Repertoire
Apollo
Balanchine's first collaboration with Stravinsky and one of his earliest international successes, Apollo presents the young god as he is ushered into adulthood by the muses of poetry, mime, and dance.
“Apollo I look back on as the turning point of my life. In its discipline and restraint, in its sustained oneness of tone and feeling, the score was a revelation. It seemed to tell me that I could dare not to use everything, that I, too, could eliminate.”
-George Balanchine
- World premiere by: Diaghilev's Ballets Russes at Théâtre Sarah Bernhardt, Paris (France), June 12th 1928
- Premiere by CND: at Teatro Real Madrid, (Spain) November 19th 2020
Apollo is the oldest Balanchine ballet in New York City Ballet’s repertory. Created for Serge Diaghilev’s Ballets Russes, and originally titled Apollon Musagète, the ballet premiered in Paris in 1928 and was Balanchine’s first major collaboration with composer Igor Stravinsky. With this dramatic and powerful ballet, which created a sensation when it was first performed, the 24-year-old Balanchine achieved international recognition. The 1928 premiere of the ballet featured sets and costumes by the French painter André Bauchant and in 1929 new costumes were created by Coco Chanel. The ballet was first performed by New York City Ballet in 1951, and during his lifetime Balanchine continued to revise the work, eliminating sets, costumes, and much of the ballet’s narrative content.
Información
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Choreography:George Balanchine
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Music:Igor Stravinsky (1882-1971)- Apollon Musagète
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Original editor:Boosey and Hawkes Music Publishers Ltd.
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Lighting Design:Roland Batesz
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Staging:Nanette Glushak
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Costumes made by:CND wardrobe
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Running time:28 minutes
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Cast premiere CND:Alessandro Riga (Apollo), Ana Calderón (Calliope), Haruhi Otani (Polyhymnia), Giada Rossi (Terpsichore)