Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Introduction
- Part I From the Renaissance to the baroque: royal power and worldly display
- Part II The eighteenth century: revolutions in technique and spirit
- Part III Romantic ballet: ballet is a woman
- Part IV The twentieth century: tradition becomes modern
- 17 The ballet avant-garde I: the Ballets Suédois and its modernist concept
- 18 The ballet avant-garde II: the ‘new’ Russian and Soviet dance in the twentieth century
- 19 George Balanchine
- 20 Balanchine and the deconstruction of classicism
- 21 The Nutcracker: a cultural icon
- 22 From Swan Lake to Red Girl's Regiment: ballet's sinicisation
- 23 Giselle in a Cuban accent
- 24 European ballet in the age of ideologies
- Notes
- Bibliography and further reading
- Index of persons
- Index of ballets
- Subject index
- The Cambridge Companion to Music
20 - Balanchine and the deconstruction of classicism
from Part IV - The twentieth century: tradition becomes modern
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 September 2011
- Frontmatter
- Introduction
- Part I From the Renaissance to the baroque: royal power and worldly display
- Part II The eighteenth century: revolutions in technique and spirit
- Part III Romantic ballet: ballet is a woman
- Part IV The twentieth century: tradition becomes modern
- 17 The ballet avant-garde I: the Ballets Suédois and its modernist concept
- 18 The ballet avant-garde II: the ‘new’ Russian and Soviet dance in the twentieth century
- 19 George Balanchine
- 20 Balanchine and the deconstruction of classicism
- 21 The Nutcracker: a cultural icon
- 22 From Swan Lake to Red Girl's Regiment: ballet's sinicisation
- 23 Giselle in a Cuban accent
- 24 European ballet in the age of ideologies
- Notes
- Bibliography and further reading
- Index of persons
- Index of ballets
- Subject index
- The Cambridge Companion to Music
Summary
I would say quite frankly that I detest the spirit of these parodies, and that the perpetual sniggering of the choreographer Mr Balanchine seems to me, at times, a sign of powerlessness. He uses and abuses classical dance by literally putting it to torture; with a type of sadistic satisfaction, he . . . forces the leader of the Muses to play the clown.
With this scathing critique André Levinson, the most prominent defender of the nineteenth-century balletic canon, assessed George Balanchine's Le Bal (The Ball, 1929). As anyone familiar with Balanchine's career knows, this is a surprisingly harsh treatment of the choreographer who has come to epitomise the resuscitation of classical ballet in the twentieth century. scholars invariably place Balanchine within an “apostolic succession” of ballet masters “extending back in time through Petipa, and Didelot before him, to Noverre and Lully”, the founding fathers of the genre. Often, his irreverent attitude towards classicism in his early work is dismissed as lacking the mature, pure-dance approach of his later years. Balanchine himself set the tone of this interpretation by allowing more unorthodox works, including Le Bal, to fall out of repertory – and by altering the choreography of such early ballets as Apollon musagète (Apollo, Leader of the Muses, 1928) in order to stress their continuity with the classical tradition.
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- The Cambridge Companion to Ballet , pp. 237 - 245Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2007
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