파리오페라+발레 HD상영회@프랑스문화원
French Institute Alliance Française (FIAF)
and American Friends of the Paris Opera & Ballet
launch
New! HD Opera & Ballet Screening Series This Spring
New York Premieres
Paris Opera & Ballet
Millepied/Robbins/Balanchine
Sunday, May 20 at 1pm
Camille Saint-Saëns: Samson et Dalila
Sunday, June 24 at 1pm
FIAF • Florence Gould Hall; 55 East 59th Street, NYC
New York, NY, April 30, 2018—This spring, the French Institute Alliance Française (FIAF), New York’s premiere French cultural center, and the American Friends of the Paris Opera & Ballet are thrilled to announce a new series presenting HD screenings of opera and ballet performances from the Paris Opera & Ballet for the first time in New York City.
New Yorkers will have a rare opportunity to experience the company’s outstanding productions, filmed live in HD. The program launches with two acclaimed recent performances from the Paris Opera & Ballet repertoire: Millepied/Robbins/Balanchine on Sunday, May 20, and Samson et Dalila on Sunday, June 24, both at 1pm in FIAF’s Florence Gould Hall.
Millepied/Robbins/Balanchine by the renowned Paris Opera Ballet features beloved works by two of the 20th century’s great American choreographers and the premiere of a new creation by Benjamin Millepied with music by composer Nico Muhly.
Samson et Dalila, Camille Saint-Saëns’ lushly romantic re-telling of the biblical tale, will be presented in a new production conducted by lauded Paris Opera music director Philippe Jordan and staged by Damiano Michieletto.
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Millepied/Robbins/Balanchine
Sunday, May 20 at 1pm
Introduced by Susan Gluck Pappajohn, Balanchine Trust
“Fireworks! Sets packed with energy and magnificent duos!”—Le Figaro
“Paris Opera Shows off Its Brilliance! … A dazzling display of formal craft!”—The New York Times
“Benjamin Millepied shines in the footsteps of his masters…”—Le Monde
Benjamin Millepied pays tribute to George Balanchine and Jerome Robbins, two extraordinary choreographers, both of Russian origin, who helped to redefine dance in Europe and the US in the 20th century.
In time to celebrate the Jerome Robbins centennial this year, the HD screening will feature the Paris Opera Ballet’s introduction of Robbins beloved 1979 Opus19/The Dreamer to its repertoire, which will be paired with the company’s revival of George Balanchine’s Theme and Variations to music by Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky.
The centerpiece of the program is the premiere of Benjamin Millepied’s acclaimed new ballet, Clear, Loud, Bright, Forward, featuring new music by composer Nico Muhly, which was created during Millepied’s tenure as director of dance at the Paris Opera.
Screening will be introduced by Susan Gluck Pappajohn, a former soloist and principal ballerina with the New York City Ballet and a current trustee of the Balanchine Trust.
Clear, Loud, Bright, Forward
Music: Nico Muhly
Choreography: Benjamin Millepied
Scenography: United Visual Artists
Lighting design: Lucy Carter
Opus 19/The Dreamer
Music:Sergei Prokofiev
(Concerto for violin n°1 in D major)
Choreography: Jerome Robbins
Violon: Frédéric Laroque
Theme and Variations
Music: Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky
Choreography: George Balanchine
Étoiles, Premiers Danseurs and Corps de Ballet
Conductor: Maxime Pascal
Paris Opera Orchestra
Film director: Vincent Bataillon
140 minutes, with intermission
Cinéma Distribution: FRA Cinéma
Complimentary herbal tea and madeleines will be available during intermission, courtesy of Kusmi Tea and St Michel.
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Camille Saint-Saëns: Samson et Dalila
Sunday, June 24 at 1pm
“From the marvelous opening of solo winds scattered across the night, one realizes that Philippe Jordan has set the bar high…masterful direction that brilliantly revives the flesh and breath of this too often forgotten music.” —Le Monde
Based on the biblical tale of Samson and Delilah from the Book of Judges in the Old Testament, the opera is one of the most popular and often performed in the French repertoire. The seductress Dalila is one of the great opera roles for a mezzo-soprano and includes the well-known arias “Printemps qui commence” (“Spring begins”) and “Mon cœur s'ouvre à ta voix” ("My heart opens to your voice").
The new, 2016 production of Samson et Dalila, staged by Damiano Michieletto, returned the work to the Paris Opera after a 25-year absence. Anita Rachvelishvili, “an exceptional mezzo-soprano of seamless quality” (Opera News) plays the femme fatale and murderous priestess, and Aleksandrs Antonenko, “who tore into Samson’s music with a genuine heroic tenor” (Opera News) is the conflicted, tragic hero.
Samson et Dalila
Opera in three acts and four scenes (1877)
Music by Camille Saint-Saëns
Libretto by Ferdinand Lemaire
Conductor: Philippe Jordan
Director: Damiano Michieletto
Set designs: Paolo Fantin
Costume designs: Carla Teti
Lighting design: Alessandro Carletti
Chorus master: José Luis Basso
Paris Opera Orchestra and Chorus
Dalila, Anita Rachvelishvili
Samson, Aleksandrs Antonenko
The High Priest of Dagon, Egils Silins
Abimélech, Nicolas Testé
An Old Hebrew, Nicolas Cavallier
Philistine Messenger, John Bernard
First Philistine, Luca Sannaï
Second Philistine, Jian-Hong Zhao
Screening in French with English subtitles.
Film Director: François-René Martin
Cinéma Distribution: FRA Cinéma
In French with English subtitles
205 minutes with two intermissions
Complimentary herbal tea and madeleines will be available during intermission, courtesy of Kusmi Tea and St Michel.
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About American Friends of the Paris Opera & Ballet
The purpose of the American Friends of the Paris Opera & Ballet is to share the many treasures of the Paris Opera directly with the American public and to foster artistic cooperation between the Opera National de Paris and the creative community in the United States.
Based in New York, the organization was incorporated in 1984 in response to a request by Rudolf Nureyev, then the Director of the Paris Opera Ballet, to tour the company in the United States. Recognized by the Internal Revenue Service as a tax-exempt foundation in 1985, the group has helped underwrite numerous U.S. tours of the Paris Opera, Paris Opera Ballet and Paris Opera Ballet School, traveling exhibitions from the Paris Opera Museum and appearances of guest artists from the Paris Opera Ballet, as well as many productions at the Paris Opera that prominently feature the participation of American artists, such as Jerome Robbins, Trisha Brown, William Christie, Peter Sellars and Robert Wilson. www.afpob.org
About the Paris Opera & Ballet
Recently announcing what The New York Times called a “boldly ambitious 2018–2019 season,” the Paris Opera & Ballet is a world cultural treasure with a rich history that underpins an innovative, vital present. The Paris Opera traces its beginnings to King Louis XIV of France, who established a formal academy of music and dance at court in 1669. Over the centuries, the company has undergone many transformations as a public institution. Today the 430-member company of musicians and dancers, led by general director Stéphane Lissner, ballet director Aurelie Dupont, and music director Philippe Jordan, collaborates with acclaimed directors, choreographers, and singers, and enjoys a position as one of the leading opera and ballet institutions in the world. In 2019, it will celebrate its 350th anniversary, and the 30th anniversary of the opening of the larger of its two theaters, the Opéra Bastille.www.operadeparis.fr
FIAF
The French Institute Alliance Française (FIAF) is New York’s premiere French cultural and language center. FIAF's mission is to create and offer New Yorkers innovative and unique programs in education and the arts that explore the evolving diversity and richness of French cultures. FIAF seeks to generate new ideas and promote cross cultural dialogue through partnerships and new platforms of expression. www.fiaf.org
Merci!
Tea courtesy of Kusmi Tea. Madeleines courtesy of St Michel.
Program Sponsors: Air France and Delta Air Lines, Cordier Enjoy la Vie, Engie, French American Cultural Exchange (FACE), Florence Gould Foundation, Howard Gilman Foundation, Jacadi, JCDecaux, NYC Department of Cultural Affairs, NY State Council on the Arts, and Office de Tourisme de Boulogne-Billancourt.