The Reason I Breath Is Because Of You
Romeo & Juliet
This essay is about compare and contrast a pair of star-cross’d lovers Romeo & Juliet’s similarities and differences of Expressions dance company and Prokofiev’s Ballet, such as, character roles, different in era’s visual setting, aural environment and performance space. Both are telling the same story are set in different contexts and eras. The theme of Romeo & Juliet, which was conveyed by the choreography, music, lighting and costumes. The choreographer used of movement and non-movement to communicate with the audience.
Prokofiev’s Ballet and Expressions dance company have very different types to preform Romeo & Juliet. The most crystal-clear memory of this show of Prokofiev’s
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Although Juliet was death in different way but it also telling the same message to the audience, which is Romeo was death, she survived is useless, she is willing to die for Romeo. When she knew Romeo was dead, she knew she can’t live without Romeo, she chooses to suicide. In both of the show, it is quite similar, she dances with her collapse body, her body seems is not hers, her movements are like a person with drunk, she walks with a not balance body with her solo, her movement has already numbed, it’s show to the audience she really loves Romeo, Juliet’s suicide complete telling us, in wordless action, of the great love story, a total dance personality, she flows into and out of the dance phrases as artlessly and beautifully as a bird flies or a fish swims.
One of the most touching audience moment, which is Juliet’s death. In ‘Juliet Funeral’, it is very intense and dramatic in Prokofiev’s Ballet. This scene isn’t just the choreographer used of movement to communicate with audience. Non-movement also provides the right amount of tonal weight and it make the performance as a whole is very powerful indeed, also it communicates with the audiences, increase the sad feeling of Juliet's death. The music that in this scene, which is full of soaring melancholy lyricism. It used a soft and quiet music to perform this scene. It makes
Romeo and Juliet both suicide after seeing each other dead. After Romeo hears about Juliet’s death, he goes to her tomb to see her one last time and kiss her before he suicides. “Here’s to my love. O true apothecary,/Thy drugs are quick. Thus with a kiss I die”(V.iii.119-120). Romeo should have overlooked his quick thoughts of suicide, and should have realized how much he still had to live for. The aftermath of this action was that both Romeo and Juliet both end up dead in the final tragedy. After Juliet sees Romeo dead, she decides to kill herself with a dagger. “Yea, noise? Then I’ll be brief. O, happy dagger,/This is thy sheath. There rust, and let me die”(V.iii.174-175). This evidence is an example of the consequences that can occur after a hasty, sad-driven decision. If Romeo did not suicide while under the influence of his emotions, both Romeo and Juliet would have lived, and the ultimate, final tragedy of the play would have been avoided, but instead, Romeo’s emotions misguided him to choose the awful decision of suicide. These actions reveal how quickly sadness leads to horrendous repercussions due to the actions that it
Whether we look at a romantic ballet like La Sylphide or a classical ballet such as Sleeping Beauty, audiences are constantly mesmerized by the gracefulness and weightlessness of the ballet dancers. They seem to defy the laws of physics, which is greatly possible due to the use of the pointe shoe. However, many masterworks that were created in the Romantic era did not solely rely on the pointe shoe to help convey messages. Instead, the choreography, dancers, scenic elements, subject matter, and music all helped shaped masterworks such as La Sylphide, Napoli, and Giselle. Similarly, in the Classical era, these elements all played a role in shaping famous ballets like La Bayadere, Sleeping Beauty, and Swan Lake. But once we take a closer look at these ballets from the Classical era, we can see how much ballet evolved. Nevertheless, it is important to note that the Romantic era was the stepping stone for this pure art form that we have been able to preserve for more than 160 years.
Tchaikovsky’s “The Nutcracker” and Stravinsky’s “Rite of Spring “ are two of the most influential ballets to ever be recorded. Their ballets have been played and duplicated for many years. I will start this paper with a summary of each composer which will include where they are from culturally, geographically and musically. Then I talk about each ballet. Where it was written, the story behind each piece, and its reception now and its reception at the time it was published. I will also include the popularity of each ballet in other forms such as Disney. Finally, I will provide a detailed concert report of each ballet.
Listening to Music class has taught me a new way to listen and enjoy music. I have learned how to differentiate the melodies, rhythms, and instruments in a song. It has also introduced me to different genres in the music world, aside from what is usually played on the radio. I can now attend any concert, listen to any genre, or watch any ballet and easily recognize the many specific aspects the music being played has. Ballets are very interesting to me. The audience is able to enjoy the music being played as it is telling a story, and being acted out through the performer’s body language. In the two ballets, The Rite of Spring and The Nutcracker, a great story is told in both referencing the many great dynamics music has. These two specific ballets are written by different composers, and each one of them have certain conditions they were written under. As well as different receptions, popularity, and development. The Rite of Spring and The Nutcracker’s differences has made some sort of an impact in the performing world back then as well as now.
The analyses these two style ballet “Sleeping Beauty” and “Rite of Spring.” this paper will describe the harmony, texture, and characteristic, which use the dissonance that help clarify stylistic identification, especially with regard to contemporary instrumental dance repertories of lute and ensemble music.
Classical ballet has been a major part of society especially in France and Italy before it spread to other parts of the world such as Russia and it developed from the court dances which date back to as far back as the 16th century. This essay will discuss and focus on the way in which dance contributed to court balls during the 16th and 17th century, the role King Louis XIV had on ballet and his influence in the art of ballet and lastly it will discuss the decline of ballet in Western Europe and the reason as to why this decline had taken place.
Romeo and Juliet, written by William Shakespear, brings many themes to life; love and fate and comedy and tragedy being among the most common and reoccurring. This essay will be focusing on the real tragedy of one of the most famous plays ever written. Romeo and Juliet are not the only ones to lose something very dear to them; everyone suffered, both emotionally and physically. The couple's union was intended to bring the feuding families together instead, their love for each other only brought their own death and the deaths of others. But it is not just physical loss that is explored in the play. Both Romeo and Juliet lose their innocence. Juliet had never experienced maternal love, something that can never be replaced.
On the other hand Juliet’s death was more of a result of both her own, and Romeo’s poor judgment and sensitivity to the problems they are given. After Romeo received word that Juliet had died, he acted without thinking and ended up snuffing out his own life due to grief and dismay. Because of his decision, when Juliet awoke she was met with the sight of her deceased husband, and she herself came to the same conclusion as Romeo, that she would be happier dead if she could not be with the one she loved. When Juliet decides to end her life she says “Drunk all, and left no friendly drop to help me after?” (Shakespeare V.iii.163-164)
Matthew Bourne’s Swan Lake was first performed at the Sadler Wells Theatre in London in 1995. Bourne's version of Swan Lake is the longest running ballet in London’s West End and on Broadway. It has been performed in a number different countries such as United Kingdom, Europe, Australia, South Korea, Japan, Israel and Singapore. Mathew Bourne’s rendering is best known for having traditionally female parts of the swans danced by men. Graeme Murphy version of Swan Lake is not so much a battle between Odette (Good) and Odile (evil), which is presented through the original Swan Lake. But it examines love and betrayal, and other elements of the original story. Through comparing and contrasting Acts 2 and Act 4 of Graeme Murphy’s rendering of Swan Lake and Mathew Bourne's Act 2 and Act 4, this essay will interpret and evaluate how each choreographer portrays movement and non-movement components throughout their piece.
The Romantic Era was one of the most artistically influential era in recent history. Artists were fueled by their inner romantic, or creative emotions, rather than the more sinister tormented geniuses of the past. Their works were full of drama, love, death. The performing arts in particular were flourishing. Ballet was truly taking off. The first pointe shoes were introduced in a performance of Le Sylphides, shorter tutus, and partnering were becoming the norm. But in particular, it was the era that brought about one of the most well known ballets of all time, ‘Giselle.’
The history of ballet is rich, complex and full of powerful meanings depending on the time period. Ballet in the 15th century was seen as something that only select individuals could do, whereas, the 20th century ballet can be preformed by anyone. By thinking about how ballet performers have changed, a question may be thought is, have the people attending these ballet performances changed as well as the performers themselves? Today, children from ages two and up start taking ballet and family members come and watch their final recitals. National ballet companies are also an event and often draw attention to the higher-class individuals who have a taste for ballet. The ballet world could be seen as to having a quite array of attendees, events and functions, but that might not have always been the
Even though ballet was great at court it was never reached a status among the highly accounted liberal arts. Even though ballet never reach highly in ranks of the liberal arts it served well as a tool for the social aspects of one’s life, “as an art…it was a vision and defense of nobility–not as a social class but as an aesthetic and way of life,” allowing social mobility and social stratification ballet had a manner of getting people from lower ranks to greater levels in
The premier of the newly renovated Swan Lake on January 15, 1895 is “considered a historical date in ballet” (Korobkov) and the score “marks a turning point not just in [Tchaikovsky’s] own creative development but the evolution of ballet music as a musical genre” (Francis). This is the first time a Russian ballet illustrated the shift between different cultural eras and artistic styles. Prior to Swan Lake, ballet was thought of as irrelevant in a revolutionary society that is Russia. After the revolution in 1917, Russian “government wanted to ‘sweep the slate clean of everything that went back to the aristocracy’…ballet got a pass in the end because Vladimir Lenin understood the potential it had to transmit information to the largely illiterate Russian masses” (Schonbek).
The music of Stravinsky has always been “ahead of time” in the way of using new and different ways of presenting music. His early ballets such as Firebird, Petrushka, and The Rite of Spring being a great example of his modernism and will to compose music which is both innovative and shocking. For this essay I have chosen to write about The Firebird (1910) and The Rite of Spring (1913). Firebird was Stravinsky’s first Ballet and his first composition that reached many people because of its modernism and exoticism. The Rite of Spring is still renowned for its portrayal of primitivism, a concept that was accentuated by the riot that happened at its premiere.
'It seems to me, my dear friend, that the music of this ballet will be one of my best creations. The subject is so poetic, so grateful for music, that 1 have worked on it with enthusiasm and written it with the warmth and enthusiasm upon which the worth of a composition always depends." - Tchaikovsky, to Nadia von Meck.