Tchaikovsky's Ballets
Swan Lake, Sleeping Beauty, Nutcracker
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Oxford University Press
Published:14th Mar '91
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
Tchaikovsky's Ballets combines analysis of the music of Swan Lake, Sleeping Beauty, and Nutcracker with a description based on rare and not easily accessible documents of the first productions of these works in imperial Russia. Essential background concerning the ballet audience, the collaboration of composer and ballet-master, and Moscow in the 1860s leads into an account of the first production of Swan Lake in 1877. A discussion of the theatre reforms initiated by Ivan Vsevolozhsky, Director of the Imperial Theatres and Tchaikovsky's patron, prepares us for a study of the still-famous 1890 production of Sleeping Beauty, Tchaikovsky's first collaboration with the choreographer Marius Petipa. Professor Wiley then explains how Nutcracker, which followed two years after Sleeping Beauty, was seen by its producers and audiences in a much less favourable light in 1882 than it is now. The final chapter discusses the celebrated revival of Swan Lake in 1985 by Petipa and Leve Ivanov.
'a masterpiece of exhaustive scholarship' Times Literary Supplement
'An authoritative, important, useful book on dance, based on primary source materials, meticulously researched, and intelligently presented ... Tchaikovsky's Ballets, by presenting a more complete picture than had heretofore been available, inevitably forces us to reassess our views.' New Criterion
`a work of exceptional and illuminating scholarship' Financial Times
'Wiley's study ... is by far the most detailed and illuminating account to date of Tchaikovsky's working relationships with the choreographers and designers of the Russian Imperial Ballet.' Bayan Northcott, BBC Music, November 1994
ISBN: 9780198162490
Dimensions: 234mm x 156mm x 35mm
Weight: 710g
446 pages