffle Along hi va haver més musicals negres i el  ball es feia més complex. Van escriure números talents com James P. Johnson i Fats Waller. Els bateries aprenien ritmes dels ballarins de claqué. Però els millors ballarins es quedaven al Vaudeville on guanyaven més. Els crítics apreciaven les innovacions dels balladors negres i en particular Bill Robinson. Però es va plantejar una qüestió d’identitat: s’havien de refinar i assemblar més els blancs? s’havien de limitar per ser més fidels a les arrels? No es va acabar d’aprofitar el talent del coreògraf Buddy Bradley, que va acabar treballant a Anglaterra ] A Anglaterra, Noel Coward. Apareixen nous compositors: Rodgers i Hart (Rodgers and Hart’s early shows were lighthearted romps, but some of their songs had surprising, bittersweet undertones. No lyricist ever eclipsed Larry Hart’s gift for capturing the heartbreak of hopeless love. Since romantic frustration plagued his private life, this was not altogether surprising.), Cole Porter i els Gershwins. Al Johnson, America’s top musical stage star of the 1920s was born in a Russian shtetl (a legally segregated Jewish ghetto) in Lithuania sometime during the late 1880s. Soon after his family emigrated to the United States in 1894, young Asa Yoelson decided to become a variety entertainer and changed his name to Al Jolson.

El 1927 es projecta el primer film amb una cançó, the Jazz Singer, amb Al Johnson. Les sales començaran a instal·lar equips de so i aviat filmen amb so pregravat: MGM was the last major studio to switch to sound production, but once it got on the bandwagon, it went first class all the way. The studio’s sound team invented two vital technologies for Broadway Melody sound editing and pre-recorded soundtracks.  (https://musicals101.com/1927-30film2.htm)

  • 1921 Shuffle Along (negre), música Noble Sissle i Eubie Blake. With the popular songs “Love Will Find a Way” and “I’m Just Wild About Harry,” Shuffle Along became such a hit that the police converted 63rd Street into a one-way thoroughfare to ease the traffic jams a6 curtain time. The show gave several stellar talents their first major breaks, including Josephine Baker, Adelaide Hall and Paul Robeson. (revival)
  • 1922 Plantation Revue (negre)
  • 1923 Runnin’ Wild amb música de James P. Johnson i en particular el número Charleston.
  • 1924 Lady Be Good, Gershwins brought Broadway stardom to Fred Astaire and his sister Adele playing impoverished dancing siblings who try to masquerade their way into a fortune. The title tune and “Fascinating Rhythm” became major hits.
  • 1925 No, No Nanette, Vincent Youmans & Irving Caesar’s, amb Tea for Two, I Want to be happy
  • 1925 Sunny, Jerome Kern, Otto Harbach and Oscar Hammerstein II
  • 1927 Funny Face, Gershwins featured Adele Astaire as a girl trying to get back her diary from her guardian (Fred), opening the way for a series of mishaps. The score included “S’Wonderful,” “My One And Only,” and the title tune.
  • 1927 Good News . The plot about a wealthy football hero who has to pass an exam so he can play in the big game and win the impoverished girl he loves inspired a slew of imitations on stage and screen, but none could match the infectious score composed by Ray Henderson with lyrics by Buddy DeSylva and Lew Brown. Their dance-happy songs included “The Best Things in Life Are Free,” “Lucky in Love” and “The Varsity Drag,” a Charleston-style number that became an international dance craze.
  • 1927 Show Boat,Telling the epic story of how the inhabitants of a Mississippi show boat survive from the 1880’s to the 1920s, this show deals with racism, interracial romance, marital heartbreak and alcoholism – subjects that had previously been considered taboo in musical theatre.The ground-breaking libretto was matched by an innovative, character-driven score with such hits as “Make Believe,”, “Old Man River” and “You Are Love.” Producció audaç de Ziegfield.
  • 1928 Keep Shufflin,(n)
  • 1928 Blackbirds (n), amb Bill Robinson
  • 1928 Paris, Cole Porter, Let’s do it.
  • 1929 Deep Harlem, un musical que volia reflectir la música i dansa de l’Àfrica a Harlem
  • 1929 Hot Chocolates (n)

CINEMA

1927 The Jazz Singer amb Al Johnson


 

Swing, música i dansa, 1926 1940

La Dansa


  • El naixement del swing 1926 – 1935: context | Harlem Renaissance | Canvis en la música i el ball
  • L’escena a Harlem, hot swing i sweet swing
  • La popularitat del swing
  • El declivi

Vídeos   Lindy Hop, vídeos Jazz dance. Bebop, Steps


[ continguts proposats a la bcnswing]

antecedents del swing

Harold lloyd i el shimmy

black bottom dance

 

 

 

 

El context: migració de negres del sud, feliços 20, la llei seca (1920 – 1933), crack de la Borsa de 1929 depressió i New Deal, 1939-1945 WWii

La guerra civil havia acabat el 1865 i s’havia abolit l’esclavatge. Però aquest va ser substituït per la segregació racial i les lleis “Jim Crown”. Això va fer que primers del segle XX, bona part de la població negra que vivia al sud, emigrés cap al nord, el que es coneix com la Great migration. Es calcula que 1.6 milions van emigrar del sud rural al nord entre 1916 i 1940. Hi havia força oportunitats de feina a la indústria degut a la primera guerra mundial.

El 1920 es promulga Llei seca prohibint la venda de begudes alcohòliques, que duraria fins el 1933. Va sorgir un mercat negre controlat per la màfia i una sèrie de locals clandestins, els speakeasies (speakeasies = parla fluix), on sovint hi actuaven grups de jazz.

Després d’una dècada relativament pròspera, el 1929 tenia lloc al crac a la borsa i els Estats Units entrarien en una gran depressió econòmica que va ser combatuda amb el New Deal de Roosevelt. L’economia es començaria a recuperar a mitja dècada dels ’30 però no ho faria del tot fins a l’esforç industrial de la segona guerra mundial. Amb tot, als estats del sud la pobresa va seguir i entre 1940 i 1970 hi hauria una segona onada migratòria de 5 milions.

Harlem Renaissance

La concentració de d’afroamericans buscant una vida millor, en unes condicions més lliures que les del sud, tot i que no exemptes de racisme, van permetre que aparegués una cultura pròpiament afroamericana en que s’anomenaria Harlem Renaissance, amb aportacions en literatura, moda, música i teatre musical.

El 1925 apareix l’antologia d’Alain Locke’s The New Negro amb escriptors com Langston Hughes, Zora Neale Hurston, o Claude McKay, Els negres prenen conciència del valor de la pròpia cultura. Per exemple, aquest poema de Langston Hugues:

Weary Bues

Swaying to and fro on his rickety stool
He played that sad raggy tune like a musical fool.
Sweet Blues!
Coming from a black man’s soul.
O Blues!
In a deep song voice with a melancholy tone
I heard that Negro sing, that old piano moan—
“Ain’t got nobody in all this world,
Ain’t got nobody but ma self.

En moda, les dones van començar a anar amb faldilles més curtes, amb plomes; els homes amb vestits Zoot d’amples espatlles, pantalons de cintura alta, grans barrets, sovint de colors vius. En aquesta escena de MalcomX de Spike Lee, que per cert va ajudar a coreografiar Frankie Manning, podem veure Denzel Washington vestit així:

En música, pianistes com James P. Johnson, Fats Waller i Lucky Roberts van començar a tocar en un estil diferent del Ragtime. La ma esquerra saltava fent una nota greu als temps 1-3 i un acord als 2-4 mentre la dreta improvisava. Es va acabar anomenant “Stride”, o “Harlem stride”. Tot i que la Depressió va posar en dificultats alguns clubs, va ser una època brillant pel Jazz. Louis Armstrong havia gravat feia poc les sessions amb els Hot Five i Hot Seven i tocava al Connie’s Inn. El Cotton Club va fitxar Duke Ellington el 1927. Count Basie arribaria a New York a mitjans dels ’30. El jazz es valorava no només per part del públic negre sinó pel blanc i també amants de la música a Europa. Els compositors blancs per a shows de Broadway es van interessar per la música i la vida negra. Gershwin estrenaria l’òpera Porgy and Bess el 1935. La influència de la música negra es trobarà en moltíssims temes de shows de Broadway, escrits per compositors com Gershwin, Cole Porter o Irving Berlin. Després aquests temes passaran a ser repertori dels músics de jazz , el que s’acabarà anomenant American Songbook.

Amèrica seguia essent un país racista però els negres podien reclamar la seva identitat i la seva cultura. No eren els ximples que retrataven els minstrel shows, ignorants que entretenien amb música i balls primitius. La seva literatura mereixia ser publicada i llegida, la seva música, escoltada i estudiada. A París, la ballarina procedent del vodevil Josephine Baker triomfava als teatres, creava tendència i era admirada per artistes d’avantguarda com Jean Cocteau, Fernand Léger o Matisse. L’arquitecte Alexander Loos que va arribar a dissenyar una casa per a ella.

En el món de l’espectacle, a més dels Minstrel shows que estaven basats en estereotips humiliants, hi havia espectacles de vodevil, alguns d’ells amb intèrprets negres i orientats a un públic exclusivament negre. Aquí es podia veure dalt d’un escenari un personatge negre que no era ridícul. En el vodevil hi van actuar artistes tan importants com les cantants de blues Bessie Smith o Ma Rainey i ballarins com Bill “Bojangles” Robinson. El 1921 es va estrenar a Broadway el musical Shuffle Along , de Noble Sissle i Eubie Blake, amb música i ball negre, que va tenir una gran acollida.


Nova música

¿Com passem de la música de bandes de New Orleans

a la música swing?

De les bandes de carrer, als locals de prostitució al barri de Storyville de New Orleans, als vaixells que recorrien el Mississipi, tot  seguint la gran onada migratòria, les bandes de jazz es van anar establint a New York, Chicago i a Kansas City. Els propers anys el jazz evolucionaria molt, tant pel que fa els solistes com pel conjunt de l’orquestra.

Els solistes explorarien noves possibilitats seguint el camí inaugurat per Louis Armstrong. Sobre una mateixa base harmònica, els solos podien ser molt més rics i complexos. Per la part de conjunt, el jazz de New Orleans tenia una corneta fent la melodia principal mentre que clarinets i trombons hi responien tot entrellaçant-s’hi. Tots improvisaven pràcticament sense arranjaments. Ara les orquestres tenen més músics i les parts de conjunt s’han d’organitzar, en blocs de trompetes i trombons d’una banda, i saxos per l’altra. Seguiran arranjaments preparats, escrits o bé memoritzats. Ho podem comparar amb el canvi de la música del renaixement, amb veus que s’entrellacen entre elles gairebé en pla d’igualtat, als concerts barrocs, on contrasta el lluïment del solista sobre uns blocs d’acomanyament de l’orquestra.

És interessant comprarar dues gravacions del mateix any 1927, El Potato Head Blues de Louis Armstrong amb els Hot Seven i el Rocky Mountain Blues de l’orquestra de Fletcher Henderson. En el Potato Head Blues hi trobem les parts de tutti típiques de l’estil de New Orleans, on trompeta, clarinet i trombó entrellacen les línies melòdiques gairebé en peu d’igualtat mentre que en els breaks, queda  només amb la secció rítmica amb el solista. Aquí hi tenim un dels millors solos de la història del jazz.

En el Rocky Mountain Blues de l’orquestra de Fletcher Henderson els solos són similars; el seu trompetista Tommy Ladnier també era de New Orleans, com Armstrong, però les seccions amb l’orquestra sencera estan organitzades en arranjaments molt precisos.

L’orquestra de Henderson i el seu arranjador Don Redman van definir una mica com sonarien les orquestres de jazz a la dècada següent. Tot i així, amb la Depressió després del crac del ’29, tenia problemes econòmics i va vendre els seus arranjaments a l’orquestra de Benny Goodman. El 1934 va haver de dissoldre l’orquestra i va passar a treballar amb Benny Goodman com a pianista i arranjador.

A Kansas City, l’orquestra de Bennie Moten, amb Count Basie al piano i fent arranjaments, va crear un estil influït pel blues, molt sincopat, i amb uns motius musicals curts molt ben definits, els riffs, sovint alternats entre els metalls i les canyes. Els riffs van passar al llenguatge musical de la majoria d’arranjaments. Aquí amb el Moten Swing:

Cada orquestra, amb el seu arranjador i els seus músics va anar desenvolupant el seu propi estil. Els arranjaments eren escrits, memoritzats i a vegades improvisats i tot.
Al Cotton Club, l’orquestra de Duke Ellington té una personalitat singular, uns arranjaments molt originals i sofisticats i un so que més”rugós” i menys “llis”, un estil que s’anomenaria “jungle”.

Una altra de les característiques és que el ritme va canvia una mica, de dividir les notes en dues iguals, o fer un sol beat, a fer-ho en una llarga i una curta en un ritme de treset. És el que s’acabarà anomenant justament “ritme swing”. Aquí en un vídeo didàctic:

 

Aquí Wynton Marsalis mostra com es construeix la pulsació amb la secció rítmica, baix als temps 1 i 3, guitarra al 2 i 4, i la bateria amb el shuffle, “el fonament del swing”.

A New York, hi havia l’orquestra de Fletcher Henderson al Roseland Ballroom, Cab Calloway i Duke Ellington al Cotton Club, i Chick Webb al Savoy Ballroom, que s’havia inaugurat el 1926. El 1935 arribaria a New York l’orquestra de Count Basie, abans Bennie Moten, procedent de Kansas City. També a Kansas City hi havia Andy Kirk amb Mary Lou Williams al piano i arranjaments. Jimmy Lunceford començà a Memphis i es traslladà més tard a New York. Des de 1928, Earl Hines actua al Grand Terrace Cafe a Chicago.

La dècada dels 30 començava amb unes orquestres extraordinàries desenvolupant una nova música.


Nou ball

Al llibre “Frankie Manning Ambassador of Lindy Hop” de Franklie Manning i Cynthia Millman s’explica com el lindy es va anar formant a partir de tres balls que es feien a Harlem a finals dels anys 20, el Charleston, el Collegiate i el Breakaway.

El Charleston: Amb arrels centre africanes, es diu que va començar a la ciutat de Charleston, South Carolina i hauria arribat a Harlem amb la gran migració. Es va fer molt popular amb la peça del pianista de stride James P. Johnson al show de Broadway Runnin’ Wild de 1923. Era un ball molt alegre que van adoptar també els blancs. Josephine Baker el va presentar a París amb gran èxit. Les faldilles curtes de les “flappers”, els passos desinhibits, obrint i tanant les cames, fent kicks, van acabar simbolitzant els feliços roaring twenties, que acabarien amb el crack del 1929.

Aquí tenim Josephine Baker el 1927, ballant el Charleston, guapíssima i fent la pallassa (recordem que venia del vodevil):

El Collegiate. Frankie Manning diu que el veia ballar a l’Alhambra, “de vuit temps amb el patró de peus similar al Charleston i el Breakaway, però sense separació entre els balladors. Més aviat estaven en una posició relativament estreta, gairebé abraçats de cintura cap amunt i enfocat a un ràpid treball de peus”.

Aquí en un concurs del Harvest Moon:

El Breakaway. Tot i mantenint la connexió, els balladors se separaven una mica, i a vegades es deixaven anar d’una mà (d’aquí el nom break away); ni junts del tot com en el collegiate, ni separats del tot com en el Charleston.
Marshall Stearns, al llibre Jazz Dance, explica que el 17 juny de 1928 va començar una marató de ball al Manhattan Casino, inicialment amb 80 parelles. Ballaven una hora i descansaven 15 minuts, dia i nit. Això va durar fins el 4 de juliol. Quedaven quatre parelles d’empeus, una d’elles George “Shorty” Snowden, amb el número 7 a l’esquena. Les quatre parelles es repartirien un premi de 5000$. A les tardes, els espectadors podien oferir un premi de 5 o 10$ per que competissin entre sí alguna de les parelles que quedaven. I en una d’aquestes Snowden diu que va decidir fer un breakaway, projectar la parella com en un swingout i improvisar unes passes. Això va trencar la monotonia de la marató, bàsicament Collegiate, i l’efecte va ser elèctric, tant pel públic com pels músics. “Shorty havia posat en marxa alguna cosa”.

En el curt After Seben de 1929 es veu molt bé barreja de Collegiate shag i passes inicials de lindy, encara en una posició molt vertical:

El breakaway s’aniria modificant, incorporant més passos del Charleston i en lloc de ser una variació del Collegiate, acabaria convertint-se en el Lindy Hop.

S’han recollit diferents testimonis sobre el nom del ball. La majoria coincideixen a indicar que es va unir “lindy” i “hop”, fent referència a la travessa de l’Atàntic per part de l’aviador Charles Lindbergh el 1927. Incidentalment, cal recordar que Lindbergh estava fermament convençut de la superitat de la raça ària i de la necessitat de preservar la puresa de la sang. No deixa de ser una trista ironia que un ball que és un producte de la cultura afroamericana hagi estat batejada amb el nom d’un racista.

El 1934, amb 20 anys, Frankie Manning comença a ballar amb els Whitey Lindy Hoppers i modifica el Lindy prenent una postura més horitzontal, com la d’un corredor. Al llibre esmentat explica que als anys ’90, quan assessorava ballarins professionals a fer el lindy hop, aquests aprenien els passos ràpidament però els costava molt canviar la postura erecta més pròpia del ballet a una més horitzontal, menys vertical i més de propera al terra: “the challenge was to get them to change from an upright position to dancing down“:

El 1935 Frankie Manning comença a fer passos aeris com els que apareixen al cèlebra fragment de Hellzapoppin de 1941. El lindy era un ball social però alhora un ball d’exhibició. El públic quedava bocabadat amb les figures acrobàtiques i el ritme rapidíssim.

Hellzapoppin 1941

I aquí un ball més relaxat, més representatiu del que podia ser el lindy social, amb l’orquestra de Lucky Millinder, “I want a big fat mama”, 1941:

[ una pàgina amb un recull més complet de lindy hop ]


L’Escena a Harlem | hot swing i sweet swing

Quina era l’escena a Harlem a principis dels ’30? Podríem fer servir de guia aquest mapa:

La llegenda diu “Un mapa dels night-clubs a Harlem. Les estrelles indiquen els llocs oberts tota la nit … L’única omissió important és la ubicació dels diferents speakeasies, però com que n’hi ha uns 500, no tindreu gaires problemes”.

Hi apareixen les sales:

  • Cotton club, Cab Calloways band
  • Savoy Ballroom, Doing the Lindy Hop
  • Lafayette Theatre, amb Don Redman’s band
  • Small’s Paradise

Hi surten també grans ballarins com Bill ‘Bojangles’ Robinson, famós pel seu número en unes escales, o ‘Snake Hips’ Tucker.

Al seu llibre Frankie Manning esmenta el Savoy ballroom, l’Alhambra Ballroom, l’Apollo Theater, El morocco, Small’s Paradise, Dunbar Ballroom, Audubon Ballroom, Rockland Palacei el Lafayette Theather.

Hi havia doncs una esplèndida escena d’entreteniment amb dansa i música.

La música es vivia també a través de la ràdio. Els discos eren un luxe perquè les gramoles costaven una fortuna.

L’altra manera de viure la música i el ball era en jams a cases particules, les “Rent parties”. Els llogaters contractaven un pianista i a vegades més músics i muntaven una jam per recaptar fons i pagar el lloguer. Ho podem veure en aquest esplèndid soundie de Fats Waller:

Aquesta era l’escena en la comunitat afroamericana. Quina era l’escena en el món dels blancs? La música que sonava era més suau i menys rítmica, i es ballava més el foxtrot:

Aquest és el “sweet swing”, contraposat al “hot swing” dels negres. És una música agradable, que permet també una dansa elegant i de primera categoria com la d’un Fred Astaire, però és un altre món. Les orquestres més populars eren les de Guy Lombardo & His Royal Canadians i Les Brown & His Band of Renown. Més endavant triomfaria la Glenn Miller Orchestra.

A vegades hi havia punts de contacte, com per exemple quan Guy Lombardo  va actuar, amb gran expectació de públic, al Savoy Ballroom. Però Shorty George comentava que “no podies ballar lindy de debó amb la música de Lombardo”.


Val la pena aturar-nos un moment per adonar-nos de la relació entre la música i el ball. Evolucionaven alhora. Hi havia una demanda de música i orquestres perquè la gent anava a ballar a les sales, i la gent hi anava perquè el música els engrescava.

A “Jazz Dance” Marshall Stearns explica com l’arribada de l’orquestra de Bennie Moten amb Count Basie al piano va suposar més impuls i alhora més fluïdesa: “en cert sentit, el Lindy és música swing coreografiada. A diferència del jazz Dixieland i el Toddle amb què es ballava, un estil com de botar amunt i avall, la música swing i el Lindy fuïen més suau i horitzontalment. Hi havia més continuïtat rítmica.”

El 1933 Willie Bryant va rellevar Lucky Millinder per dirigir la banda al Lafayette Theater i va ensenyar a tots els músics de la banda a fer el Shim Sham. HI havia Teddy Wilson, Benny Carter, Ben Webster i Cozy Cole. Va ser el primer cop que els músics deixaven la tarima per fer un número de ball. (JD 196)

Els balladors escoltaven la música atentament. Leon James explica que quan Dizzy Gillespie actuava amb la banda de Tewdy Hill, abans del bebop, molts l’etiquetaven de pallasso per les seves extravagàncies, però que els balladors estaven encantats. “Cada vegada que feia un lick esbojarrat, nosaltres miràvem d’improvisar un pas boig que hi lligués. I ell seguia i tocava encara coses més boges encara a veure si érem capaços de seguir-lo, com un joc, amb els músics i balladors desafiant-se els uns als altres.”

Grans músics inspiren grans balladors i a l’inrevés. Lester Young ho diu molt bé: “M’agradaria que el jazz es toqués més sovint per ballar. El ritme dels balladors et retorna quan estàs tocant.” Una de les raons per les que va crear-se un jazz de primera categoria a les bandes del Savoy va ser la presència de grans balladors.

Aquesta influència mútua entre música i ball s’ha donat sempre. A primers dels anys ’20, quan balladors de claqué negres van començar a aparèixer a Broadway, els bateries de jazz en treien idees. O si anem enrera al 1600 trobem que les peces que integren una Suite barroca, com les famoses suites per a cello de Bach, són danses: l’Alemanda, la Courante, la Sarabanda (per cert, una dansa d’origen afroamericà, ja és estrany com va acabar essent un moviment lent meditatiu) , la gavota, la Bourrée, el Minuet i la Giga. Alguns cursos d’interpretació de música barroca ofereixen classes de dansa per que els músics sàpiguen millor com interpretar-les.

Durant uns anys, el jazz feia una música d’alta qualitat i molt ballable. A la dècada dels ’40 i següents però, la música tornaria a canviar, amb el bebop i el Rhythm&blues, i els balls també canviarien. Al seu llibre Frankie Manning explica que quan es va llicenciar de l’exèrcit la majoria de grups i bandes tocaven bebop “que era un so tan estrany per les meves orelles que no el podia entendre. Jo estava acostumat a música per ballar, però aquest nou so només era per escoltar”.


La popularitat del swing, Benny Goodman

Així com les comunitats estaven segregades, la música i el ball de negres i blancs, tot i ésser més o menys coneguts per tots, també seguien camins separats.

El productor musical John Hammond, coneixedor del jazz dels negres, va suggerir a Benny Goodman de fer servir els arranjaments de Fletcher Henderson i més endavant l’encoratjà a contractar músics negres com el pianista Teddy Wilson, el guitarrista Charlie Christian o el vibrafonista Lionel Hampton. Així, era una de les primeres orquestres integrades del país i el seu so era més “negre” que el d’altres orquestres populars del moment com la de Guy Lombardo, cosa que feia que no sempre fos ben acollida per part d’un públic acostumat al “sweet swing”.
El 1934 va començar una programa de ràdio patrocinat per l’empresa de galetes Nabisco que es deia Let’s Dance. S’emetia els dissabtes a les 10:30 del vespre. Durava tres hores i hi actuaven l’orquestra de Kel Murray, Xavier Cugat i Benny Goodman al final. A aquesta hora ja era molt tard a la costa est, però en canvi era una bona hora a la costa oest, amb tres hores de diferència. Així, quan en una gira per l’oest el 19 d’agost de 1935 l’orquestra va actuar al McFadden’s Ballroom a Oakland, va ser rebuda per per una colla d’entusiastes balladors que havien estat escoltant el programa de ràdio Let’s Dance. El “hot swing”, ni que fos en la versió més adaptada de l’orquestra de Goodman, va començar a tenir èxit entre el públic blanc. Potser el concert que va fer el 16 de gener de 1938 al Carnegie Hall de New York, simbolitza el moment en que el “hot swing”, el jazz creat pels negres, va ser reconegut i popular pel públic en general. Els anys trenta acabarien essent coneguts com l’era del swing.

No sabem si avui coneixeríem el swing sense les intervencions de John Hammond, un productor blanc de família acomodada, i sense el programa de ràdio de les galetes Nabisco. Una de les conseqüències lamentables de la discriminació racial és que, a més de ser una injustícia, ens perdem les aportacions d’una cultura, en aquest cas l’afroamericana, perquè no acceptem que la puguin crear, o posem barreres per que la donin a conèixer i explotar comercialment. Molts temes musicals creats per negres van ser apropiats per blancs sense reconèixer-ne l’autoria. Va passar amb el swing, amb el Rhythm&blues i segueix ara amb el Hip Hop. No sabem quines músiques i quins balls més ens hem perdut, per culpa de la discriminació dels afroamericans, de la mateixa manera que no sabem la ciència, art, música i literatura creada per dones, o que hauria pogut haver estat creada per dones, que ens hem perdut per culpa de la discriminació de gènere.


El declivi

A partir de 1940, acabada la segona guerra mundial, l’època del swing i les grans orquestres va declinar. Es poden identificar diferents factors, la vaga de músics, la dificultat de mantenir econòmicament les orquestres, i el canvi en la música.

Els músics afiliats als sindicats feia temps que demanaven a les discogràfiques el pagament de royalties. Com que no cedien van començar una vaga el juliol de 1942 que duraria fins el 1944. Els programes de ràdio que es basaven en novetats de discos es van quedar sense material. Les discogràfiques van reaccionar reeditant material antic i gravant a vocalistes acompanyats per un grup vocal però finalment van capitular. Però aleshores el focus havia canviat de l’orquestra als vocalistes com Frank Sinatra, Bing Crosby, Perry Como. En lloc de tenir un vocalista ocasional a una orquestra famosa, ara hi hauria un grup de músics acompanyant un vocalista famós. Pels clubs resultava més econòmic un grup petit acompanyant un vocalista que no pas una big band sencera.

L’orquestra de Fletcher Henderson ja havia plegat el 1934 i havia passat a escriure els arranjaments per a Benny Goodman. Chick Webb, que estava molt malament de salut, havia mort el 1939. El 1940 es van desfer per problemes econòmics les orquestres de Cab Calloway i Jimmy Lunceford. A Chicago Earl Hines també va plegar el 1940 i va estar de gira amb un grup fins el 1947. Andy Kirk a Kansas City va aguantar fins el 1948. Benny Goodman va resistir un temps.

Count Basie va haver de desfer la banda i va estar actuant i gravant amb petits grups fins que va tornar a formar una orquestra i es va reinventar. Va fer servir arranjaments de Neal Hefti amb qui va fer el famós Atomic Basie de 1958. Va incorporar novetats com la flauta travessera i alguns solos tenien característiques del bebop, però sempre va mantenir una pulsació swing. Va mantenir la banda fins que moria el 1984.

Duke Ellington va aconseguir aguantar la banda fent gires per Europa tot i que la seva popularitat va minvar i, com passava amb altres big bands, es pensava que el seu estil havia quedat antiquat. Però el famós concert de Newport de 1956, amb el Diminuento i Crescendo in blue i els 27 chorus de Paul Gonsalves, van revitalitzar l’orquestra i va seguir en actiu fins la seva mort el 1974, sense parar de compondre i concebre peces més complexes.

Per últim, molts músics es trobaven incòmodes havent de tocar els mateixos arranjaments dels mateixos estàndards una i altra vegada. Amb menys feina a les big bands i alhora amb ganes d’experimentar, músics com Charlie Parker, Dizzy Gillespie, Charles Mingus, Thelonius Monk i altres van provar a fer un jazz més independent del ball. Els tempos podien ser rapidíssims, amb breaks i interrupcions més difícils de seguir. Els solos i les harmonies també eren menys previsibles.
Potser això és el que va fer dir a Frankie Manning dient que el bebop era una música més per escoltar que no pas per ballar. El lloc del jazz ja no era tant les sales de ball com el Savoy sinó clubs com Minton’s, el Birdland o el Village Vanguard.

En tot cas, si el bebop es balla, és d’una altra manera. Després de la guerra Frankie Manning va seguir ballant uns anys però a primers dels ’50 ho va deixar i el 1955 va començar a treballar a correus. No va ser fins el 1984 que un bon dia Norma Miller el va trucar per dir-li que al Smalls’ Paradise, l’antic nightclub de Harlem, havien tornat a organitzar jams de swing els dilluns al vespre.

Paral·lelament a aquest jazz més intel·lectual, es pot dir que del swing se’n va derivar també una música molt ballable, que no tenia l’etiqueta de “jazz” sinó de “Rhythm and blues”, amb una estructura basada en els 12 compassos del blues i una pulsació similar a la del swing però també incorporant altres ritmes, amb bandes com la de Louis Jordan o Big Joe Turner. Aviat van incorporar les guitarres elèctriques que van anar agafant més protagonisme per sobre dels metalls. Inicialment eren bandes i discos dirigits només a una audiència negra, amb segells com Chess records que van enregistrar a músics com Bo Diddley, Willie Dixon, Chuck Berry, Howlin Wolf, Muddy Waters o Buddy Guy. Tal com havia passat als anys ’30 amb el swing, ara als ’50 i ’60 aquesta música que inicialment era feta per negres i consumida per negres, va acabar essent valorada també pels blancs. Elvis Presley vindria a ser com el Benny Goodman del rock and roll. El R&B també va ser la influència principal del pop britànic, amb Beatles i Rolling Stones.

El llegat del swing

Potser es pot dir que la música  jazz swing de la dècada dels 30 s’havia dividit en tres branques :

  • un jazz per escoltar, el bebop
  • una música per ballar, el Rhthm & blues i després rock ‘n roll
  • una música popular dels vocalistes

Si hi afegim el gospel, el soul, que ve a ser una fusió del gospel i el R&B, el Motown i més tard el hip hop, no és cap exageració afirmar que la majoria de música que ens ha fet emocionar i ballar els darrers cent anys és producte o influència de la creativitat afromericana, en gran part de la música swing.

Si hom escolta els premis Grammy en les categories jazz, segons com costa de reconèixer-ne les arrel. Aquí el guanyador de millor àlbum instrumental de 2019, “Finding Gabriel” de Brad Mehldau.

I també pot costar de veure la continuïtat en aquest tema de Kendrick Lamar, guanyador de 5 grammys el 2018 en la categoria de Hip hop,

Però hi ha una continuïtat, igual que passa en biologia, que espècies aparentment allunyades comparteixen una bona part del DNA.  Una de les maneres de veure aquest DNA compartit són les versions de temes moderns en clau de swing i a l’inrevés, com resulta possible la transformació només canviant la base rítmica.

Aquí el Billy Jean de Michael Jackson en una versió swing de “Jazz de copes”

I aquí Louis Armstrong fent hip hop:

El 1988 es creava la Jazz Lincoln Center Orchestra sota l’impuls de Wynton Marsalis. De la mateixa manera que la Filharmònica de Viena conserva el llegat musical dels segles XVIII i XIX, la JLCO conserva i promou el llegat del jazz de totes les èpoques, de Duke Ellington, a Thelonius Monk i Coltrane. I als concerts el públic és acollit amb un “Welcome to the house of Swing“. El swing ha passat a simbolitzar el jazz en general.


dansa popular
(JD intro)
buit de 1945 a 1954
1955 rock n roll, els blancs descobrien el que els negres havien estat ballant des dels 20. Much of it was blues. It was played by economical jazz combos with a honking tenor saxophone, and characterized by a big (and often mushy and monotonous) off-beat.
Elvis Presley, twist (earl tucker) Mashed potato (lliscar), chicken james brown, billy preston amb ray charles

 


Ballet, posicions i moviments

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Les cinc posicions bàsiques


Resum sessió

  • Pliés: en 1a 2a 4a 5a, flexió i gran flexió.
  • Tendues en 5a:estirar la cama recta sense que el peu s’aixequi de terra.
  • Degagés en 5a, més enllà del tendu, disparar la cama fregant el terra.
  • Developpés i fondus: developpé, doblegar cama i extendre; fondue el mateix amb flexió.
  • Rond de jambe à terre, Rond de jambe en l’air.
  • Frappés: amb el peu al tou de la cama, disparar i tornar a lloc.
  • Estirament de barra.
  • Grand battements

Treball al centre: Grand Adagio, desplaçaments, pirouettes, salts, pas de bourrée, grand jeté.


Vocabulari de passos, Royal ballet

Llista de passos en ordre d’aprenentatge segons el llibre Que-sais-je. Entre [[]] els que no fèiem a classe.

  • Pliés
  • Tendus: estendre la cama fregant el terra
  • Degagés: com el tendu però al final desenganxant la cama fins a 45º
  • [[Emboité: (descrit al llibre com a caminar de 5ª en 5ª fent degagés de la cama que pasa de darrera a davant), a internet, desplaçaments en diagonal girant, [ ho confonc amb el deboulé]]]
  • [[Relevé: posar-se de puntetes]]
  • [[Battement: aixecar la cama i tornar a lloc]]
  • Fondus flexionar i estirar
  • Developpés [desplegar amb la cama estirada partint d’un passé, tornar amb tendu]
  • [[Detiré: estirar la cama del tot tocant el peu amb la mà]]
  • [[Attitude: equilibri sobre una cama, l’altra aixecada endavant o enrera]]
  • [[Arabesque: semblant, cama enrera]]
  • Rond de jambe
  • Reverence
  • Glissade: desplaçament de costat lliscant
  • Chassé: desplaçament de costat lliscant
  • Pas de bourrée / creuar per davant 1 quiet, 2 comencem a moure a la dreta, 3 queda l’altre creuat  / pes dreta davant (L) 1 punta darrera l, 2 punta davant a punt per fer el pas lateral a la dreta, 3 pes darrera r punt l davant // 1 punta darrera r, 2 punta davant l a punt per pas lateral a l’esquerra, 3 pes darrera punta r davant
  • [[Pas de Basque: desplaçament combinant degagé, rond de jambe, glissade]]
  • Port de bras: braços a primera, cinquena, segona i allongé
  • [[Detourné]]
  • [[Temps de cuisse]]
  • [[Soubressaut]]
  • [[Changement de pied]]
  • [[Assemblé]]
  • Grand Battement
  • (Adagio)
  • Salts

Passos

  • Pirouette
  • Valse
  • Balancé
  • Pas de bourrée

Rutina

Una sessió, barra:

  • Plies: 1st 2nd 4th 5th position: 2 demi plié & 1 grande plié. 1st port de bras are front and back. 2nd port de bras are side to side. 4th plié back leg * weight off front leg!* port de bras are front and back. 5th plié sous-sus and hold releve for 4 slow counts. Finish in 5th position. [flexió i gran flexió]
  • Tendues in 5th: Feet: Front, Side, Back, Side: 2 slow and 3 fast. Arms: 3rd 2nd arabesque & 2nd. Then port de bra side to side. To finish, balance in arabesque 45-90 degrees. *lift inside leg and hold for slow 4 counts. [estirar la cama recta sense que el peu s’aixequi de terra]
  • Degagés in 5th: Front: 4 and 1 passé that closes to the back. Back: 4 and 1 passé that closes to the front. Side: 4 and 1 passé that rises to releve. Hold releve for a slow 4 counts. Port de bras front and back. [més enllà del tendu, disparar la cama fregant el terra]
  • Fondue and Developpés: Part I: movement goes; front, side, back side: fondue front 45 degrees then 90 degrees, holding 2 counts and 1 count close in 5th, moving their working leg do a plie into a sous-sus and end in plié. Next section: do a pirouette after the sous-sus. Last section: Front, side, back, side: Developape, take as high as they can go slowly for 4 counts. To finish, plié sous-sus and balance in attitude to the front. [ developpé, doblegar cama i extendre; fondue el mateix amb flexió]
  • Rond de jambe à terre : 2 slow “prepatory” going dehors, 3 faster going dehors, then brush working leg front and back 45 degrees, the 90 or higher close in 5th position. Then do the whole thing dedans. To finish: do grande port bras dehors and en dedans. To finish, plié pirouette and balance in passé.
  • Rond de jambe en l’air: 4 slow singles dehors and then dedans. The inside leg then lunges keeping toes pointed and weight off that foot! After you pull up they can then set foot on floor and port de bra back. Then plié sous-sus and balance 4 slow counts. 4 slow singles dehors, then 2 doubles. And then do whole thing dedans. Then the inside leg then lunges keeping toes pointed and weight off that foot! After you pull up they can set foot on floor and port de bras back. Then plié sous-sus and balance 4 slow counts.
  • Frappés: version I: 4 plain front, side, back, side. Next, do one set of slow double frappes front, side, back, side. Finish with, port de bras front and back.
  • Version II: 4 plain frappes: front, side, back, side. Double frappes front, side, back, side 2 times. 8 counts of petite battements. Then plié sous-sus into a passé then plie su-su into a pirouette. Finish with a balance in passé for 4 counts. [amb el peu al tou de la cama, disparar i tornar a lloc]
  • Barre Stretch: Front and side and in arabesque: 2 demi plié, then do a port de bras front and back then slide back and forth along the barre. Etc. Then make them do splits and hold them to the count of a slow 10!
  • Grand battements: 4 front, side, back, side. 2 slow 3 fast front, side, back, side. Port de bras front and back. To finish, do a balance in attitude back for 4 slow counts. *Do combination 2 times*

Treball al centre:

  • Grande Adagio  in 1st position facing front. 1 grande plié. Then, Developpé front taking 4 counts: passé then extend leg out and finish in 5th position. Do that front, side, back, side. Then do; plié su-su moving to 5th position and do passé on right and then left side. Next do pirouette right and then left –from 5th position.
  • Version II:  do the same beginning, however, start combination in 5th and start facing corner and when you get to arabesque do a promenade and then  penchée in arabesque. To finish after the  penchée do a tombé pas de bourrée into a 4th position pirouette.
  • Moving across the floor: 2 soutenu turns and 2 piquée turns into 3 quick counts of chaîné turns and to finish tombé pas de bourrée and do double pirouettes in 4th position.  Do combo at least 2 times across the floor and make them do it 2 at a time.
  • Moving across the floor: Balance front and back and side to side, then 2 slow soutenu turns into a tombé pas de bourrée and do pirouettes in 4th position then swivel around and do an dedan pirouette in 4th position. Do combo at least 2 times across the floor and make them do it 2 at a time.
  • Moving across the floor: 2 lame ducks into bourrées quickly across floor: 3 counts into an arabesque turn. Do combo at least 2 times across the floor and make them do it 2 at a time.
  • Moving across the floor: Do emboité jumps turning (do them slowly-movement goes corner to corner: jump off right foot onto the left and land with right foot in front of the left ankle. This movement is often done while turning and traveling.) Into a tombé pas de bourrée and do pirouettes in 4th. Do combo at least 2 times across the floor and make them do it 2 at a time.
  • Back in the Center:  petite allegro: 4 jumps- in 1st, 2nd, and 5th. Version II:   échappé  sauté in 4th position front  close in a 5th position, then do  échappé sauté in 2nd , to échappé sauté in 4th to the back. 8 jumping passés moving back and then 8 jumping passes moving front. Do combo at least 2 times in 2 large groups.
  • Back in the Center:  Assemblés .4 total: right leg side close right leg in front 5th position then left leg side close left leg in front 5th position. Then 4 entrechats. Then moving right: 2 glissades and then do 3 pas de chat. Finish with a tombé pas de bourrée into a 4th position and do pirouettes. * Then do combo to the left. * Do combo at least 2 times in 2 large groups.
  • Moving across the floor: Do Tour jetés across the floor. Do combo at least 2 times 1 at a time.Moving across the floor: Do tombé pas de bourrée glissade grand jeté across the floor in the “zig-zag” pattern. Do combo at least 2 times, 1 at a time.
  • Moving across the floor: 2 sissonnes in arabesque moving forward, 2 jumping passés-right and left *2 times and then moving backwards pique arabesque and do 2 tour jetés in a row. To finish tombé pas de bourrée glissade into a ring leap/calypso.
  • Back in the Center:  practice pirouettes from 5th position and then practice fouetté en tournant.

Estudi de la dansa

Teatre, Cinema, Dansa  |  La Dansa  |  Història de la dansaEl ballet  |  Els musicals   |   Estudi de la dansa   |   Danses participatives: el swing, la dansa urbana  |  Altres


[Aprendre a deixar-se anar i sentir el cos, consciència del cos] [ a completar ]


El treball del ballador

  • [La condició física]: Han de treballar la musculatura i la flexibilitat dels lligaments des de molt d’hora. A més cal que tinguin una bona coordinació, equilibri, sentit del ritme i musical, i capacitats interpretatives.
  • [El llenguatge]: Ballet, posicions i moviment

EL LLENGUATGE DE LA DANSA

(EB) Crear una coreografia té tres etapes.

  • Aplegar el material de moviments d’acord amb les tradicions amb què es vol treballar, que pot anar des del ballet clàssic, a danses africanes o els espasmes del contemporani.
  • Frases: Cada tipus de dansa té un vocabulari de passos però aquests s’han de convertir en una frase, ” a series of movements bound together by a physical impulse or line of energy and having a discernible beginning and end”. Podrà tenir patrons de ritme, accents més forts o fluixos. Les frases es podran repetir, alterades o no, alternar entre elles, jugar amb els clímaxs intensos i els moments més quiets .
  • Crear l’estructura final: [equivalent a organitzar les frases musicals en moviments sencers d’una sonata o simfonia]. Si la dansa ha de seguir un ritual  o narrativa, s’haurà d’adaptar a aquesta estructura; i evidentment també ho ha de fer a la música. Però sobretot l’estructura ha de ser orgànica, una moviment en segueix un altre amb una lògica de continuïtat o de trencament, aprofitant contrastos entre passatges de molta energia i meditatius, solos, duets i conjunt.

Escriure una coreografia

(EB) La dansa només es podia transmetre per imitació perquè no hi havia manera de registrar-la tal com e sfa amb música. El 1892 Stepanov publicava el Alphabet des mouvements du corps humain. El 1928 Rudof Laban proposava un sistema per referenciar tots els moviments del cos, el Labanotation (un resum aquí). El 1956 Joan i Rudolf Benesh introduïen la choreology, més visual.


Una idea de moviment ha de tenir en compte,

  • la música. Sempre hi és present, fins i tot quan la dansa s’executa en silenci, les passes dels balladors produeixen so i ritme. Les frases del moviment es fan correspondre amb les frases musicals, seguint el ritme, el dibuix, el caràcter.  El coreògraf a vegades voldria escapar als condicionaments de la música.
  • set & design [decorat], l’escenari, la il·luminació, el maquillatge, el vestuari [ no és el mateix el llac els cignes amb tutús que amb malles de bachata] . El lloc “Perhaps the most important influence on the way spectators perceive dance is the place in which it is performed. Religious dances usually take place within sacred buildings or on sacred ground, thus preserving their spiritual character. Most theatre dance also occurs in a special building or venue, heightening the audience’s sense that it has entered a different world. Most venues create some kind of separation between the dancers and the audience in order to intensify this illusion.” ( Per això és extraordinari l’efecte de Victoria Aletta interpretant el llac dels cignes al carrer verdi el maig de 2020 en ple confinament )
  • la història (drama): Throughout history there has been a rough division between dramatic dance, which expresses or imitates emotion, character, and narrative action, and purely formal dance, which stresses the lines and patterns of movement itself. Hi ha danses que segueixen un argument, expliquen una història, o que imiten fets de la vida, com una cacera. Amb tot “Because dance movements are often closely related to everyday forms of physical expression, there is an expressive quality inherent in nearly all dancing.” [ la diferència estaria en que la dansa formal ens dóna les emocions del moviment en estat pur, i no associades a un argument ]. [ Argument i expressió emocional no és el mateix; el ballet romàntic podia explicar una història però no podíem atribuir sentiments als ballarins, que serien com símbols sense vida pròpia, elements decoratius com uan mena de gimnàs acrobàtic. Fokine va reaccionar proposant moviments més expressius. ] [ Potser el millor ballet és el que no il·lustra servilment una narrativa però alhora tampoc és una decoració, sinó que revela, a través del moviment, aspectes bàsics de la condició humana, l’impuls, l’alegria, l’energia, el desànim]

Proves de l’Institut del teatre

A

a) Té per objectiu avaluar l’habilitat de ballar segons els següents paràmetres:

Col·locació corporal: consciència dels eixos vertical, lateral i profund; deles diagonals i dels plans que travessen el cos i el seu domini en l’execució dels diferents tipus de moviment
Coordinació corporal i control del ritme: habilitat de saber moure el cos sencer i/oalguna de les seves parts, successivament o simultàniamenten l’execució d’una acció determinada i habilitat de seguir amb el cos (o una part) els valors temporals d’una música, en les seves dinàmiques
Flexibilitat muscular i potència física: tenir la musculatura del cos elàstica, preparada per executar amb cura i refinadament els moviments que requereix la dansa i habilitat de desenvolupar la força necessària per executar moviments que requereixin una fermesa física determinada en general i per impulsar el cos en el salt en particular.
Domini espacial: habilitat d’ubicar-se en l’espai a partir de les orientacions del cos respecte a la sala, de les direccions dels moviments delcos i/o de les seves parts, dels trajectes, dels nivells i de les àrees que ocupa; i relacionar-ho amb l’espai que genera el propi cos a partir deles formes.
Nomenclatura: saber utilitzar la nomenclatura de la dansa clàssica, i/o contemporània i/o flamenca d’acord amb el 6è nivell dels estudis de Grau Professional
Interpretació: habilitat de controlar, projectar i comunicar l’emoció que pugui generar el moviment durant l’execució. També s’observarà l’habilitat de retenir i executaramb precisió les frases de moviment dictades i mostrades durant l’exercici.
b).Execució de dues classes de dansa a triar entre l’estil clàssic,contemporani i flamenc.

A2: teoria

A3:  a.Té per objectiu avaluar l’habilitat de l’aspirant d’improvisar i/o composar a partir d’unes pautes donades. b.L’exercici consistirà en seguir un procés d’improvisació i composició, dirigit per un docent.

PROVA B, Té per objectiu posar el cos en disposició per a moure’s.

ExerciciB1

a.Té per objectiu mostrar les capacitats creatives durantla realització d’una seqüència de moviments amb el propi cos i de transformar-la, tot integrant canvis segons les pautes de temps, espai i energia.
b.L’aspirant haurà de presentar una seqüència de moviments, de 2 minuts com a màxim, elaborada i per a un solintèrpret. La presentació serà feta davant la comissió avaluadora durant una sessió enelcurs de la qual aquesta podrà fer ala persona aspirant qualsevol pregunta, així com també proposar alguna transformació del fragment coreogràfic.
c.El temps màxim pera aquest exercici és de quinze minuts.
d.S’avaluarà la capacitat de transformar la proposta coreogràfica des del punt de vistadel temps, l’espai i l’energia.

Lindy Hop

1929 After seben.  Shorty Snowden

1937 A Day at the races

1937 Shorty George & Big Bea

1937 Manhattan Merry-go-round. Cab Calloway

1938 Radio City Revels

1939 Big Apple (Keep Punchin)

1939 Call of the Jitterbug. Cab Calloway


1941 Hellzapoppin

en color

1942 Sugarhill masquerade

 

1943 A Cabin in the Sky

1943 Whiteys Lindy Hoppers, Cootie Williams Orchestra

Del film JIVIN’ IN BE- BOP 1946  [ malgrat el que deia Frankie Manning que el bebop no es podia ballar, almenys durant els primers temps sí, i aquests ballarins ho demostren amb una gràcia admirable]

 

1947 What a boy

1948 Killer Diller

1950 Spirit Moves

1992 Stompin at the Savoy

2021 Ron Parker i June Hamilton

 

Bob Fosse

Bob Fosse (  1927 – 1987 ), ballarí i coreògraf.

Fosse said that from a director’s point of view there were only three types of show songs:

  • I Am songs – Any song that explains a character, a group of characters, or a situation.
  • I Want songs – These tell us what characters desire, what motivates them. Most love songs fit into this category.
  • New songs – This includes any number that does not fit the other two categories, usually because they serve special dramatic needs.

The Pajama game 1957


Damm Yankees 1958


1961 How to succed

 


Sweet Charity (1969) music by Cy Coleman, lyrics by Dorothy Fields and book by Neil Simon. Un èxit a Broadway i un fracàs de taquilla al cine. If they could see me now.


Cabaret (1972), music by John Kander, lyrics by Fred Ebb

Willkommen

Cabarett

Mein Herr


The Little Prince ,  musical de 1974, Stanley Donen

Balla un número on anticipa Michael Jackson a Billy Jean


Chicago in 1975, music by John Kander, lyrics by Fred Ebb, and book by Ebb  and Bob Fosse.


All That Jazz , 1979 film autobiogràfic, amb un començament antològic

El musical

La Dansa  |  Musicals cronològic  |  Musicals categoria

Musicals 1900 – 1920   |   Musicals 1930   |   Musicals 1940  |   Musicals 1950   |   Musicals 1960   |   Musicals 1970   |   Musicals 1980-20xx

Jazz DanceNicholas BrothersFred Astaire RKO 1930 i Fred Astaire II  ,   Gene Kelly , Altres vídeos musicals  || Jerome Robbins , Bob Fosse  //   Musicals que he vist


El musical, un gènere específicament nord americà, amb la influència en música i ball de la cultura afroamericana tot i que la gestió de teatre i cinema estava dominada per blancs.

[ Stearns: This book deals with American Dancing that is performed to and with the rhythms of jazz – that is, dancing that swings … The characteristic that distinguishes American vernacular dance -as it does jazz music – is swing, which can be heard, felt, and seen, but defined only with great difficulty.] [ A Swing hi trobem la dansa social dels ’30 ]

Hi trobarem la confluència del talent de compositors, lletristes i cantants, que acabaran configurant el que s’anomena Great American Songbook , coreògrafs i ballarins.

Compositors: Cole Porter, Rodgers & Hart, Duke Ellington, Irving Berlin, George & Ira Gershwin, Harold Arlen, Jerome Kern, Johnny Mercer, Rodgers iHammerstein, Cy Coleman, Styne, Adler & Ross, Loesser, Kander & Ebb, Lerner Loewe, Stephen Sondheim.

Cantants: Ella Fitzgerald, Frank Sinatra

Coreògrafs: Bob Fosse, Jerome Robbins

Ballarins: Nicholas Brothers, Fred Astaire, Gene Kelly


Musicals 1900 – 1920 Sempre hi ha hagut teatre amb música i dansa. Al segle XIX tindrem les sàtires de Jacques Offenbach, les comèdies de Johan Strauss, les operetes com Die Lustige Witve de Franz Lehár, la Zarzuela i el music Hall anglès amb les operetes de Gilbert i Sullivan com el Mikado.

La música i dansa d’arrel afroamericana apareix al segle XIX en els humiliants Minstrel Shows. El teatre musical encara era importat de Gran Bretanya.

El musical de Broadway comença a la dècada dels 10 i esclata a la dècada dels ’20, amb el foxtrot d’una banda, el Charleston de l’altra com a ball social, i la creativitat de compositors que escriuen i publiquen es concentren el carrer 28 entre al 5a i la 6a, el que s’anomenarà Tin Pan Alley. Irving Berlin, Jerome Kern, els Gershwin. The Wizard of Oz, No No Nanette, Shuffe along musical negre.


Musicals 1930  Malgrat la depressió, és l’època en què la comèdia musical triomfa a Broadway, amb Cole Porter (Anything Goes) i Gershwin (Porgy and Bess). Bill Robinson es fa popular. En la dansa social apareix el swing. El musical es comença a filmar. Busby Berkeley (42nd street). Fred Astaire fa 10 grans films amb Ginger Rogers a la RKO (Top Hat).


Musicals 1940  La comèdia lleugera es va mantenir però alhora va evolucionar cap a un espectacle en què cançons i dansa s’integraven en la història: Oklahoma de Rodgers i Hammerstein. Films de Fred Astaire amb Rita Hayworth. A Cabin in the Sky, film negre dirigit per Vicente Minnelli. Stormy Weather amb la seqüència dels Nicholas Brothers. On the Town (Bernstein).


Musicals 1950 La música de Broadway es va convertir en la música popular del món occidental, amb musicals memorables que tenien bones històries i excel·lents cançons i coreografies. Compositors com Rodgers & Hammerstein (The King and I), Loesser (Guys and Dolls), Bernstein. Directors com George Abbott, Jerome Robbins, Bob Fosse (aquests darrers, coreògrafs), i estrelles com Gwen Verdon, Mary Martin, Ethel Merman. Silk Stockings (Cole Porter). My Fair Lady (Loewe Lerner). Royal Wedding amb Fred Astaire ballant pel sostre, The Band Wagon. An American in Paris  i Singin’ in the Rain (Gene Kelly).


Musicals 1960 Encara hi ha musicals clàssics com Hello, Dolly! i Fiddler on the Roof però els gustos musicals canviaven cap el  rock’nroll i el teatre musical no s’hi adaptà. Tot i així es van crear obres memorables com Cabaret, Sweet Charity (Cy Coleman) i films extraordinaris com West Side Story, Mary Poppins, My fair Lady, The Sound of Music, Hello Dolly.


Musicals 1970  Una barreja de Revivals, creacions originals com A Chorus Line, Sweeny Todd (Stephen Sondheim), i superproduccions comercials com Evita (Andrew Lloyd Weber). JesusChrist superstar. Grease. Chicago. Hair. All That Jazz.


Musicals 1980-20xx

Seguirà la tendència de grans produccions Brit hits  com Cats, Les Miserables, Phantom of the Opera i Miss Saigon. Revivals, Lullaby of Broadway, My one and Only. Novetats com Rent, The Producers, The Adams FamilyBring in da noise, amb tap dance de Savion Glover. Films de dibuixos que després es duran a Broadway, Aladdin, The Lion King. Hamilton incorpora el rap.


FONTS

musicals101   | Broadway database  |   accuradio broadway  |  Streetswing

La suite de danses

La Dansa   |     Formes musicals


[parelles de temps lents i ràpids]

basse danse – saltarello, tourdion

Pavana – Galliarde

Alemanda – Courante

Sarabanda – Giga


Xacona: sembla que originàriament era una dansa ràpida del nou món, de “moviments suggestius” i lletres de doble sentit que es va propagar per Europa. Un exemple n’és el Sarao de la Chacona de Juan Arañés. Va acabar convertint-se en una forma musical lenta, que proposava variacions sobre un baix donat. La van conrear Monterverdi i Frescobaldi i n’és un cas extraordinari la de Bach a la partita per violí No.2 BWV 1004.

 

Sarabanda: The dance may have been of Guatemalan and Mexican origin evolved from a Spanish dance with Arab influences, danced with a lively double line of couples with castanets.[1][2] A dance called zarabanda is first mentioned in 1539 in Central America in the poem Vida y tiempo de Maricastaña, written in Panama by Fernando de Guzmán Mejía.[3][4] The dance seems to have been especially popular in the 16th and 17th centuries, initially in the Spanish colonies, before moving across the Atlantic to Spain.  Espanya va intentar prohibir-la el 1583 però va seguir essent popular. It spread to Italy in the 17th century, and to France, where it became a slow court dance.[5] Baroque musicians of the 18th century wrote suites of dance music written in binary form that typically included a sarabande as the third of four movements. It was often paired with and followed by a jig or gigue.[8] J.S. Bach sometimes gave the sarabande a privileged place in his music, even outside the context of dance suites; in particular, the theme and climactic 25th variation from his Goldberg Variations are both sarabandes. The anonymous harmonic sequence known as La Folia appears in pieces of various types, mainly dances, by dozens of composers from the time of Mudarra (1546) and Corelli through to the present day.[9] The theme of the fourth-movement Sarabande of Handel’s Keyboard suite in D minor (HWV 437) for harpsichord, one of these many pieces, appears prominently in the film Barry Lyndon.[10]

[LA FOLIA]

424 El ballet a partir de 1975

Dansa  |   Història de la dansa    |  Història del ballet


Al llarg del segle XX hi ha hagut experimentació en el ballet, pioners que trencaven amb la tradició com Vaslav Nijinsky, Michel Fokine o Balanchine. Però és sobretot a la segona meitat dels ’70 que elss coreògrafs volen deixar la seva empremta personal. Es barreja el ballat clàssic i la dansa moderna. Es reinterpreten ballets clàssics. Twyla Sharp barreja ballet i jazz. Es busca sorprendre l’audiència [ cosa que no sempre implica un resultat interessant] [Es renuncia al moviment “bonic” per expressar les emocions humanes].

Les companyies proposen ballets nous innovadors i al mateix temps reposen els clàssics.

Coreògrafs: William Forsythe. Kennet Macmillan. Jiri Kylian (Netherland Dans Theater). David Bintley (Birmingham ballet). John Neumeier (Hamburg Ballet).  Wayne Mcgregor. Christopher Wheeldon.

Ballarins: Baryshnikov, Sylvie Guillem, Darcey Russell, Carlos Acosta, Tamara Rojo, Vivina Durante

[ després de tants arguments fantàstics, històries apassionades i tràgiques, m’agradaria un ballet més sobre la vida normal, anar a treballar al despatx, comprar al mercat, sopar, dormir] [ també em resulten més atractius els gestos expressius que no les proeses gimnàstiques de flexibilitat i força, la foto de Balanchine ensenyant un moviment que no pas aixecar la cama a 180º]


1976 A Month in the Country, Frederick Ashton, Chopin, London

Sobre una història de Turgenev. En una casa de camp d’una rica família russa, el 1850, Natàlia, la muller avorrida del senyor, té un amant Yslaev, però s’enamora del preceptor del seu fill.

1978 Royal Ballet, Covent Garden


1976 Push Comes to Shove, Twyla Sharp, Joseph Lamb – Haydn

Un ballet que barreja ragtimes de Joseph Lamb amb música de Haydn, pràcticament sense argument. Dues dones una vamp i una ingènua reclamen l’atenció d’un home.

Es va estrenar amb Baryshnikov que alternava moviments de musical amb passos de ballet clàssic virtuosístic.

Push comes to shove  M Baryshnikov baixa resolució


* 1978 Café Müller, Pina Bausch, Henry Purcell, Wuppertal

Pina Bausch (1940 – 2009). Els seus pares tenien un restaurant amb habitacions a Solingen i de petita li agradava actuar al menjador davant dels hostes i pujava a ballar a les seves habitacions. Va començar a estudiar a Alemanya i va aconseguir una beca per la Juilliard School a New York.

El 1973 és nomenada director artístic del ballet de l’Òpera de Wuppertal, que s’acabarà anomenant Tanztheater Wuppertal Pina Bausch. Pina Bausch estava interessada en explorar com reaccionaven els ballarins actors davant d’una situació, els impulsos, els objectes de l’escenari, les lesions del cos.

Fa una coreografia moderna sobre l’òpera de Glück Orfeu i Eurídice

Una de les seves creacions més conegudes és Café Müller, on els ballarins van ensopegant amb taules i cadires, a vegades movent-se amb els ulls tancats.

1978 Café Müller (Pina Bausch)


1978 Mayerling, Kenneth Macmillan, Liszt, London

Creada després de deixar al direcció del Royal ballet per poder-se dedicar més a la coreografia.  Basada en la història real del príncep Rudolf (1858-1889), hereu de la corona austrohúngara, promès a la princesa Stéphanie de Bèlgica. Insatisfet, visita tavernes disfressat, pren una altra amant, la baronessa Maria Vetsera. Rudolf cada cop està més inestable i fa un pacte de suïcidi amb Maria. Al seu pavelló de caça li dispararà un tret i després es llevarà la  vida.

Mayerling , assaig del Royal Ballet


1978 Yvonne Rainer A Trio

A Trio , assaig del Royal Ballet

 


1979 Live, Hans van Manen

Els ballarins són capturats per una càmera que projecta primers plans a l’escenari.

Live


1981 Forgotten Land, Jiri Kylian, Britten, Stuttgart

Explora els temes de la fragilitat de la vida, inspirat en la Simfonia da Rèquiem de Britten i un quadre de Munch.

Nascut el 1947 a Praga, Jiri Kylian estudia al Royal Ballet amb una beca. Es queda a Stuttgart després que les forces del pacte de Varsòvia envaeixin Txecoslovàquia. El 1975 és nomenat director artistic del Nederlands Dans Theater. Li agrada proposar temes surrealistes i confrontar el clàssic amb el modern.

Forgotten Land , Ballet de Flandes, fragment


1983 Glass Pieces, Jerome Robbins, Philip Glass

Ballet de l’Opéra de Paris


1985 Steptext, William Forsythe, Bach, Reggio Emilia

Nascut el 1949, va créixer amb el rocknroll i això es nota en les coreografies que ell descrivia com “ballet amb un toc de funk”. Va entrar al ballet de Stuttgart de John Cranko. Treballa amb música experimental i se centra més en les transicions que no en les posicions.

Steptext és una peça que deconstrueix els passos clàssics mirant de sorprendre l’espectador en trencar el que seria el desenvolupament esperat d’una frase de dansa.

Steptext , a fugue of the mechanic of the theatre ritual
Steptext , una altra versió.

El 2009 va posar en marxa una eina online per anotar coreografies: motionbank


1987 In the middle somewhat elevated, William Forsythe, Thom Willems

És la peça més coneguda de Forsythe, molt exigent tècnicament. Els ballarins no estan sempre de cara al públic, van entrant i sortint en diferents direccions amb una música industrial gairebé hipnòtica.

In the middle somewhat elevated , Sylvie Guillem i Laurent Hilaire
In the middle Somewhat Elevated , Sylvie Laurent
In the middle somewhat elevated , Marta Romagna, Roberto Bolle, Zenaida Yanow


1989 Falling Angels, Jiri Kylian, Steve Reich, Den Haag

Un ballet minimalista on vuit dones, tota l’estona al mig de l’escenari, alternen duets, solos, moviments a l’uníson, expressant diferents emocions com naixement, maternitat, seducció, ambició, mort. Forma part de la sèrie Black and White.

1989 Black White, Jiri Kylian, Den Haag

Falling Angels , Nederlans dans theater
Falling Angels , Compañía Nacional de danza


1991 Petite Mort, Jiri Kylian, Mozart, Salzburg

“Petite mort” normalment fa referència al moment de l’orgasme. Aquí, sis homes i si dones es troben, culminen l’acte sexual que pot donar origen a una nova vida,i ens recorda que la vida és curta i mai queda gaire lluny de la mort. Hi contrastos entre repós i activitat frenètica, sensualitat i espiritualitat.

Petite Mort Sylvie Guillem e Massimo Murru
Petite Mort , Nederlands dans theater


1992 The Judas Tree, Kenneth Macmillan, Brian Elias, London

Una obra polèmica que representa l’últim sopar dels deixebles, 13 homes, i una dona, suposadament Maria Magdalena, que s’insinua sensualment, especialment a Jesús, fins que desencadena la violència i Judas el traex amb el petó .

TheJudas Tree, The Genius of Kenneth MacMillan (The Royal Ballet and Birmingham Royal Ballet)


1994 Jerome Robbins

Suite of Dances, 1994


1995 Bella Figura, Jiri Kylian, Lukas Foos Pergolesi, Den Haag

Bella Figura. Netherlands Dance Theater


1995 Ephemeroptera, Jiri Kylian, un lament grec

Ephemeroptera


1996 The Vertiginous Thrill of Exactitude, William Forsythe, Schubert

Considerada una de les peces més difícils del repertori

The Vertiginous Thrill of Exactitude


2001 Raise the red lantern

Inspirat en el film de Zhang Yimou de 1991. Situat a la Xina dels anys 20, una jove d’una família arruinada és obligada a casar-se amb el ric senyor Chen, que ja té tres concubines. Totes competeixen per la seva atenció cada nit. La que és escollida encén la llanterna vermella.

La llanterna vermella


2002 Tryst, Christopher Wheeldon, James MacMillan, London

Al coreògraf li va venir la idea mentre conduïa per les highlands d’Escòcia escoltant la música de James Macmillan.


2006 Chroma, Wayne McGregor, Talbot White, London

Wayne McGregor venia de projectes experimentals i el ballet posa cinc parelles que exploren el cos humà en situacions extremes, cosa que du a postures turmentades i contorsionades.

Chroma  duet, Bolshoi
Chroma , reportatge Royal Ballet


2011 Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland, Christopher Wheeldon, Joby Talbot, London

Després d’una dècada que el Royal Ballet no presentava cap espectacle que expliqués una història, Wheeldon s’inspira en la història de Lewis Carroll. Alícia segueix el conill a Wonderland on troba el Knave of hearts, la duquessa i el gat de Cheshire. Segueix el te del barreter boig, l’eruga i el joc de croquet amb els flamencs. [un retorn a un espectacle més popular? a mig camí del musical?]

Alícia en terra de meravelles:  L’adagi de la tarta, El pas de deux del Knave of hearts, The tea partyL’eruga, Royal Ballet


2013 Raven Girl, Wayne McGregor

Com un conte de fades modern, una noia mig corb que volia volar.

Raven Girl explicat per Wayne McGregor, trailer


2013 Capricis, Àngels Margarit, Paganini, Barcelona

Capricis, actuació al MACBA gener 2014 [jo hi era], Trailer 2013, Sismògraf

 


2013 Angelin Preljocaj

Les Nuits


2014 The Winter’s Tale, Christopher Wheeldon, Talbot, London

Seguint la mateixa línia que Alícia en terra de meravelles, Wheeldon adapta l’obra  de Shakespeare. Hermione, la dona del rei de Sicília, dóna a llum una nena que el seu marit, Leontes, sospita que és fruit d’una infidelitat amb el seu hoste el rei Polixenes. L’abandona a un bosc on és rescatada per un pastor. Amb 16 anys, s’enamora d’un pastor que en realitat és el fill de Polixenes disfressat. S’ecapen a Sicília on leontes els ajuda i al final tot acaba bé.

The Winter’s Tale Royal Ballet assaig, Trailer, Introducció


 

424 El ballet internacional 1945 – 1975

Dansa  |   Història de la dansa    |  Història del ballet


Les gires dels ballets russos havien popularitzat el ballet. Mentre que a la URSS les companyies russes mantenien el seu elevat nivell, els nous focus de creació que havien aparegut a la primera meitat de segle es consoliden.

Als USA Balanchine i Kernstein funden el NYC ballet el 1948. La seva escola es concentrarà en el pur moviment deixant de banda la pompa del ballet imperial o l’esplendor visual de la posta en escena dels Ballets Russes.

A Londres el Sadler Wells es convertirà en el Royal Ballet el 1956, Frederick Ashton serà el principal coreògraf. Anthony Tudor el 1957 crearà l’American Ballet Theater. Es fundaran companyies a Stuttgart amb el coreògraf Cranko, Canadà, Cuba, Iran o Beijing.

Ja no es busca inspiració en històries fantàstiques sinó que s’explora com expressar les emocions humanes, com Béjart amb el seu “Boléro” al ballet de Lausanne, o temes socials com la denúncia de l’esclavatge per part d’Alvin Ailey.

Jerome Robbins crerà coreografies per ballets i musicals, incorporant moviments que vénen del jazz.

Coreògrafs destacats: George Balanchine, John Cranko, Peter Wright,  Kenneth Mcmillan.

Ballarins destacats: Galina Ulanova al bolshoi, Alicia Markova, Margot Fonteyn, Rudolf Nureyev, Mikhail Baryshnikov, Nadia Nerina, Lynn Seymour.


1946 Symphonic Variations, Frederick Ashton, Cesar Franck, London

Projecte d’Ashton de fer un ballet purament moviment sense haver d’explicar una història.

Variacions simfòniques, Cocoraju, Rojo, Wildor (baixa resolució)

Variacions simfòniques, Mcrae Marquez Bonelli (baixa resolució)


1946 The Four Temperaments, Balanchine, Paul Hindemith, New York

Un ballet abstracte que consolidà el nou estil americà de Balanchine. S’inspira en la concepció antiga dels quatre temperaments segons la qual al cos hi ha quatre fluids que són combinació de les quatre propietats fonamentals. Cada fluid correspon a un temperament:

Sang (càlid, humit) → sanguini
Bilis groga (càlid, sec) → colèric
Bilis negra (fred, sec) → melancòlic ( melan = negre, chola = bilis )
Flegma (fred, humit) → flegmàtic

1964 filmació canadenca


1948 Cinderella, Frederick Ashton, Prokofiev, London

Basat en el conte de la Ventafocs de Perrault. Ashton es va inspirar els ballets de Petipa. Va fer servir homes per als papers de les germanes dolentes.

OpernHaus Munich bona resolució

Bolshoi ballet baixa resolució

Ballet National Opera Paris amb Sylvie Guillem baixa resolució


New York City Ballet i George Balanchine (1904 – 1983)

Georgi Balanchivadze era fill d’un compositor i va tenir una formació musical que el permetia analitzar una partitura i col·laborar amb els compositors.  Va estudiar a l’escola imperial de Sant Petersburg i el 1924 durant una gira, desertà a Europa unint-se als Ballets Russes.

Fou cridat als USA pels filàntrops Lincoln Kernstein i Edward Warburg. Volien que fundés una companyia de ballet amb personalitat americana però que estigués al nivell de les millors companyies europees. Balanchine va acceptar però primer va voler crear una escola i després va acabar essent el que en va dir “ballet master”.

Deia que “men were just on stage to lift and carry the women”. I s’explica que quan la mare d’una ballarina li pregintà si la seva filla es podria dedicar professionalment a la dansa, li respongué: “La danse, Madame, c’est une question morale.”

Balanchine fou substituït per Peter Martins que no va estar tant encertat.

El 2019 es reporten cassos d’assetjament sexual


1948 Symphony in C, Balanchine, Bizet, New York

Un altre ballet abstracte, un homenatge al Paris Opéra ballet

2016 NYCB Palais de cristal


(1948 Scènes de ballet, Frederick Ashton, Stravinsky, London)

Frederick Ashton va començar de ballarí amb Léonide Massine i després amb Marie Rambert, que li feia classe sense cobrar perquè no tenia ballarins mascles. Va començar a coreografiar per a ella i també per Ninette de Valois.

Royal ballet assajant obres de Frederick Ashton


1948 The Red Shoes

Film de Michael Powell i Emeric Pressburger, sobre una ballarina que entra a una important companyia de ballet i triomfa en un nou espectacle anomenat les sabatilles vermelles. Es basa en un conte de Hans Christian Andersen en que una dona es posa unes sabatilles vermelles que en realitat estan encantades per un dimoni. La faran ballar sense parar fins a morir. Els principals ballarins van ser Moira Shearer, Anton Walbrook, and Marius Goring.

Les sabatilles vermelles


1949 Jerome Robbins (1918 – 1988) entra al NYCB com a ballarí i coreògraf.

Havia estudiat ballet clàssic, dansa moderna, dansa espanyola i asiàtica. Va ballar i coreografiar tant ballet clàssic com musicals. El ballet Fancy free (1944), amb música de Leonard Bernstein es va acabar convertint en el musical On the Town (1949).

1953 Afternoon of a Faun, Debussy

1956 The Concert, Chopin

Entre els musicals més coneguts: On the Town, Billion Dollar Baby, High Button Shoes, West Side Story, The King and I, Gypsy, Peter Pan, Miss Liberty, Call Me Madam,i Fiddler on the Roof.

jeromerobbins.org


1955 Frederick Ashton. Romeo & Juliet


1956 Spartacus, Yakobson, Khachaturyan, Leningrad

Ballet soviètic que va rebre el premi Lenin, Spartacus es capturat per Crassus i forçat a lluitar com a gladiador mentre la seva dona Frígia ha de servir d’esclava. Spartacus es revolta amb altres glaidiadors, lluita i venç Crassus però refusa matar-lo. Aquest reuneix un exèrcit que ataca Spartacus i el mata. Amb salts i elevacions espectaculars, va ser un gran èxit tant a la URSS com a la resta del món.

Spartacus, Bolshoi, 1957


1957 Agon, Balanchine, Stravinsky, New York

Balanchine es va inspirar en un manual de dansa francès del s XVII. Va treballar en estreta col·laboració amb Stravinsky per crear dotze danses sense cap argument especial, amb l’escenari nu  i els ballarins vestits com quan assagen. Mostra la interacció entre cossos en moviment, tensió, tendresa. És un dels ballets més importants que va crear.

1993, NYCB homenatge a Balanchine. Western Symphony, Agon, Who cares, Stars and Stripes


1960 Liebeslieder Walzer, Balanchine, Brahms, New York

Els ballarins comparteixen escenari amb dos pianistes i quatre cantants, i ballen 33 els 33 valsos que Brahms va escriure. Balanchine deia que durant el primer acte ballen les persones reals, i en el segon, les seves ànimes.

1977, fragment


1960 Revelations, Alvin Ailey, Howard Roberts, New York

Alvin Ailey (1931-1989) va tenir una infantesa dura, abandonat pel seu pare, vivint a l’època de la depressió en el sud racista. El 1949 entra a l’escola Hornton a Los Angeles, una de les poques que permetien negres. Ballarà per a diferents companyies i musicals.

El 1958 Ailey funda el Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater per honorar la cultura afroamericana a través de la dansa.

Blues Suite

El 1960 crea la seva obra més famosa, Revelations, amb música gospel i blues, inspirada en els records de la seva infantesa a Texas.

Revelations


1960 (1786) Recuperació de La fille mal gardée, Ashton, cançons franceses

Basat en una història del segle XVIII a França. La vídua Simone (normalment inetrpretada per un home), vol casar la seva filla Lise amb Alain, un ximplet fill d’un ric propietari de vinyes. Però ella està enamorada del jove pagès Colas. Asthon el va recuperar posant-hi molt d’humor, escenes de la collita a Suffolk i inserint-hi algunes danses populars angleses com la famosa dansa dels esclops.

2012, La fille mal Gardée Royal Ballet


1961 Boléro, Maurice Béjart, Ravel, Bruxelles

El 1928 Bronislava Nijinska n’havia fet una primera versió, representant una dona ballant sobre la taula en una taverna espanyola. Béjart ho canvia per per una coreografia que passa de la vulnerabilitat del solista al centre al poder que exerceix sobre els qui l’envolten a mesura que el patró repetitiu de la música creix fins el clímax.

Béjart neix a Marsella el 1927, fill del filòsof Gaston Berger i comença a ballar per consell mèdica. Balla per a diverses companyies i el 1960 funda el Ballet du XXe Siècle a Brusel·les. El 1987 trasllada la seva companyia a Lausanne, on es dirà Béjart Ballet Lausanne. Mor el 2007. Llista d’obres.

 

1988 Boléro, Jorge Donn solista, introducció de Maurice Béjart

2015 última actuació de Sylvie Guillem

Reportatge sobre Maurice Béjart, 1994 Trois semaines et 1/2 au Chaillot

Reportatge sobre Maurice Béjart

Béjart ballant Duke Ellington: 22’57”


1962 A Midsummer Night’s Dream, Balanchine, Mendelsohn, New York

Un dels pocs ballets de Balanchine amb argument. Seguint la comèdia de Shakespeare. Al bosc, la reina de les fades, Titània, víctima d’un encanteri del rei Oberon que la vol castigar, s’enamora de Bottom que porta un cap de ruc. Quan arriben altres atenesos al bosc, nous enamoraments resulten de l’ús de les gotes màgiques.

El somni d’una nit d’estiu, Pacific Northwest Ballet, 1999


1963 Marguerite et Armand, Ashton, Liszt, London

Inspirat en la història de la Dama de les camèlies, una cortesana a punt de morir, recorda el seu amor per Armand, a qui rebutjà per protegir la seva reputació, a instàncies del seu pare que desaprovava la relació. Quan el pare ho confessa a Armand, aquest corre a retrobar-la. Ella mor als seus braços.

Ashton va crear el ballet per a Margot Fonteyn, que amb 43 anys estava pensant en retirar-se. La seva carrera es va revifar. Va tenir un gran èxit en aquest paper juntament amb Rudolf Nureyev i mentre van ser vius no el va ballar ningú més.

2012 Marguerite et Armand, Sergey Polunin / Christine Shapran


1964 The Red detachment of women, Li Chengxiang, Jiang Zuhui and Wang Xixian, music by Du Mingxin, Wu Zuqiang, Wang Yanqiao, Shi Wanchun and Dai Hongcheng, Beijing

El ballet a la Xina comunista començava el 1954 amb la fundació de la Beijing Dance Academy. Els primers anys tenien Rússia com a model però aviat van desenvolupar un estil propi.

“The red detachment of women” es crea a partir d’un film de propaganda de 1961. Explica la història d’una jove pagesa que s’apunta a un grup comunista per lluitar contra un tirà local.

El despreniment vermell de les dones

1964 The_red_detachment_of_women_ballet


1964 The Dream, Ashton, Mendelsohn, London

Igual que Balanchine, Ashton basa el seu ballet en Shakespeare i la música de Mendelsohn.

The Dream, American Ballet Theater, 2004


1965 Song of the Earth, Kenneth MacMillan, Mahler, Stuttgart

Kenneth MacMillan (1929-1992) va descobrir el ballet durant la segona guerra mundial,  i als 15 anys va falsificar una carta del seu pare per ser admès a l’escola Sadler Wells de Ninette de Valois. Voldrà explorar les motivacions psicològiques dels personatges. Va començar a fer coreografies pel Royal Ballet però no li deixaven fer projectes com el del “Cant a la terra” i el va fer per l’Stuttgart Ballet i les relacions se’n van ressentir i se’n va anar al Deutsche Oper Ballet a Berlin. Tornarà a Londres el 1970. El llegat de Kenneth MacMillan.

Kenneth  MacMillan va treballar diversos anys per crear aquest ballet basat en les cançons simfòniques de Mahler sobre traduccions a l’alemany de poesia xinesa de la dinastia Tang.

Das Trinklied vom Jammer der Erde (Cançó de taverna de la misèria terrenal): un home balla alegre amb els amics, però sap que la mort és propera.

El vi ja titil·la en la copa daurada,
però no beveu encara, primer us cantaré una cançó!
La cançó de l’aflicció us ha de ressonar amb rialles
dins l’ànima. Quan la pena s’acosta,
s’assequen els jardins de l’esperit,
es marceixen l’alegria i el cant.
Llòbrega és la vida, obscura és la mort.

Der Einsame im Herbst (el solitari a la tardor):

Boires tardorenques onegen, blavoses, damunt el llac;
tota l’herba és coberta de gebre;
semblaria com si un artista hagués escampat pols de jade
damunt les delicades flors.

La dolça flaire de les flors s’ha volatilitzat;
un vent fred en vincla les tiges.
Aviat, les marcides i daurades fulles
de les flors de lotus, suraran damunt l’aigua.

El meu cor és cansat. La meva petita llàntia
s’apaga crepitant;
[em constreny al somni]
Vaig cap a tu, entranyable lloc de repòs!
Sí, dóna’m l’assossec, necessito tant l’ablaniment!

Jo ploro força en les meves solituds.
La tardor perdura massa temps en el meu cor.
Sol de l’amor, ja no vols brillar més
per eixugar, amb tendresa, les meves amargues llàgrimes?

El cant a la terra (fragment)

Reportatge sobre el cant a la terra de K Macmillan

Ballet sencer filmat des de bastidors Milton Keynes 2017


1965 Monotones, Frederick Ashton, Satie, London

Inicialment era un ballet de tot just tres minuts, amb música de Satie, un pas de trois evocant com seria moure’s a la lluna, mig flotant, dos homes i una dona vestits de blanc. Després el va extendre amb un altres pas de trois, dues dones i un home vestits de verd, representant el moviment sobre la terra, més pesant.

Monotones II, Royal ballet

Monotones II, versió extesa


1965 Onegin, Cranko, Txaikovsky, Stuttgart

Seguint la novel·la de Puixkin aquest ballet és l’obra més important de Cranko. Tatiana s’enamora de l’aristòcrata Eugene Onegin quan el promès de la seva germana, Lensky, els presenta. Li escriu una carta d’amor. Onegin, en la festa d’aniversari de Tatiana, estripa la seva carta i discuteix amb Lensky. Es baten en duel i el mata. Anys després Onegin s’adona que va desdenyar l’única dona que realment el va estimar. Però ara ja és massa tard.

Onegin part 1, part 2, part 3,  1984 Ballet Nacional Canadà


1967 Jewels, Balanchine, Fauré-Stravinsky-Txaikovsky, New York

Balanchine es va inspirar en l’aparador d’una joieria de la 5a avinguda que veia cada dia en passar. Emeralds s’inspira en el Paris dels 20 que ell havia conegut amb els Ballets Russes. Rubies té a veure amb el jazz que es va trobar en arribar a Amèrica els ’30. I els Diamonds tornen al ballet clàssic imperial rus.

És l’obra que representa l’essència de Balanchine.

El 6/2/2004 es va representar a New York i entre el distingit públic hi havia la Teresa i Maria Cots.

Paris Opéra Ballet 2006

NYCB: Emeralds, Rubies, Diamonds


1967 Anastasia, Macmillan, Bohuslav Martinu, Berlin

Un dona és rescatada després de caure en un canal a Berlín, diu anomenar-se Anna Anderson i pretén ser la gran duquessa Anastàsia, única supervivent de la matança dels Romanov en la revolució russa. Se li dignostica esquizofrènia. La música fou composta quan Martinu s’estava recuperant d’una ferida al cap i és d’avantguarda. El ballet mostra les al·lucinacions i records d’Anastàsia.

Anastàsia


1970 In the Night, Jerome Robbins, Chopin

Ballet & Orchestra of the Opéra national de Paris, 2008


1974 Manon, Henneth Macmillan,Massenet, London.

La sòrdida història escrita per l’Abbé Prévost de 1731 narra com Manon, una noia que anava a entrar a un convent, és subhastada pel seu germà Lescaut i venuda a GM. Ella s’enamora de Des Grieux i miren d’escapart però GM la troba, mata Lescaut i ella és deportada a New Orleans. Escapa amb Des Grieux i mor als seus braços.

El tema no va ser ben rebut, però la coreografia, sí.

1974 Manon – The Royal Ballet – 1982


1974 Elite Syncopations, Kenneth Macmillan, Scott Joplin, London

Elite syncopations (fragment)

Assaig d’Elite syncopations Royal Ballet


1975 Ivan the terrible, Grigorovich, Prokofiev, Moscow

La banda sonora del film de Sergei Eisenstein sobre Ivan el terrible (1944) és la base del ballet de Grigorovich, estrenat a la URSS . Ivan es proclama Tsar de totes les rússies amb l’oposició de l’antiga noblesa, els boiards. Es promet amb Anastàsia i marxa a lluitar contra invasors estrangers. Els boiards preparen un beuratge enverinat per assassinar-lo però se’l beu Anastàsia que mor. Ivan persegueix tots els boiards i acaba embogit. Demana una gran força al seu protagonista.

Ivan el terrible, Bolshoi


 

424 El ballet modern 1905 – 1945

Dansa  |   Història de la dansa    |  Història del ballet


Mentre que a Europa el ballet havia anat perdent el favor del públic, a Rússia seguia amb força però la nova generació de ballarins i coreògrafs tenia ganes de sortir de l’estricta tradició imperial. Així apareixen els Ballets Russes de l’emprenedor Serge Diaghilev amb Michel Fokine de coreògraf, Vaslav Nijinsky, Anna Pavlova i Tamara Karsavina de ballarins. Fan gires per tot el món i renovaran l’interès pel ballet a Occident. Serà molt innovador en coreografia, amb Fokine, Nijinsky i Balanchine de coreògrafs, amb la música de Stravinsky, Satie i Prokofiev i amb posades en escena d’artistes com Léon Bakst, Picasso Matisse o Alexandre Bénois. Amb la mort de Diaghilev el 1929 es desfarà la companyia. De 1932 a 1936 seguiran com als Ballets Russes de Montecarlo sota Wassily de Basil.

El 1913 s’estrena la Consagració de la primavera i tant la música com la coreografia escandalitzen el públic.

El 1917 la revolució russa interromp la tradició de moment ja que els soviets el veien com una art decadent, però més tard el recuperaran com a eina de propaganda. Entretant molts dels seus talents deserten a Europa, fet que seguirà passant durant les dècades de la guerra freda amb Nureyev, Baryshnikov i Makarova.

Un segon focus d’innovació vindrà d’Amèrica amb Isadora Duncan i Marta Graham, que fundaria la seva companyia el 1926.

L’interès que han despertat els Ballets Russes germinarà en nous centres de creació. Marie Rambert, d’origen polonès, fundarà un Ballet Club a Londres el 1928, i descobrirà els talents de Frederick Ashton i Anthony Tudor com a coreògrafs. Ninette de Valois havia ballat amb els Ballet Russes però ho va haver de deixar per dolor a la columna. El 1931 crea el Vic-Wells Ballet a Londres que més endavant serà el Royal Ballet. Donarà oportunitats a coreògrafs com Frederick Ashton, John Cranko i Kenneth Macmillan. Tindrà com a ballarins estrella a Rudolf Nureyev i Margot Fonteyn.

Balanchine estableix la School of American Ballet el 1934.

Veiem així que el ballet va néixer a França, des d’on es traslladarà a Rússia fins que al segle XX els russos tornen a París amb Diaguilev i es propaga a Londres i New York.


1902 – 1927 Isadora Duncan (1877-1927)

Nascuda als USA, impulsada a ballar des de petita, el 1899 es trasllada a Londres. S’inspira en els clàssics grecs al museu britànic i en les teories de Desarte que afirmava que cada moviment i gest correspon i expressa una emoció interna. Classicisme, llibertat i espontaneïtat. Va tenir un gran èxit per tot Europa. Va ser un exemple de dona independent. No va voler mai ésser filmada. Inspirà Fokine i Frederick Ashton. EL 1927, quan anava en un descapotable al costat del seu amant, el mocador que duia es va enganxar a una de les rodes i li va trencar el coll.

Reportatge d’imatges

Who was Isadora Duncan

Tamara Rojo ballant els valsos de Brahms en l’estil d’Isadora Duncan

1968 Film de Karel Reisz sobre la vida d’Isadora Duncan


1909 Les Sylphides, Michel Fokine, Chopin, Paris

Primer ballet “abstracte”, que no pretén explicar una història. Fokine intentava evocar l’atmosfera el ballet romàntic amb Marie Taglioni a partir d’un recull de peces de Chopin.

Les Sylphides – Chopin – The Maryinsky Ballet – Kirov Ballet


1910 Sherezade, Michel Fokine, Rimsky Korsakov

Inspirada en les “1001 nits”, amb decorats i vestuari que evocaven l’orient exòtic i de llegenda.

Sherezade. Kirov 2002


1910 Firebird, Michel Fokine, Stravinsky, Paris

Ballet escrit expressament per als Ballets Russes, basat en un conte rus. El príncep Ivan s’esmuny a un jardí per robar l’ocell de foc. Aquest li demanà que el deixi en llibertat i a canvi li dóna una ploma amb la promesa que el protegirà quan estigui en perill. Hi ha un grup de princeses encantades pel bruixot immortal Kotschei i Ivan s’enamora d’una d’elles, Tsarevna. Però cada cop que algú les ha intentat rescatar, es torna de pedra. Arriben uns monstres i Kotschei però Ivan crida l’ocell de foc que farà ballar les criatures fins que s’adormen. Ivan troba com fer morir Kotschei trencant un ou que conté la seva ànima. Ivan i Tsarevna es casen.

L’ocell de foc. Royal ballet. 2002

L’ocell de foc i la consagració de la primavera. Ballet of the Mariynsky Theatre, 2009


1911 Le Spectre de la rose, Michel Fokine, Carl Maria von Weber, Montecarlo

Un ballet curt, gairebé improvisat. Una noia torna a casa portant una rosa i s’adorm. Arriba l’esperit de la rosa i balla amb la noia com en somnis fins que desapareix saltant per la finestra. Aquest salt que executà Nijinsky va fer famós el ballet.

L’espectre de la rosa. Kirov. Igor Kolb i Zhanna Ayupova 2002


1911 Petroushka, Michel Fokine, Stravinsky, Paris

Inspirat en un personatge popular rus, tres titelles, Petrushka, una ballarina i un moro. Petrushka pretén la ballarina però aquesta prefereix el moro. Quan ell els assetja el moro l’empaita i el mata.


1912 L’Après-midi d’un faune, Nijinsky, Debussy, Paris

Possiblement aquesta és la primera coreografia moderna. Nijinsky ja era cèlebre com a ballarí, sobretot pels seus salts espectaculars. Diaguilev el va animar a experimentar amb coreografies. Eren amants però el 1913 es casa amb una aristòcrata hongaresa. Diaguilev l’acomiadarà. Intentarà fundar una companyia pròpia però no se’n sortirà. Cada cop estarà més inestable mentalment fins que el 1919 se li diagnostica una esquizofrènia i és internat a un asil a Suïssa on passarà els 30 anys que li queden de vida sense tornar a ballar.

Petrushka, Le Spectre de la Rose, Le Tricome, L’après midi d’un Faune


1913 Le Sacré du Printemps, Nijinsky, Stravinsky, Paris

Tercer ballet de Stravinsky coreografiat per Nijinsky. Evoca rituals pagans amb una dansa d’adoració de la terra i després el sacrifici d’una verge que balla fins a morir. La sorpresa per la música i la coreografia, allunyades del que es considerava bonic, juntament amb certa hostilitat prèvia del públic, van fer que l’estrena acabaés amb tot el públic cridant i protestant. El ballet s’ha revisat moltes vegades.

(Veure més amunt la versió del Mariinsky després de l’ocell de foc)

La consagració de la primavera


1917 Parade, Léonide Massine, Satie, Paris

Representa actors de music hall que surten al carrer per atraure públic. Amb una partitura de Satie que incorporava sons quotidians com una màquina d’escriure, una coreografia amb moviments quotidians, decoració de Picasso, vestuari cubista.

Parade (youtube)


1923 Les noces, Bronislava Nijinska, Stravinsky, Paris

Un espectacle dur, amb música i coreografia (la germana de Nijinsky) representant unes noces a pagès, unes noces amargues en el context marxista en que l’individu se sotmet a l’estat.

Les Noces – Royal Ballet – 2001


[1924 Les Biches, Bronislava Nijinska, Francis Poulenc, Montecarlo]

Evoca una festa. Té un aire molt més lleuger que les precedents Noces

Les biches (youtube)


1926 Martha Graham (1894-1991) funda la seva companyia

Filla d’un metge que feia servir el moviment físic per tractar malalties nervioses, el 1920 entra a la companyia Denishawn a Los Angeles. El 1926 funda la seva companyia i comença a desenvolupar un llenguatge propi que explota el contrast entre contraure el cos i deixar-lo anar. També explora les caigudes a terra.

Martha Graham, reportatge (youtube)

Martha Graham, Frontiers (youtube)

Martha Graham, Lamentation (youtube)


1928 Apollo, Balanchine, Stravinsky, Paris

Amb 24 anys Balanchine creà un ballet que evoca el pas a l’edat adulta d’Apol·ló, que rebrà l’ajuda de tres muses, la poesia amb Calíope, el teatre amb Polyhymnia i la dansa amb Terpsicore. Les posicions en algun moment volen ser com les escultures gregues. Es considera el primer ballet “neoclàssic”.

1960 Damboise Adams Jiliana Rusell Apollo


1929 The Prodigal son, Balanchine, Prokofiev

Últim ballet amb els Ballets russes abans que es desintegressin, inspirat en la paràbola de la bíbia, dramàtic i ple d’acrobàcies, va ser un èxit. El fill pròdig se’n va de casa, arriba a una ciutat on és temptat per una sirena i gent que va de festa fins que li prenen tot el que duia. Torna a casa penedit i és acollit pel seu pare.

2001 Jeremie Belingard, Agnes Letestu


1931 The Bolt, Lopukhov, Shostakovich, Leningrad

Un ballet soviètic: Lenka, un treballador gandul acomiadat, convenç el jove Goshka que llenci un cargol al torn de la fàbrica espatllant-lo, i carregant les culpes a un altre. Tot s’acaba descobrint, el torn és reparat i els treballadors tornen a la feina.

Tot i l’argument “políticament correcte”, música, vestuari i coreografia eren una paròdia satírica i va ser prohibida poc després de l’estrena.

El cargol, 2006


1934 Serenade, Balanchine, Txaikovsky, New York

Primera peça de Balanchine als USA. No té cap narrativa, simplement “the only story is the music’s story, a serenade, a dance, if you like, in the light of the moon”.

Serenade


1936 Jardin aux Lilas, Antony Tudor, Ernest Chauson, London

Creat per la companyia de Rambert, exposa les convencions de la societat amb la història d’una dona que renuncia a l’home que estima per casar-se amb un altre que té millor posició.

Lilac Garden, Sylvie Guillem


1937 Checkmate, Ninette de Valois, Arthur Bliss, Paris

La reina negra, que representa la mort, lluita amb l’alfil vermell, que no gosa matar-la. Ella l’apunyala per l’esquena i fa escac mat al rei vermell.

Fragment (youtube)


1940 Romeo and Juliet, Lavrovsky, Prokofiev, Mariinsky Sant Petersburg

Un encàrrec a Prokofiev, amb la idea de fer-lo tornar a Rússia, es va estrenar amb gran èxit tot i que la partitura va ser considerada massa moderna i van demanar l’autor que la revisés.

Romeo And Juliet – Nureyev – Ballet Nacional De La Opera De Paris

2007 Romeo And Juliet – Tamara Rojo – Acosta- Royal Ballet (revisió Kenneth Macmillan de 1965)


1944 Danses Concertantes, Balanchine, Stravinsky, New York

Una peça suggerida al compositor pr Balanchine que després altres coreògrafs es farien seva.

Fragment (youtube)

424 El ballet clàssic 1860 – 1905

Dansa | Història de la dansa | Història del ballet


A França és l’època del segon imperi, i viu un procés de modernització. El 1871 perd la guerra amb Prússia. El ballet perd força i apareixen espectacles més lleugers com el vaudeville. En canvi a les corts russes, que amb Alexandre II el 1855 havia iniciat una etapa de reformes, el ballet és apreciat. Els tsars faran venir els millors mestres i ballarins. A Sant Petersburg hi havia el teatre Mariinsky on Jules Perrot s’establí com a mestre de dansa el 1851. Ara quan viatja, la companyia fa servir el nom de Kirov.

Marius Petipa havia estat ballarí a Nantes i Bordeaux i després a Espanya, on va absorbir dansa espanyola i va aprendre a tocar les castanyoles. El 1847 arriba a Rússia com a ballarí i el 1869 esdevenia el coreògraf principal.(https://petipasociety.com/)

Rússia aportarà també el talent ballarins, coreògrafs i compositors com Txaikovsky. És aquí on es crearan peces claus del repertori com La Bella dorment, el trencanous o el Llac dels Cignes. Torna el protagonisme del ballarí masculí que exhibeix força i musculatura, menys present al ballet romàntic. Marius Petita consolida el Grand pas de deux com a final dramàtic on es mostrarà la tècnica dels solistes. És també ara que es formaran ballarins com Anna Pavlova i Vaslav Nijinsky que proparan el ballet per tot el món a les primeries del segle XX.

Alguns ballets intercalen números amb “danses de caràctere” que s’inspiren en danses folklòriques, russes, espanyoles, orientals.


1869 Don Quixote, Marius Petita, Ludwig Minkus, Bolshoi Moscow

Don Quixote – Novikova – Sarafanov – Mariinsky Ballet – 2006


1870 Coppélia, Arthur Saint León, Leo Délibes, Paris

El Dr. Coppelius construeix una nina a la qual vol dotar d’ànima humana i la posa a la finestra. Franz s’hi sent atret pensant que és de debó i la seva promesa, Swanilda, gelosa entra al taller del doctor. Aquest vol robar l’ànima de Franz per traslladar-la a la nina. Però Swanilda es posa els vestits de la nina i farà veure que cobra vida.

Coppelia – Royal Ballet Covent Garden Carlos Acosta


El 1875 s’inaugura a París l’esplèndid Palais Garnier


1876 Sylvia, Louis Mérante, Léo Delibes, Paris

Història d’un pastor Aminta, enamorat de Sílvia, una nimfa caçadora que el rebutja però Eros la ferirà amb una de les seves fletxes. És raptada per Orion però escapa amb l’ajuda d’Eros. Va ser tornat a coreografiar per Frederick Ashton el 1952.

Sylvia – Royal Ballet 2005 – Darcey Bussell Roberto Bolle


1876 La dansa de les hores, ?, Ponchielli

Integrat en l’òpera la Gioconda

1876 – dance_of_the_hours_letizia_giuliani_e_angel_corella

Una altra coreografia


1877 La Bayadère, Marius Petipa, Ludwig Minkus, Mariinsky, Sant Petersburg

Situat a la Índia clàssica, el guerrer Solor s’enamora de Nikiya, una “bayadere” o ballarina del temple. Però és promès a Gamzati, la filla del Rajah, que enverinarà Nikiya. En una de les escenes més cèlebres del ballet, un somni induït per l’opi fa que Solor visualitzi Nikiya en el regne de les ombres i s’hi vulgui retrobar. Les deitats destrueixen el temple on s’havien de casar Solor i Gamzati. Solor i Nikiya es retroben al cel.

La Bayadere – Svetlana Zakharova, Roberto Bolle – Teatro Alla Scala 2005


1877 Swan Lake, Julius Reisinger, Txaikovsky, Bolshoi Moscow

El príncep Siegfried surt a caçar al vespre, i veu com un dels cignes es transforma en una noia, Odette, la reina dels cignes i se n’enamora. A l’alba apareix el malvat Rothbar i es tornen a convertir en cignes. En una festa a palau Rothbar du la seva filla Odile disfressada d’Odette. Enganyat, Siegfried li jurà amor. Odette se sent traïda. Rothbar li voldrà fer complir la promesa. Sigfried i Odette decideixen morir junts i es llencen al llac. En algun final alternatiu, aconsegueixen vèncer Rothbar.

El llac dels cignes – Ballet de l’Opera de Paris 2005

El llac dels cignes. Ballet i orquestra del teatre Maryinsky V Gergiev 2006


1890 The Sleeping Beauty, Marius Petipa, Txaikovsky, Mariinsky Sant Petersburg

Segons el conte de Charles Perrault en què la princesa Aurora és maleïda per la fada dolenta a dormir eternament si es punxa el dit amb un fus. Malgrat prohibir totes els filoses, el rei no podrà evitar que un dia es punxi i tant ella com tota la cort cauen en un son profund fins que cent anys després, un príncep veu Aurora en una visió enviada per la fada bona, la troba, li fa un petó, i tots es desperten.

La Bella dorment – Kirov Ballet – Leningrad Theatre – 1983


1892 The Nutcracker, Lev Ivanov, Txaikovsky, Mariinsky Sant Petersburg

Seguint el conte de E.T.A. Hoffmann, Drosselmeyer un mag que fa joguines mecàniques, regala a Clara, en la festa del seu aniversari, un trencanous que representa un soldat. Quan Clara baixa al soterrani s’espanta en veure una rata de la mida d’una persona. Però Drosselmeyer farà que el trencanous es converteixi en un príncep que, amb els seus soldats, combat les rates. Clara i el Príncep viatjaran per un bosc nevat (número del vals dels flocs de neu) i llocs encantats on hi ha danses espanyoles, àrabs, xineses i russes.

El Trencanous, Covent Garden, The Royal Ballet & The Royal Opera House Orchestra [2009]


1898 Raymonda, Marius Petipa, Alexander Glazunov, Mariinsky Sant Petersburg

A l’època de les croades Raimonda espera el retorn del seu promés Jean de Brienne. El senyor sarraí Abderraman també la pretén i, en ser rebutjat, intentarà raptar-la però Jean arribarà a temps per salvar-la.

Raymonda – Bolshoi Ballet – 1989


1905 The Dying Swan, Michel Fokine, Camille Saint Saens

Anna Pavlova demanà Fokine de coreografiar la música de Saint-Saens inspirada en el poema de Tennyson la mort del cigne. Es va estrenar el 1905 en una gala benèfica a Sant Petersb urg i el 1907 a Moscú.La néta de Fokine diu que avui no es balla tal com la va concebre Fokine, i sembla una mica l’Odette del llac dels cignes davant la mort. No demana una tècnica extraordinària però sí un gran sentit artístic. Ha d’expressar algú ferit davant la mort propera, no una ballarina que es converteix en ocell.

La llegenda diu que les últimes paraules d’Anna Pavlova abans de morir van ser “prepareu-me el vestit de cigne”.

La mort del cigne. Anna Pavlova

La mort del cigne. Uliana Lopatkina

 

424 El Ballet romàntic. 1830 – 1860

Dansa | Història de la dansa | Història del ballet


Hi ha hagut la revolució francesa, comença la industrialització i alhora hi ha una reacció contra la societat ordenada en classes socials i una vida alienada a les fàbriques. Es valora l’individu i les seves emocions, l’edat mitjana més que no l’època clàssica, la naturalesa salvatge contraposat al paisatge domesticat, l’espiritual i el sobrenatural contraposat al racional.

El centre creatiu serà sobretot París. França entra en un període de lluita entre els intents de tornar a l’Ancien régime, a la qual es resistirà la revolució de 1848 amb la que comença la segona república fins que Napoleó III s’erigeix en emperador i comença el segon imperi fins 1871.

El ballet evoluciona i dóna protagonisme a les ballarines com Marie Taglioni (1804-1884), Carlota Grisi (1819-1899). Apareix el ballet blanc, on les ballarines van de blanc amb tutus. El 1832 s’estrena la Sylphide on per primer cop es faran servir les puntes, que realcen l’elegància i la lleugeresa de les ballarines. Els librettos presenten temes sobrenaturals com a Giselle. Els principals coreògrafs seran Jules Perrot, i Bournonville que fundarà el ballet danès. La il·luminació a gas permetrà una posta en escena més brillant.


1832 La Sylphide c Taglioni-Bournonville, Schneitzhöffer, Paris. Hi va haver una primera versió de Filippo Taglioni amb la seva filla de protagonista. Bournonville en va fer una segona versió amb música de Lovenskiold que és la més coneguda. L’acció passa a Escòcia on James és atret per un sílfide, un esperit de fada dansarina.

La Sylphide. The Danish Ballet


1841 Giselle, Coralli Perrot, Adolphe Adam, Paris

Giselle s’enamora de Loys que en realitat és el duc Albrecht disfressat i que està promès a una altra. Quan descobreix l’engany, Giselle balla fins a morir. Al cementiri és rebuda pels esperits nimfes del bosc que atrauen els homes i els fan ballar fins a morir. Elles voldran atrapar Albrecht però Giselle el protegirà.

Giselle -Svetlana Zakharova & Roberto Bolle – La Scala (2005)

Giselle – Natalia Osipova, Carlos Acosta (Adolphe Adam) – Royal Opera House 2014


1842 Napoli, Bournonville, Paulli, Gade Lumbye, Copenhaguen

Teresina cau al mar durant una tempesta i és rescatada per les nàiades.

Napoli Royal Danish Ballet 1986


1846 Paquita, Mazilier, Deldevez, Paris

Un oficial francès s’enamora d’una gitana que al final resultarà ser la filla del comte d’Urbilly raptada. Famós pel seu grand pas classique.

Ballet Opera Paris, 2003


1845 Pas de quatre, Perrot, Pugni, London

Coreografia pe Jules Perrot per mostrar les excel·lències de les ballarines del moment, Marie Taglioni, Carlotta Grisi, Fanny Cerrito i Lucile Grahn.

Alicia Alonso, Carla Fracci, Ghislaine Thesmar, Eva Evdok

Paris Opéra ballet


1849 Le Conservatoire, Bournonville, Holger Pauli, Copenhaguen

L’acció passa a una escola de ballet a Paris on Bournonville evoca quan estudiava amb Auguste Vestris.

Vaganova Academy 2017, teatre Mariinsky

Reportatge sobre l’estil d’August Bournonville


1856 Le Corsaire, Mazilier-Perrot, Adolphe Adam, Paris

Inicialment coreografiat per Mazillier amb una història inspirada en un poema de Byron, serà refet més endavant per Perrot a Sant Petersburg, ajudat per Marius Petipa. És famós per un espectacular pas de deux que va ser afegit pel ballarí Chabukiani del Kirov sirigit per Vaganova. El pirata Conrad s’enamora de l’esclava Medora i els seus corsaris la raptaran, alliberant també la resta d’esclaves destinades al Paixà.

Ballet Kirov

Bolshoi Ballet – 2012

 

 

424 Els inicis del ballet. 1550 – 1830

Dansa  |   Història de la dansa    |  Història del ballet


SEGLE XVI

A les corts italianes, les celebracions amb música i dansa havien arribat a certa sofisticació. Quan Caterina de Médicis es casa el 1553 amb el rei Henri II de França portarà a la cort francesa artistes i músics. Era un època en que la monarquia encara era relativament fràgil i això hauria de consolidar el seu prestigi. Fa venir d’Itàlia el músic Baltasar Beaujoyeux. El 1581 la nora de la reina, Marguerite de Vaudémont li encarrega  el Ballet comique de la Reine, une spectacle de cinc hores i mitja que combina coreografia i narrativa.


SEGLE XVII

Els ballets de cour seguirien essent populars i arriben al màxim esplendor al sXVII amb Louis XIV, le roi soleil, que regnà de 1643 a 1715. Amb catorze anys ja havia paregut a l’espectacle Le ballet de la nuit com al déu Apollo.

fragment de Le roi danse (youtube)

Le roi danse, film de Gerard Corbieau sobre Louis XIV, 2000

El 1661 es funda l’Académie Royale de la danse, amb músics i ballarins, que serà la base de l’Opèra. Beauchamp defineix les 5 posicions dels peus dels peus que encara es fan servir ara. El ballet, que fins ara era cosa de nobles aficionats (ballet de cour), es professionalitza i passarà de la sala de ball a l’escenari [com l’esport al segle xx].

Hi haurà les comédies-ballets de Molière i Lully, com el bourgeois gentilhomme i les opéras-ballets de Campra i Rameau.

1660 Le Bourgeois Gentilhomme, Beauchamp, Lully, Chambord

1697 L’Europe Galante, Pécour, Campra, Paris


SEGLE XVIII

El 1708 apareix el ballet d’action on es representa l’acciò sense paraules, només amb el moviment i el gest. Un dels pincipals coreògrafs fou Jean-Georges Noverre. Els ballarins eren principalment mascles que arribaven a fer els papers femenins, com Gaétan Vestris i Louis Dupré. Entre les dones, Marie Camargo.Ballarins cèlebres: Gaétan Vestris

Apareixen altres centres a Copenhaguen, Sant Petersburg, Moscú i Milà però Paris serà el centre d’innovació del ballet fins a la segona meitat del segle XIX.

1776 es funda el ballet Bolshoi

1778 es funda la Scala (Lombardia, Itàlia encara no s’ha reunificat)

1735 Les Indes galantes, Blondy, Rameau, Paris

Chaconne

1763 Médée et Jason, Noverre, Rodolphe, Stuttgart

Reportage Renaud et Armide, Medée et Jason. Noverre, Rodolphe

Història de la dansa

La dansa


ANTIGUETAT: dansa tribal i religiosa

Dansa tribal: per afavorir les collites, la fertilitat, la renovació anual de la naturalesa en el cicle de les estacions. Per animar els guerrers. [indis americans, Àfrica, Haka maorí]

Egipte: Hi ha pintures i escrits de dansa religiosa amb el sacerdot representant déu. Hi ha evidències de dansa del ventre, de caràcter eròtic, amb ballarines especialitzades per entretenir els rics. També acrobàcies com a les danses adagio. [ ].

Grècia clàssica: (EB) Van rebre influència dels egipcis. Hi havia danses rituals religioses a Apol·ló, i a Dionís. (Plató fou un teòric de la dansa). Una de les nou muses que inspiren les arts està dedicada a la dansa, Terpsichore . Pyrrhiche, danses que evoquen el combat. Dansa ecstàtica entre els seguidors de Dionisos, primer les dones i després homes representant sàtirs. Algunes d’aquestes danses van ser l’embrió del teatre.

Roma: (EB) la noblesa romana no veia la dansa amb bons ulls però no van poder frenar la influència grega. La representació d’obres amb gestos, pantomimi, es va fer popular.

Danses jueves esmentades a l’antic testament.

Dansa clàssica índia: Es remunta potser al 1000 BCE. La dansa representa llegendes hindus amb codi de gestos molt elaborat. S’ha propagat a tota la zona d’influència hindu i budista al sudest asiàtic. [ ]

Satpathy


EDAT MITJANA

(EB) Els pobles germànics tenien danses de fertilitat i de guerra en el marc de les seves religions no cristianes. L’església catòlica, d’una banda s’hi oposava, com Sant Agustí, pel fet de ser una manifestació del desig i la luxúria. Però Sant Basili de Cesarea el 350 deia que era l’activitat més noble dels àngels. I Dante també els faria ballar. Les danses de les religions paganes van passar a ser seculars quan aquestes van ser substituides pel cristianisme. Va començar la divisió entre la dansa social participativa i la dansa com a espectacle executada per un especialista, un joglar o comediant.

Danses d’èxtasi. Ball de Sant Vitus (masses de gent saltaven i ballaven com a posseïts als segles XIV i XV a Alemanya i Itàlia [un antecedent de les rave?]. Totentanz a Alemanya (La dansa de la mort a Verges).

Dansa bergamasca, Marco Uccellini en va fer una música adaptada.

BALL SOCIAL

Al segle XII la societat estava dividida en noblesa, pagesia i clergat. La noblesa, inspirant-se en els ideals cantants pels trobadors ballaria danses elegants en parella evocant l’amor cortesà. La pagesia en canvi ballaria en cercle, sovint agafats de les mans i a vegades cantant.

Basse dance, ballo  [  ] Aquest era el ball social més extès, en un ritme pausat. Sovint es combinava amb el saltarello (haute dansa) o el Tourdion, de ritme més viu. És el precursor de la pavana. Originat a la cort de Borgonya i estès després a tota França.

s.XII Sufís  Pels místics sufís, la dansa giratòria és uan forma de meditació.  Una branca  [  ]

Flamenco (EB): Ball del sud d’Espanya que seria el resultat de la trobada entre els inmigrants romanís, o gitanos, procedents del Rajasthan, i la cultura jueva i mora.


RENAIXEMENT

Amb el renaixement, Itàlia passa a ser el centre de l’evolució de la dansa substituint a França . A les diferents corts els joglars muntaven espectacles sofisticats per a les celebracions. Apareix al figura del “mestre de dansa”.  El 1416 Domenico de Piacenza publica el primer tractat de dansa a Europa: De arte saltandi et choreas ducendi.

A partir de danses populars van evolucionar balls més sofisticats i formes musicals, com el Branle a França i la Morisca a Espanya, la jiga, la canaria i altres. La Sarabanda i la xacona originàriament eren danses populars a les colònies espanyoles, d’influència afroamericana, que van fer-se populars a tot Europa [com el jazz 400 anys després!]. El 1588 Thoinot Arbeu publica la Orchésographie on es descriu el tipus de ball i música que correspon a la la basse danse, pavanes, galliard, volta, courante, allemande, gavotte, canarie, bouffon, moresque i diferents variacions de branle. (la forma musical de la suite de danses).

Inicis del ballet: Caterina de Médicis es casa amb el rei Henri II i introduirà a la corta francesa els espectacles d’Itàlia fent venir el músic Baltasar Beaujoyeulx que el 1581 crearà el que es considera el primer ballet, en la forma de ballet de cour, combinant coreografia i narrativa en un espectacle de cinc hores.


Segles XVII i XVIII

A França la dansa esdevindrà molt popular. Estèticament es reacciona al manierisme i exageració del barroc amb un suposat retorn a la simplicitat, el rococó.

BALLET

(inicis del ballet 1550 – 1830) Amb Louis XIV (1638-1715) el ballet es consolida. En l’espectacle le ballet de la nuit, de 12 hores, apareixia ballant representant el déu Apol·ló. El 1661 Louis XIV funda la Académie Royale de danse. Apareixen tractats i escrits com Orchésographie de Arbeau i la Choréographie ou l’art de décrire la danse de Raoul Feuillet on ja es defineixen els termes dedans i dehors per la posició del cos. El ballet es va professionalitzant i deixarà de ser un acompanyament decoratiu de representaciosn teatrals per constituir un espectacle independent.

A partir de 1700 el ballet i el ball social seguiran camins separats.

BALL SOCIAL

A la cort de Versailles es ballava una suite de danses, començant per un Branle encapçalat pel rei. Seguia una Courante, que s’havia tornat més lenta. La gavota es ballava en cercle, fent cada parella un petit solo. A vegades seguia una Allemande, ball procedent d’Alsàcia, amb la dona recolzada al braç de l’home. Relacionada amb el ländler, serà un precursor del vals. Però la forma més popular era el minuet. Venia del del Poitou i el nom derivava de “pas menu”, pas petit.

A Anglaterra el ball es democratitza. Playford publica el 1760 The ENglish Dancing Master amb moltes danses populars, com la “Morris dance”. S’extendrà entre les classes burgeses i populars a Europa. La contredanse anglaise indicant dos línies de balladors cara a cara, la contredanse française, en rotllana.

[La sardana ] es remunta al segle XVI

 


Segle XIX

EL BALL SOCIAL: EL VALS

Amb la revolució francesa, la vida de cort que propiciava el minuet va quedar obsolet. Com altres aspectes de la cultura romàntica, en literatura i pintura, el vals va venir d’Alemanya, concretament del sud. Allà i a Àustria eren populars els ländler, dreher o deutscher, on les parelles ballaven alegres amb més llibertat. Sense les regles dels mestres de dansa, el vals permetia més expressivitat i entregar energia amb passió. Viena en va ser la capital i des d’allà es va extendre a tot Europa. Juntament amb el vals es van fer populars danses que venien de Bohèmia com la polca, que en forma accelerada es deia galop, i la mazurka, procedent de Polònia.

BALLET

El ballet romàntic 1830 – 1860

Els ideals de naturalitat, passió i expresivitat passaran a dominar el ballet, contraposat a les convencions preexistents. El 1760 Noverre havia publicat Lettres sur la danse et sur les ballets on ja intentava renovar el ballet. El ballet romàntic poblarà els escenaris d’esperits de la natura, fades i sílfides. Millora la tècnica de les ballarines femenines que agafaran el protagonisme que abans tenien els masculins. Ballet blanc amb les ballerines de blanc i presència “d’esperits” (Giselle)A la Sylphide apareix per primer cop el balla amb puntes i tutus llargs i blancs amb Marie Taglioni. Canvis tècnics amb la il·luminació amb gas. Auguste Bournonville i Jules Perrot són els principals coreògrafs.

El ballet clàssic 1860 – 1905

El ballet romàntic i Paris perden força però arriba una època d’esplendor a Rússia amb els coreògrafs francesos Marius Petipa  i Jules Perrot a la cort dels tsars Romanov a Sant Petersburg i Moscú. Torna el paper del protagonista masculí. Anna Pavlova, Vaslav Nijinsky.

ALTRES ESPECTACLES

Apareix el genere de l’opereta, espectacles musicals de caràcter còmic que acostumaven a tenir números de dansa. A Viena es representaven a la Volksoper mentre que l’òpera “sèria” es feia a la Staatsoper. Seguia la tradició de la  commedia dell’arte italiana, el Vaudeville francès, o l’English Ballad. A França l’autor més cèlebre va ser Jacques Offenbach amb l’Orphée aux enfers (1858), a Anglaterra W.S. Gilbert and Arthur Sullivan. 82).

L’espectacle de music hall amb balls com el can-can, sense les pretensions d’art del ballet, es va fer molt popular a Paris.

A Amèrica hi havia molta varietat d’espectacles, amb minstrel shows, vaudeville, inicis del tap dance i soft-shoe a partir de dansa irlandesa. Els blancs imitaven els negres i els seus balls pintant-se la cara, i els negres estrafeien els blancs creant noves danses com el cakewalk.


Segle XX

El nou segle veurà el ballet renovat pels Ballets russes de Diaghilev establert a París. Després de la segona guerra mundial Londres i New York emergeixen com a centres de creació. Es considera que la dansa expressi emocions enlloc de narrar una història. Des de 1975 els coreògrafs busquen cada cop més sorprendre amb quelcom nou i original.

El ball social viurà grans canvis. L’Europa i Amèrica d’abans de la guerra segueix amb els valsos i galops alhora que intenta reviure el minuet i la pavana. Però aviat tot quedarà desplaçat per la irrupció de música i balls de sudamèrica i afroamericana.

ELS MUSICALS AL TEATRE I CINEMA

Als teatres de New York, al barri de Broadway, apareix un nou tipus d’espectacle, el musical, hereu de l’opereta però amb temes i música específicament americans, que no imitaven les operetes europees. Tant la música com el ball acabaran incorporant molts elements del jazz. La música de compositors com Jerome Kern, Rodgers&Hart, Cole Porter, Hammerstein, Iving Berlin o George Gershwin aportarà temes que es consolidaran també fora dels escenaris entre els intèrprets de jazz. El ball serà molt important i hi hauran elaborats números de tap dance i acrobàcia.

Als anys ’30 es comencen a filmar películ·les musicals. Busby Berkeley mostra coreografies geomètriques de molts ballarins. Aviat es fan populars les comèdies de l’extraordinari Fred Astaire, de parella amb Ginger Rogers. Aquest gènere permetia evadir-se de les misèries de l’època de la depressió. Després de la segona guerra mundial el gènere es renova, intentant introduir al dansa de manera més natural en la història.

A partir dels ’60 el cinema musical “clàssic” decau [potser degut també a l’evolució del jazz que s’ha dividit en una branca més progressiva i intel·lectual, i el Rhythm&blues que acabarà en el rock’nroll]. Al teatre els musicals continuaran. Als ’90 seran populars els del britànic Andrew Lloyd Weber però queden lluny de la vitalitat del musical americà clàssic.

BALLET

El ballet modern 1905 – 1945

A Europa havia quedat relegat a Music Hall. A Rússia seguia però es volia alliberar de l’estricta tradició imperial. El 1909 Diaghilev presentà a Paris els Ballets Russes. Després de la revolució de 1917 s’hi van afegir molts ballarins. Va tenir com a principal coreògraf Michel Fokine. Després van venir Vaslav Nijinsky, la seva germana Nijinska i Léonide Massine. Va encarregar música a Stravinsky i va recórrer a autors francesos moderns com Debussy, Ravel o Satie. Va innovar en la posta en escena amb decorats de Picasso, Alexandre Bénois, Matisse, Léon Bakst o Coco Chanel. Algun dels seus ballarins més famosos van ser Vaslav Nijinsky, Anna Pavlova i Tamara Karsavina. Fan gires per tot el món. El 1913 l’estrena del Sacré du Printemps serà un escàndol. Amb la revolució el ballet queda tocat a Rússia, molts dels talents deserten a Europa però aviat els soviets el recuperen com a element cultural tot mantenint la tècnica.  Nureyev, Baryshnikov i Makarova desertarien.

A Amèrica Marta Graham i Isadora Duncan trenquen amb la tradició i proposen una dansa més natural que expressi les emocions humanes i que no hagi de ser com una marioneta que executa figures convencionals. Va ser un moviment sobretot de dones. Van buscar inspiració en altres fonts com la dansa oriental o les il·lustracions de dansa en ceràmica grega. Ruth StDenis i Ted Shawn van fundar una escola d’on sortirien Marta Graham i altres. A Alemanya el moviment de l’Ausdrucktanz va tenir com a teòric Rudolf Laban que va inventar un sistema de notació dels moviments.

Marie Rambert introdueix el ballet a Gran Bretanya. El 1940 es crea la Vic Wells amb Ninette de Valois i Frederick Ashton que acabarà essent el Royal ballet.

El ballet internacional 1945 – 1975

Les gires dels ballets russos van popularitzar el ballet i apareixen nous centres de creació a New York, Londres i altres llocs. Als USA Balanchine funden el NYC ballet el 1948. El Sadler Wells es convertirà en el Royal Ballet el 1956, Frederick Ashton serà el principal coreògraf. Anthony Tudor el 1957 crearà l’American Ballet Theater. Es fundaran companyies a Stuttgart amb el coreògraf Cranko, Canadà, Cuba, Iran o Beijing. Béjart el ballet de Lausanne. Jerome Robbins crerà coreografies per ballets i musicals. Peter Wright a Londres i Stuttgart. Kenneth Mcmillan. El 1958 Alvin AIey funda el Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater per expressar la cultura afromaericana.

Els coreògrafs volen deixar la seva empremta personal. Es barreja el ballet clàssic i la dansa moderna. [Es renuncia al moviment “bonic” per expressar les emocions humanes] Es reinterpreten ballets clàssics. Twyla Sharp barreja ballet i jazz. William Forsythe. Kennet Macmillan. Jiri Kylian (Netherland Dans Theater). David Bintley (Birmingham ballet). John Neumeier (Hamburg Ballet). Wayne Mcgregor. Christopher Wheeldon.
Ballarins: Barysnikov, Sylvie Guillem, Carlos Acosta, Tamara Rojo

El ballet contemporani

Les companyies russes del Kirov i el Bolshoi van seguir fent gires representant el ballet clàssic amb gran èxit. Londres i New York van continuar amb molta activitat i nous centres arreu del món van anar apareixent. Nous coreògrafs com Marta Graham, Merce Cunningham, Twyla Sharp van introduir innovacions i experiments. Alguns coreògrafs com Jerome Robbins van col·laborar també amb els musicals de Broadway com West Side Story.

BALL SOCIAL

Després de dècades de ritmes sobretot ternaris, arriben ritmes quaternaris sincopats com el two-step el quickstep o el foxtrot, el ragtime, el charleston, el swing, el jitterbug, el lindy hop i el rock’nroll. amb el swing, la música i la dansa evolucionen alhora. Del món llatí, el tango, la rumba i molts altres. La creativitat afroamericana, del nord i del sud, predominarà tot el segle.

A Anglaterra sobretot es consoliden els balls de saló amb estils definits i regles, amb el quickstep, vals, fox-trot, tango i blues. I d’estil llatí, la rumba, la samba, el calypso i el cha-cha-cha.

https://youtu.be/yCoPdguD7H4

1928 Victor Silvester Modern Ballroom dancing

Gràcies a la ràdio i el tocadiscos, la gent podia ballar sense haver de tenir una orquestra a la seva disposició. Hi ha una progressiva individualització. Si abans hi havia una comunitat ballant en cercle o en línia, amb el vals i el swing es passa a ballar en parella i més endavant, a les discoteques cadascu tot sol. Alhora, als ’70 i ’80 també hi havia coreografies preparades que incorporaven moviments atlètics del gimnàs i de dansa moderna. Bona part de la dansa es crea al carrer, la dansa urbana. Amb el hip-hop neixen balls acrobàtics que requereixen un gran entrenament com el break-dance.

 


 

Nicholas Brothers

Dansa  |   Jazz Dance


1932 Pie Pie Blackbird (soundie sencer)

193?

1934 Kid Millions amb Eddie Cantor

Calling All Stars 1937

Lucky number. 1936

1940 Down Argentina Way

1941 TRen

1941 Chatanooga Choo Choo amb Dorothy Dandridge

1942 I got a Wife (minut 4:13)

1942 Chatanooga Choo Choo

Jumpin Jive a “Stormy Weather”, 1943

1944 Nicholas

1944 Harold Nicholas “Carolina Blues”

1947 improvisant a Londres

 

10 ballets clàssics

Els 10 ballets clàssics: Rússia 1865 –  1917 Marius Pettipa, Europa 193x Nijinski,

MATT SCHIESL FEBRUARY 16, 2011

Top 10 Greatest Ballets

10 Cinderella
Choreography by Rostislav Zakharov, Music by Sergei Prokofiev

Many different versions of this ballet exist, but the original was performed in 1945, in Moscow, Russia. Prokofiev is one of my favorite composers, with fantastic composing skills, and his Cinderella is no exception. Based on the fairy tale, the ballet is noted for its fantastic score and very humorous tone. The very beginning of the ballet, I think, is one of the most beautiful pieces of music and it’s virtually unknown.9
https://youtu.be/Ww68J0Pi_-o

9 Don Quixote
Choreography By: Marius Petipa, Music By: Ludwig Minkus

Originally Performed in 1869, in Moscow, Russia, this beautiful ballet is based on the book “Don Quixote de la Mancha” by Miguel de Cervantes. The story follows Don Quixote on his quest of chivalry and the slaying of mythical beasts. Originally staged in 4 acts and 8 scenes, it is an immensely charming and fun ballet, with some great music. 8
https://youtu.be/VMOPF4WYYLE

8 The Sleeping Beauty
Choreography by Marius Petipa, Music by: Pyotr Tchaikovsky

No, not the Disney movie, but this beautiful ballet has some of the most beautiful music of all time. Originally performed in 1890, in St Petersburg, Russia, and based on Charles Perraults “La Belle au bois Dormant”, The story tells of Princess Aurora who is cursed to prick her finger on a spinning wheel and sleep for 100 years. This, indeed, comes to pass until she is awoken by a Princes’ kiss. They are married at the end of the ballet. With soaring, beautiful musical numbers, this one jumps onto the list7

7 A Midsummer Nights Dream
Choreographed by Fredrick Ashton, Music By Felix Mendelssohn

The most recent ballet on the list, originally performed in 1962, most of the credit to this ballet actually goes to Balanchine, who put the whole thing together. Mendelssohn didn’t write the music to the ballet knowingly, it was mostly background music to the play version that was reworked into ballet music. The story is obviously based on the play of the same name, by the late great William Shakespeare, and has quickly become one of the most popular American Ballets of all time. 6
https://youtu.be/hzyyvw3YV_I

6 Le Sacre du Printemps (The Rite of Spring)
Choreography by Vaslav Nijinski, Music By Igor Stravinsky

I admit, it took every fiber of my being to not put this one higher (closer to number 1). It is my personal favorite ballet, but I kept it low due to the fact that it is only about 30 minutes in length, but the importance, beauty, and emotion behind this ballet is enormous. It Premiered in Paris, in 1913, and it started a riot. When they went to see the performance, they were not prepared for the…ungrace of it? Being used to soaring melodies of Russian Ballet, audience members were shocked to find gritty harmonies, and less than graceful, and jarring movements. It is much better received by todays audiences. The story is that of a sacrifice of a young girl to the god of spring. She is killing herself through dance.
https://youtu.be/bjX3oAwv_Fs

5 La Bayader (The Temple Dancer)
Choreography by Marius Petipa, Music by Ludwig Minkus

Originally performed in 1877, in St. Petersberg, Russia, this ballet in four acts is considered to be Petipa’s greatest work, by some. The story tells of Nikiya and Solor, who have sworn to be faithful to each other. In his jealousy, the High Brahmin wishes to have Solor the warrior killed, but his plan does not come to pass. Instead, Nikiya is killed by a snake set forth by a man named Rajah, who believes Solor should be with his daughter rather than Nikiya. Solor is about to marry Rajah’s daughter, but the gods, in their anger, kill everybody in the temple. Yes, that was a VERY short version of a rather deep plot line, but nonetheless, it has some of the most celebrated movements (such as the Kingdom of Shades scene) of any ballet.4

https://youtu.be/g-3uM_8Wsjg

4 The Nutcracker
Choreograpy by: Petipa and Ivanov, Music by Pyotr Tchaikovski

This piece was almost universally panned when it premiered, in 1892, in St. Petersberg, but has since grown to be one of the most popular ballets of today, due to its ties with Christmas. Based on E.T.A. Hoffmann’s “The Nutcracker and the Mouse King”, the story tells of a young girl, Clara, who gets shrunk to the size of a mouse, and her beloved nutcracker who goes to war, with other toys, against the evil Mouse King. He is later transformed into a beautiful prince and they go to the kingdom of the Sugar Plum Fairy (Confiturembourg) to rule forever after. With cherished music and wonderful dance, it has become the staple of poplar ballets in the 20th century.3

3 Giselle
Choreography by Coralli and Perot, Music by Adolphe Adam, 1841

One of the most sought after roles of all time for a ballet dancer is the title character in this classic. Based on the poem of Heinrich Heine, it is about a young peasant girl named Giselle, who meets a nobleman dressed as a commoner and falls in love with him, not knowing that he is of noble birth. When another man who loves Giselle, named Hilarion, outs the nobleman, Giselle realises that she cannot be with him, upon which she goes mad and dies of a weak heart. In the second act, when Hilarion goes to grieve at Giselles’ grave, he is greeted by spirits of dead women called Wilis, who throw him into a river and kill him. When the nobleman comes, the Wilis sentence him to death as well, but the spirit of Giselle saves his life, and she then departs at peace to the afterlife. A Ballet filled with emotion and beautiful dance, it is considered a classic among all forms of entertainment.2

2 Romeo and Juliet
Choreography by Leonid Lavrovsky Music by Sergei Prokofiev

Another Ballet based on the works of William Shakespeare, the story is well know. Originally performed in 1938, in Czechoslovakia, it was significantly reworked and revised, and opened anew in 1940, in Leningrad, Russia. This Ballet is considered to be a the epitome of music and movement, and the masterpiece ballet of Prokofiev. This is a ballet that is truly too beautiful to be talked about, but must be seen and heard to be fully understood and loved. The movement, and the music, and the colors, I weep just thinking of it now.1
https://youtu.be/ZB3sd2BAxys

1 Swan Lake
Choreography by Julius Reisinger, Music By Pyotr Tchaikovsky

Premiering in 1877, in Moscow, it was originally titled “The Lake of the Swans” but was shortened to just “Swan Lake” after it was drastically reworked by Marius Petipa and Riccardo Driggo in 1895, and this is how it is known to audiences today. When it first went up it was viewed with harsh criticism, it was believed to be too difficult and unmemorable. However, it has grown to be Tchaikovsky’s masterpiece work, and was also his first ballet. The story is that of Odette, a princess who is cursed by Von Rothbart to become a swan by day, but is human by night. A prince, named Siegfried, sees the swan form of Odette transform into a beautiful woman and falls in love on the spot. They go to a ball together, until morning when she leaves to transform back into her swan alone. The prince looks for her and finds another woman, named Odile (played by the same woman who playes Odette) who looks the twin of the swan queen Odette. This is planned, of course, by Von Rothbart, and when Siegfried falls for Odile, Odette is cursed to be a swan forever. Realizing his mistake Siegfried seeks forgiveness, but Odette is eternally bound to be a swan, so the Prince and the Princess kill themselves and ascend into heaven together. The powerful story is seen by modern day audiences in more ways than just the Opera. An Academy Award movie called “Black Swan” was released in 2010, and it is also the base of the story Shrek, the Disney movie “The Swan Princess”, and many other stories and legends. It is a true masterpiece of ballet, and is always considered one of the, if not the, greatest ballet of all time.

Notables not listed: Paquita, Coppellia (so badly wanted to put it in there), Spartacus, Peter Pan, Anastasia, and Firebird.