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Rating: Summary: Pre-Oedipal Fixations In Pre-Revolutionary Russia Review: I never saw a Swan Lake that failed to move me - until I watched this one. Patrice Bart, associate director of the Paris Opera Ballet has modified the story for this production, which was sensationally successful in Germany and in France. It is a 2 act instead of a 4 act version, as each indoor scene is combined with the following lakeside scene. In his version, the story takes place around 1900 at the court of Nicholas II. Prince Siegfried is a sensitive young man who is besieged by expressions of incestuous desire from his dominant mother, the Queen, and by homo-erotic longings from his close friend, Benno. The Queen's intentions towards her son and the paralyzing effect of her seduction on him are played (or danced) out from their first piece together (30:00 - manipulating seduction and rejection in the service of control). The jealous Queen and her Prime Minister Rotbart become major dancing roles. The Queen's role in particular grows monstrously until she dominates the ballroom scene at the expense of the Russian and Hungarian dances (1:27:40). These dances are pushed to the background while a crude oedipal triangle is being played out, whereby the Queen dances with her Prime Minister Rotbart in order to arouse Siegfried's jealousy. This theme isn't really developed or integrated into this version in a coherent manner, but as a ballet piece their dances in the beginning of the ballroom scene are very impressive. This evil Queen and Rotbart have a more significant scheme anyway, which is played out at the end of this scene, not before they get in the way and inflict some damage on an otherwise exciting all male Mazurka, led by Benno (1:42:22). The Swan Lake's ballroom scene is a Dionysian eruption that ends in a rude awakening, but the dominance of this annoying Queen in this scene pretty much kills the almost orgiastic element. The sets for the 2 indoor scenes are in the spirit of art nouveau. The décor, costumes and choreography for the two "white" lakeside scenes remain almost untouched, with a pure cold beauty. Siegfried's strangling of Rotbart in the finale of the last scene (2:26:30) and the irritating reappearance of the sorrowful Queen look like a silent movie melodrama (i.e. a farce). The only response that I felt was regret that Siegfried didn't strangle his mother, or at least slash her seductive throat the moment she started to castrate him emotionally and stand between him and his sexual and emotional maturity to fulfill her own perverse needs. It has become a cliché to describe Barenboim's lethargically inane conducting as "contemplative". I loathe Barenboim both as a conductor as well as a public persona. He gets exactly what he wants from the Staatskapelle Berlin, i.e. a perfectly polished and disciplined performance. This controlled polished quality of the production renders it sterile in my humble opinion. Tchaikovsky is considerably wilder than that. This is what I like about the Bolshoi and particularly the Kirov swan lakes: not only the perfect dancing but the somewhat uncontrolled brooding romanticism that was at the heart of the Russian soul. This seemingly spontaneous or natural hyper-emotionality that can felt in the less than perfectly polished Russian orchestras and (some) conductors has an appealing quality even when underlined with old fashion pathos. So what do we have so far: a dominant mother who schemes with her Prime Minister, a prince in a bisexual context struggling in vain to achieve separation-individuation, pop-psychoanalytic themes - is Matthew Bourne my private idiosyncratic free association to all of this? Isn't Patrice Bart concerned about being perceived as mounting a watered- down version of Bourne's revolutionary work, or am I missing something? Bourne's Swan Lake was completely coherent and his choreography created a new language that is congruent with Tchaikovsky's forms but brought them to new levels of meaning. Maybe this is the first sign that all swan lakes shall be produced henceforth in Bourne's shadow. However, this over the top nasty review should be taken with a grain of salt. It represents my private reaction to the psychological themes that form the basis of the choreography. Ballet is first and foremost a dancing piece rather than a dramatic one. This new choreography includes a lot of technically tricky, nimble-footed dances for the leading roles as well as for large groups. These are executed with hair-raising perfection by the Berlin troupe. Odile does her 32 fouettes rather fast (2:04:04); the camera catches 28 of the 32, but this is part of the slings and arrows of outrageous fortune. Margot Fonteyn does "only" 28 in the Nureyev film. I suppose they stop when they feel dizzy (do they count?). It is an enjoyable performance and certainly one that provokes you to think. The performance was recorded for High Definition TV with superior picture and Dolby digital 5.1 sound quality. The camera work is highly professional and has a perfect balance between close-ups and distant shots with a slight soft focus in mid and long shots probably more attributable to the live production being shot on video rather than any fault in the transfer. The DVD is beautifully presented in a clear plastic case and is accompanied with a 30-page booklet (which has a wrong count for the cues). This is an ARTHAUS DVD imported from Germany - may this be a harbinger of things to come.
Rating: Summary: simply beautiful ! Review: one of my favorite dvd titles. this title makes you relaxing all the way. beautiful again !
Rating: Summary: This is not the precious one to collect for appreciation. Review: Steffi Scherzer did not present remarkable talent in technique of being a swan. Compare to Natalia Makarova's creative and marvelous performance in the 20th century, Scherzer is just an ordinary ballerina who might ruin this masterpiece in the art of classical ballet. This is not the precious one to collect for appreciation.
Rating: Summary: In some ways excellent but not your first Swan Lake Review: Tchaikowsky's Swan Lake probably presents the greatest textual difficulties of any ballet in the repertoire. The first production in Moscow was a failure. The second at the then Mariyinski (now the Kirov), after Tchaikowsky's death, was the work of two master choreographers whose marked stylistic differences enhanced the thematic variety between the "white acts (II and IV) " choreographed by Ivanov, and the "color-full acts" (I and III) choreographed by Petipa. They also made a crazy quilt of Tchaikovsky's score, changing some items around, deleting others, adding Tchaikovsky piano pieces (orchestrated by Ricardo Drigo) and interpolating bits by Minkus. It was a success that has lasted to this day. An unintended legacy of this initially effective approach has been that SWan Lake has been considered re-interpretative fair game by varied and lesser talents. Miraculously, Ivanov's second act remains relatively untouched. It is one long love duet that has become the very definition of classical ballet, the steps and patterns so chaste, so appropriate, so beautiful and so ingrained in the collective balletic consciousness that it has mercifully intimidated choreographers through the decades and remained devoid of tampering in general (well.... Balanchine tweaked a thing here and there, and added a coda to the central pas de deux). All this to justify why, worthy though this effort from Berlin is, it should not be anyone's first Swan Lake. I will always advise to start with the Russians. The only one available on DVD so far is the Kirov: a sumptuous production, danced superbly, with the romantic restraint characteristic of the company. It enshrines stylistic traits that identify it as Russian ballet.... Swan Lake's score will allow it to be nothing else. For example, the folkloric tilt of the heads in the cygnet pas- de-quattre, or the way females use their backs, nowhere more obvious than in the Spanish dance (Act III), but also central to the swans, the flow of the arms, etc. So start in St. Petersburg..... you can't go wrong. As to this Berlin production. The good: never have I heard the score played as well on any performance. The Staatskapelle Berlin outdoes itself, Barenboim makes the score clear, moving and vibrant (even if at times his tempos are a bit slow for the dancers to show off). He brings the orchestra on stage for a bow at the end of the performance.... well deserved (the DVD sound is very good). The Staatsoper company is excellent.... I would never have expected such lyrical dancing from a German company (so much for stereotypical thinking). The principals are outstanding, with special kudos to Steffi Scherzer, a dancer I did not know before this and who is truly gifted. But all are fine and worthy of greater exposure. The bad is pretty bad: an Oedipal, unsubtle and melodramatic supertext has been imposed on the fairy tale creating a meaty dance role for the Queen (àla Matthew Bourne), a mime part in all other productions I know and which the late Lucia Chase relished performing occassionally with "her" company, ABT. Then there is the gay infatuation Benno has for the prince...... why? it doesn't contribute anything nor go anywhere....I guess it's decorative. There is even a hint of palace intrigue since von Rothbart now seems to be a Prime Minister who gets strangled by the Prince at the end. Does it work? Not really. All this added to&fro needs music and stage time which is robbed mostly from Act III. The national dances are truly shortshrifted when they can be exciting. Perhaps Mr. Bart should have allowed more of Petipa in what Petipa did best, and refrain from doing what he obviously has not mastered. So.....all told, I enjoyed it. Even the bad stuff has the redeeming quality of sounding so good. I would have given this performance 3 stars but for the superlative work of the orchestra. If you are a lover of Swan Lake and know it, get it. If it is your first acquaintance with the work.... go elsewhere. I recommend the Kirov (I particularly enjoy the introduction of some black swans among the white in Act IV to Tchaikowsky's Valse Bluette, orchestrated by Drigo, a lovely, appropriately melancholy dance, even if the result of the hodge-podge prone masterpiece bequeathed to us by Lev Ivanov, Marius Petipa..... and Tchaikovsky.
Rating: Summary: Exquisite rendition of Swan Lake Review: This is probably the best commercially available Swan Lake. Steffi Scherzer is a lyrical and effective Odette/Odile and the corps de ballet is outstanding. The orchestra conducted by Barenboim is an absolute delight. The orchestra and the dancers are so well integrated that there are no miscues, none!! This Swan Lake is set in the 19th century, but do not let this worry you. The gowns are exquisite and flowing, which adds an airy effect to the choreography of the ballroom scene. The white scenes are otherwise conventional. The finale will also surprise you since Siegfrid's mother plays a significantly more involved role. Siegfrid fights Robarth in desperation of having lost Odette and kills him. Robarth while dying, reminds Siegfrid that the spell will not be broken with his death, but that Odette will die as well. Siegfrid kills himself when he realizes he has sealed Odette's fate. Finally, Siegfrid's mother looks for her son in the woods and finds him lying in the fog next to Robarth. She tries to wake him up and goes mad when realizing he is dead. Still my favorite ending is that of the American Ballet theater production, in which Odette dies as a swan when Siegfrid and Robarth kill each other, but this comes close enough. The orchestra and corps are just exquisite, you will enjoy this one.
Rating: Summary: Exquisite rendition of Swan Lake Review: This is probably the best commercially available Swan Lake. Steffi Scherzer is a lyrical and effective Odette/Odile and the corps de ballet is outstanding. The orchestra conducted by Barenboim is an absolute delight. The orchestra and the dancers are so well integrated that there are no miscues, none!! This Swan Lake is set in the 19th century, but do not let this worry you. The gowns are exquisite and flowing, which adds an airy effect to the choreography of the ballroom scene. The white scenes are otherwise conventional. The finale will also surprise you since Siegfrid's mother plays a significantly more involved role. Siegfrid fights Robarth in desperation of having lost Odette and kills him. Robarth while dying, reminds Siegfrid that the spell will not be broken with his death, but that Odette will die as well. Siegfrid kills himself when he realizes he has sealed Odette's fate. Finally, Siegfrid's mother looks for her son in the woods and finds him lying in the fog next to Robarth. She tries to wake him up and goes mad when realizing he is dead. Still my favorite ending is that of the American Ballet theater production, in which Odette dies as a swan when Siegfrid and Robarth kill each other, but this comes close enough. The orchestra and corps are just exquisite, you will enjoy this one.
Rating: Summary: Stunning Steffi, Sublime Corps, Interesting Production Review: Totally objective and irrefutable ratings (0-10): DVD Video - 10.0 - Superb. Very thoughtful and gratifying camera work. Sound - 10.0 - Barenboim and the Staatsoper Orch play this piece as well as I've ever heard it. The Digital 5.1 sound is full and just what you'd expect from a well-made DVD. I am not a sound expert though, so take my rating on sound only with a grain of salt. Content - 8.5 - (breakdown follows) Steffi Scherzer (Odette/Odile): 10.0 - Miss S. is enormously talented and, in many places, spine-tingling to watch. I've never seen or heard of her before this, but she is simply one of the best currently dancing ballerinas I've seen. Her performance is languid, and she seems ever-conscious here that she is playing someone who is part-bird. This is true of the corps too. Oliver Matz (Prince Siegfried): 8.5 - is not as good, but still competent. Plus, even though his technique is a little rough edged (in places it looks too hard for him; plus he's a terrible partner), he brings a very pleasant lightness to the steps, especially in the "danse du prince" that begins the first "white" scene. Overall, Matz is memorable, which says a lot. Jens Weber(Benno): 8.0 - His technique is a little raw, but overall, his dancing is pleasant to watch. His role is beefed up in this production, and that's a good thing in this case because Weber has some acting talent. This is important because, in this production, Benno is a catalyst for the Prince's troubles. (See comment below on production). Bettina Thiel - (the Queen): 9.0 - Very nice to watch, beautiful lines, soulful acting. Anyone who's seen other Swan Lakes (not counting Matthew Bourne's) knows that the Queen is usually a pantomime role. Here, she is central to the story, so it's good that she has a lot of dancing to do. The most exceptional moment is her solo scene, which is danced, I believe, to the prelude of Act II (Act III in most productions; see below). Corps de Ballet: 10.0+ !! - Absolutely marvelous. The white acts are breathtaking. I have three Swan Lakes on DVD. This is the one I watch the most. And I watch it a lot. The main reason is the stunning corps. Production: 8.5 - Traditionally, the ballet is set in the 13th century or whatever - fairy tale time - whereas this one is set in what appears to be late 19th century dress (during the full color scenes). So what? The white scenes are totally traditional, and the color scenes are a little more innovative, but, apart from the plot tweaking, nothing spectacularly controversial. Benno has a "thing" for the prince, which is unrequited. I believe that this is an objective subtext in this ballet whose whole premise is the Prince's sexual confusion. When Benno finally gets it that the Prince is not interested, Benno's jealousy ignites the subsequent deception. You'll either be persuaded or not. Did I mention the Corps?
Rating: Summary: Stunning Steffi, Sublime Corps, Interesting Production Review: Totally objective and irrefutable ratings (0-10): DVD Video - 10.0 - Superb. Very thoughtful and gratifying camera work. Sound - 10.0 - Barenboim and the Staatsoper Orch play this piece as well as I've ever heard it. The Digital 5.1 sound is full and just what you'd expect from a well-made DVD. I am not a sound expert though, so take my rating on sound only with a grain of salt. Content - 8.5 - (breakdown follows) Steffi Scherzer (Odette/Odile): 10.0 - Miss S. is enormously talented and, in many places, spine-tingling to watch. I've never seen or heard of her before this, but she is simply one of the best currently dancing ballerinas I've seen. Her performance is languid, and she seems ever-conscious here that she is playing someone who is part-bird. This is true of the corps too. Oliver Matz (Prince Siegfried): 8.5 - is not as good, but still competent. Plus, even though his technique is a little rough edged (in places it looks too hard for him; plus he's a terrible partner), he brings a very pleasant lightness to the steps, especially in the "danse du prince" that begins the first "white" scene. Overall, Matz is memorable, which says a lot. Jens Weber(Benno): 8.0 - His technique is a little raw, but overall, his dancing is pleasant to watch. His role is beefed up in this production, and that's a good thing in this case because Weber has some acting talent. This is important because, in this production, Benno is a catalyst for the Prince's troubles. (See comment below on production). Bettina Thiel - (the Queen): 9.0 - Very nice to watch, beautiful lines, soulful acting. Anyone who's seen other Swan Lakes (not counting Matthew Bourne's) knows that the Queen is usually a pantomime role. Here, she is central to the story, so it's good that she has a lot of dancing to do. The most exceptional moment is her solo scene, which is danced, I believe, to the prelude of Act II (Act III in most productions; see below). Corps de Ballet: 10.0+ !! - Absolutely marvelous. The white acts are breathtaking. I have three Swan Lakes on DVD. This is the one I watch the most. And I watch it a lot. The main reason is the stunning corps. Production: 8.5 - Traditionally, the ballet is set in the 13th century or whatever - fairy tale time - whereas this one is set in what appears to be late 19th century dress (during the full color scenes). So what? The white scenes are totally traditional, and the color scenes are a little more innovative, but, apart from the plot tweaking, nothing spectacularly controversial. Benno has a "thing" for the prince, which is unrequited. I believe that this is an objective subtext in this ballet whose whole premise is the Prince's sexual confusion. When Benno finally gets it that the Prince is not interested, Benno's jealousy ignites the subsequent deception. You'll either be persuaded or not. Did I mention the Corps?
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