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Kenneth's MacMillan's Mayerling / Mukhamedov, Durante, Collier, Royal Ballet |
List Price: $29.95
Your Price: $26.96 |
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Product Info |
Reviews |
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Rating: Summary: BEAUTY IN NOTE AND FORM Review: AWESOME VIDEO MOSTELY BECAUSE OF THE MUSIC OF FRANZ LISZT TO WHICH THE BALLET IS SET AND NOT TO MENTION THE EXQUISITE DANCING OF VIVIANA DURANTE AND IREK M. - JUST CHECKING AMAZON TO SEE IF IT IS OUT ON DVD YET.
Rating: Summary: The dark side of passion Review: I bought "Mayerling" sight-unseen after reading the synopsis in a book, and I'm glad I did. "Mayerling", choreographed by Kenneth MacMillan ("Romeo and Juliet") and performed by the Royal Ballet, tells the story of the tragic love affair between the mentally-ill Crown Prince Rudolf of Austria-Hungary and his 17-year-old mistress Mary Vetsera, which ended in a murder-suicide at the royal lodge of Mayerling on January 30, 1889. Viewers be warned...this is no fairy-tale, but a dark, intense story of passion, violence, and death.
Irek Mukhamedov is almost frightening as Rudolf, a tormented, drug-addicted womanizer who brutally assaults his new bride (Jane Burn) on their wedding night and who seems to decay visibly as he sinks into madness and addiction. Drawn against his will into a web of radical political intrigue, Rudolf finds solace in Baroness Mary Vetsera, a highstrung teenager with a death-wish to match Rudolf's own. Viviana Durante dances Mary with an electrical intensity, fully believable as a young girl fascinated by death. Lesley Collier and Darcey Bussell also add spice as the scheming Countess Larisch and Rudolf's coquettish mistress Mitzi Kasper, and Matthew Hart is a loose-limbed Bratfisch. The choreography is classic MacMillan, filled with the same passionate, full-speed-ahead energy that characterizes his "Romeo and Juliet" --- the pas de deuxs are so violent sometimes you wonder how Mukhamedov, Durante, and Burn get through them without getting hurt. If you're looking for pretty, "classic" ballet, you're not going to find it here. Dancers flail and fall, grasping frantically at each other like drowning people reaching for the last available lifeboat, and even the scenery seems soaked in despair. I suppose you could call "Mayerling" the "anti-Romeo"; transcendant, glowing romance is replaced here by lust, desperation, and darkness. The ballet ends with one of the most shocking scenes I can remember; the rigor-mortised body of Mary Vetsera being dragged from a carriage and laid in a coffin for a secret burial in a barren, darkened cemetery.
The only quibble I had with the production was the overuse of closeups, especially during the violent wedding-night pas de deux for Rudolf and Stephanie. While it was nice to see the emotions on the dancers' faces up-close every so often, the director had a habit of going for tight closeups during some of the most dramatic moments in the dance, which detracted from the brutal physicality of the pas and lessened the emotional impact. There was a nice touch, though, in the on-screen narration between scenes, very helpful if you're not quite up to speed on your Austrio-Hungarian history. If you're serious about building a ballet DVD collection, add "Mayerling" to your list if only for a change of pace from all those swans and sleeping princesses.
Rating: Summary: Beautiful music and choreography. Review: I just love MacMillan, so I had to check out The Royal Ballet's Mayerling production. Though the plot is rather confusing (especially for a ballet), the dancing is passionate and sensual and never misses provocative themes that underly.
Rating: Summary: A masterpiece Review: I think the Royal Ballet's version of Mayerling was wonderful.In my opinion, the royal ballet has never dissapointed me with their productions.The shows that they put on, are quality performances, in regards to the stage sets, the costumes, the skills of the dancers,the story lines.By the time you are done watching this video, you will have a better understanding of Austro Hungarian history,of the Hapsburg dynasty (you will learn more about Franz Joseph,Empress Elizabeth and their emotionally tender love starved son; Crown Prince Rudolf), and of the richness and high culture of that royal dynasty.The main character,(played by Irek Mukhademov), was a fantastic Rudolf.He brought out the raw emotions of this character (Rudolfs lonliness,his mother's lack of warmth for him, his father's unfriendly relationship with him, his fascination with death, his and Mary Vetsera's substantial love for one another). I am also a great fan of Viviana Durante, who plays Mary Vetsera.She is an excellent dancer and plays her part beautifully.I also enjoyed seeing Lesley Collier in this performance. Her dancing is lovely, and you just can't help but like her. The music in this ballet is by Franz Liszt.I think that the music is perfect for the ballet.
Rating: Summary: kind of boring Review: If you are looking for something close to a classic, then this is not it! It is an interesting story, but there are several scenes that are very hard to understand. The lead male either had a shaky performance or he is just not the best dancer in the company. Several smaller male roles that were performed were much more stronger and precise than his. As a viewer, he did not make everything "look easy". THe female dancers and principals were very talented, along with the rest of the corps, in terms of technique and expression. I am just not a fan of the ballet itself. The music does not always connect and parallel the dances and there are many dull moments in the ballet where I just had to fast forward. If you are looking to take a chance on this dvd, then you will not be completely disappointed, but I do recommend browsing around a little more. It is also very gloomy and the camera angles can be a little frustrating when all you see is the arms of someone doing [maybe] 3 or four turns, yet all you can see is an unecessary close-up of one stationary dancer! For a good production from the Royal Ballet, try Swan Lake with Dowell and Makarova. But if you're looking for something completely different from a Swan Lake, Sleeping Beauty or Le Corsaire, then maybe you'd want to see this one for yourself.
Rating: Summary: Poor MacMillan Review: Mayerling is one of the most intense ballets I have ever seen and Kenneth MacMillans choreography is superb (as allways). This reccording though is very lacking. The cast is excellent (including such stars as Irek Mukhamedov, Viviana Durante and Darcey Bussell, Lesley Collier) and all give wonderfull performances, but the camera angles and the frequent close-ups ruin many of the scenes - especially the dramatic and very high energy pas de deux between Prince Rudolf (Irek Mukhamedov) and his new wife Princess Stephanie (Jane Burn). This pas de deux is quite violent and covers huge areas of the stage. The movement and energy is compleatly lost in shots of faces, hands etc. As the only reccording of the ballet it is still worth having though.
Rating: Summary: Poor MacMillan Review: Mayerling is one of the most intense ballets I have ever seen and Kenneth MacMillans choreography is superb (as allways). This reccording though is very lacking. The cast is excellent (including such stars as Irek Mukhamedov, Viviana Durante and Darcey Bussell, Lesley Collier) and all give wonderfull performances, but the camera angles and the frequent close-ups ruin many of the scenes - especially the dramatic and very high energy pas de deux between Prince Rudolf (Irek Mukhamedov) and his new wife Princess Stephanie (Jane Burn). This pas de deux is quite violent and covers huge areas of the stage. The movement and energy is compleatly lost in shots of faces, hands etc. As the only reccording of the ballet it is still worth having though.
Rating: Summary: Beautiful, passionate and sad. Review: This video is worth buying just for the wonderful dancing from the stars of the Royal Ballet. There are some lovely choreography although the ballet does have its dull moments. Irek Mukhamedov is the star with his wonderful dancing and characterization of Prince Rudolf. Also stars Viviana Durante as the cool and sexy Mary which she dances perfectly, and Darcey Bussell in the role of Mitzi Casper ( Rudolf's mistress ), Sarah Wildor, Jane Burns, Adam Cooper, Nicola Trannah.
Rating: Summary: Ballet as a lurid, passionate historical melodrama Review: To enjoy Mayerling to its fullest, a little historical background is in order: in 1889, at the Mayerling hunting lodge, the Crown Prince Rudolf of Austria-Hungary died with his young lover Mary Vetsera for reasons that even today remain a mystery. Some maintain that the unbalanced Rudolf was death-obsessed and that the deaths were a murder-suicide from a morbid couple. To add to the intrigue, Prince Rudolf was the last heir to the Hapsburg family line and thought to have dissident sympathies. Certainly the deaths of two illicit lovers, one of which happened to be a Crown Prince, continue to make good story.
Kenneth MacMillan's ballet is a lurid, passionate historical melodrama. He obviously buys into the murder-suicide theory. This 1994 video of a Covent Garden revival is as intense and "R-rated" as anything you're likely to see at the ballet. The video helpfully has a scrolling synposis before each act to make the myriad characters and thick storyline more understandable -- in the final scene they even superimpose some pictures of the historical characters.
The main reasons to get this video are: 1. the intense, haunting, vivid choreography of MacMillan, set to a score by Franz Liszt; and 2. the almost perfect casting. Irek Mukhamedov gives an unforgettable (and I use that word sparingly) performance as Prince Rudolf. Diabolical, morbid, he is a true Byronic hero in this very long, intense role. A lead character that has to stroke a skull and shoot up heroin can easily become hammy and campy, but Mukhamedov's feral, almost demented committment, as well as his Soviet training (huge leaps, huge jumps, big drama) defies such pitfalls. As his young lover Mary, Viviana Durante is equally memorable. Her petite, waifish body, girlish bangs, and frilly costumes belie a sinister, predatory, oversexed personality. She's like Salome -- she has to be young, innocent-looking, but shockingly depraved. Durante and Mukhamedov have incredible chemistry. Durante's pliant back-bends during the lovers' frenzied pas de deuxs are a textbook blend of classical ballet technique and verismo. Equally as touching is the innocent Princess Stephanie (a wonderful Jane Burn). Her terrified shaking on her wedding night to Prince Rudolf borders on misogynistic and voyeuristic, but the violent pas de deux retains its shock value even after repeated viewings.
The supporting cast is a who's-who of British ballet: the tall, high-kicking, button-nosed Darcey Bussell has a brief scene as Mitzi Caspar, a seedy bar-girl. Lesley Collier is Countess Larisch, a go-between for Mary and Rudolf.
I think to enjoy Mayerling you must have a taste for costume melodramas. The choreography is at-times lurid, and pretty much disregards the chivalry that is such a tradition in classical ballet. The story is complicated. But for those who want a dollop of historical intrigue, with shovel-fuls of melodrama and more than a dash of vulgarity, Mayerling is devastatingly effective theater.
Rating: Summary: Bravo!! Review: We all love ballet and still, we do not have to always go for fairy tales!!! Here is a perfect ballet piece -- sophisticated chreography by McMillan and Listz' music -- suited for older audiences. All I have is admiration for the Royal ballet dancers, who are just so beautiful, devoted and tallented, in acting as well.
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