Joseph Posted October 30, 2005 Share Posted October 30, 2005 I friend of mine said that the original production of Giselle has the wilis in Act II set in a ballroom, all wearing different costumes? Is this true? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Mel Johnson Posted October 30, 2005 Share Posted October 30, 2005 Not Act II, but Act I! The original plotline of the ballet was going to have the Wilis appear at a ballroom and enchant the floor to make the party-goers dance especially vigorously. Giselle was supposed to be a young socialite who has a weak heart and takes a chill, so dying of (apparently) a sort of congestive heart failure. They ditched this idea as being insufficiently catastrophic. The Wilis were supposed to come from all over the world, and this device is seen vestigially in the names of the two lead Wilis, Moyna (a Russian Gypsy) and Zulma (a Bayadere). Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Joseph Posted October 30, 2005 Author Share Posted October 30, 2005 Thanks Mel- This friend also did say there is a video that has a version constructed as mentioned above...Do you know anything about this, or where I could find it? I have never heard of one, but always looking for new footage! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Mel Johnson Posted October 30, 2005 Share Posted October 30, 2005 I don't know that Mary Skeaping's "original re-creation" Giselle went all that way back, but it did include things that were actually present in the first production that we don't see today, like the Fugue for the Wilis. Others? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Joseph Posted October 31, 2005 Author Share Posted October 31, 2005 Ok, cool - so how would I find this copy??? Do you think it is still available??? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Mel Johnson Posted October 31, 2005 Share Posted October 31, 2005 Skeaping's production was done in 1971 for the London Festival Ballet, now the English National Ballet. I don't know that it was ever made commercially available on video. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Alexandra Posted October 31, 2005 Share Posted October 31, 2005 The ballroom idea was tossed out before the premiere. It was Gautier's idea, but the theater management thought it was not stageable and the libretto was revised to be what we know today -- with a heck of a lot more mime! (Even the Skeaping production didn't put back all the mime). Marion Smith's "Opera and Ballet in the Age of Giselle" has a lot of detail on the age, and the balllet. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Evelio Sierra Posted January 10, 2006 Share Posted January 10, 2006 (edited) :mellow: I friend of mine said that the original production of Giselle has the wilis in Act II set in a ballroom, all wearing different costumes? Is this true? <{POST_SNAPBACK}> On one hand I doubt it, but on the other hand I have seen so many queer things that something like this wouln't surprise me. I would not approve it anyway. Evelio. Edited January 10, 2006 by Evelio Sierra Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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