-
A baby cursed at birth. A fierce battle
of good and evil.
-
A true love awoken with a kiss.
-
Sleeping Beauty is one of the world’s
favorite folktales.
-
But one of its most famous renditions
tells the story without a single word.
-
Since premiering in 1890,
-
The Sleeping Beauty has become one of the
most frequently staged ballets in history.
-
So what makes this piece so beloved?
-
And what exactly does ballet bring
to this – or any other story?
-
At the heart of ballet are dozens of
gestures
-
that dancers painstakingly perfect
over thousands of hours of practice.
-
This unique set of gestures has been
used for centuries,
-
each movement rich with meaning
and history.
-
But you don’t need to study them to
understand ballet,
-
any more than you need to study
music to be moved by a song.
-
And just as composers combine notes
and phrases to form pieces of music,
-
choreographers string these gestures
together with new movements
-
to form expressive combinations.
-
Working alongside the orchestra’s
live score,
-
ballerinas precisely perform these
combinations to convey narrative,
-
emotion, and character.
-
In The Sleeping Beauty’s opening scene,
-
a flurry of techniques depicts the fairy
court
-
bestowing gifts on baby Princess Aurora.
-
The Fairy of Generosity delicately walks
“en pointe” –
-
meaning on the tips of her toes – in
step with the light plucking of violins.
-
The ballerina moves in perfect harmony
with the music,
-
even mimicing the violins’ trill with an
elegant bourrée.
-
The Fairy of Temperance, bestowing the
gift of strong will on Aurora,
-
is choregraphed as if shooting bolts of
electricity from her fingers.
-
She bounds across the stage, spinning with
quick chaînés before decisively jetéing.
-
Some movements are even more literal
than this.
-
The evil fairy Carabosse curses
the princess with a lethal “X,”
-
and the benevolent Lilac Fairy
counters that curse.
-
Of course, the relationship between
music and movement
-
isn’t always this straightforward.
-
While classical ballet gestures often
respond to musical elements,
-
the degree to which the dancers and
orchestra align
-
is another choreographic tool.
-
Some characters and scenes move in
sync to create rhythmic clarity,
-
while others deliberately diverge from
the orchestra.
-
Dancers and musicians maintain this
delicate balance
-
throughout each performance,
-
engaging in a live negotiation
of speed and rhythm.
-
But prior to the performance, a ballet’s
most important relationship
-
is between the choreographer
and the music.
-
Choreographer Marius Petipa and composer
Piotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky worked together
-
on every second of The Sleeping Beauty.
-
This is particularly noticeable in
Princess Aurora’s exuberant entrance
-
on her 16th birthday.
-
Tchaikovsky’s enthusiastic music
tumbles forward in fits and starts,
-
even cutting short some musical
phrases to capture her impatience.
-
Petipa choreographs Aurora bouncing
back and forth with “pas de chat” –
-
French for cat steps – as she waits for
her party to begin.
-
Once the celebration starts,
it’s up to the dancers to deliver
-
on the physical spectacle of performing
these gestures with grace.
-
Aurora has the hardest part of all:
her famous Rose Adagio.
-
As four suitors vie for her hand,
-
the Princess performs a dizzying array
of balances, all en pointe.
-
She briefly takes each suitor’s hand,
but then balances unassisted –
-
a breath-taking display of physical
strength and skill.
-
However, it’s not just technique that
carries meaning,
-
but also style and personality.
-
Like an actor delivering their lines,
-
ballerinas can execute their movements
to convey a wide range of emotion.
-
Aurora can be elegant and restrained,
-
throwing her arms in independence
from her suitors.
-
Or she can be coy and flirtatious,
descending from en pointe with grace
-
and knowing confidence.
-
The Sleeping Beauty offers a showcase
for so much of what ballet can do.
-
Its graceful spectacle, dramatic
physical vocabulary,
-
and enchanting coordination of music
and movement
-
perfectly reflect the themes of this
fantastical romance.
-
But ballet isn’t just for epic fairytales.
-
Ballets can be non-narrative emotional
journeys,
-
experimental deconstructions of form,
-
or pure demonstrations of skill.
-
The artform is always experimenting
with a centuries old set of rules,
-
making it the perfect medium for
stories old and new.