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La Bayadère
La Bayadère
Theater Tickets
Royal Opera House
Booking from
Tue, 13th January 2009
Booking to
Sat, 7th February 2009
Supplier
This item is supplied by Seatem Group and is subject to their terms & conditions.
Terms & Conditions
Romantic India provides the setting for one of The Royal Ballet’s favourite full-length works: La Bayadère, a tale of love, murder and vengeful judgement by the gods. At the centre of this showcase of classical dancing is the warrior Solor and his love Nikiya, the beautiful temple dancer (bayadère) of the title.
Nikiya provokes the murderous jealousy of her wicked rival, Gamzatti, encouraged by the High Brahmin, whose own designs on the bayadère are far from pure. Seeking solace in opium after the death of his love, Solor hallucinates an afterworld – the Kingdom of the Shades – filled with one of classical dance’s most famous images as multiple spectral Nikiyas fill the stage. With the collapse of the temple, destroyed by the gods, Solor and Nikiyia are finally reunited as spirits in the next world. Originally choreographed in 1877 by Marius Petipa, La Bayadère was later adapted by The Kirov Ballet and re-created in this three-act version by Natalia Makarova with naturalistic and detailed designs that create a rich setting for an exotic tale. Two star ballerina roles, the epitome of a ‘White’ ballet and a Bronze Idol who comes briefly but spectacularly to life are just some of the elements that make this a perennial favourite of The Royal Ballet repertory. CREDITS Choreography: Marius Petipa Natalia Makarova Music: Ludwig Minkus Orchestrated by John Lanchbery Costume Designs: Yolanda Sonnabend Lighting: John B Read Production: Natalia Makarova Set Designs: Pier Luigi Samaritani PERFORMERS Conductor: Valeriy Ovsyanikov Nikiya: Tamara Rojo Lauren Cuthbertson Yuhui Choe Marianela Nuñez Alina Cojocaru Sarah Lamb Roberta Marquez Solor: Thiago Soares David Makhateli Sergei Polunin Ivan Putrov Carlos Acosta Federico Bonelli Johan Kobborg Gamzatti: Isabel McMeekan Laura Morera Hikaru Kobayashi Marianela Nuñez Alexandra Ansanelli Lauren Cuthbertson The present theatre was built in 1858. During World War II it was used as a dance hall but after the war the decision was made to establish the Royal Opera House as the permanent year-round home of the opera and ballet companies now known as the Royal Opera and the Royal Ballet. The ballet company reopened the building on 20 February 1946 with The Sleeping Beauty. The two companies combined for Purcell's The Fairy Queen that December, and on 14 January 1947, Covent Garden Opera Company gave its first complete opera performance, Bizet's Carmen.
TRAVEL InfoNearest Rail: Charing Cross Nearest Tube: Covent Garden (Piccadilly line) |
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