- La Péri
"La Péri" (English: "The
Peri "), or "The Flower of Immortality", is a 1912ballet in one act by Jewish-Frenchcomposer Paul Dukas , originally choreographed byIvan Clustine and first performed inParis , about a man's search forimmortality and encounter with a mythologicalPeri .ynopsis
At the end of his days of youth, the
Magi having observed that his star had faded, Iskender travels throughoutIran in search of the Flower of Immortality. After three years of looking and wandering, he finally arrives at the Ends of the Earth, a place of utmost tranquility and calm. Iskender finds atemple toOrmuzd , and on its steps is aPeri . With a star flashing above her head and alute in one hand, the Peri carries the Flower of Immortality, a lotus decorated withemerald s, in the other.Later, as the Peri is sleeping, Iskender steals the Flower, careful to avoid making noise so that she does not wake up. Immediately the Flower sparkles brightly in his hands, and when the Peri wakes up, she strikes her hands against each other and lets out a great cry, because without the Flower it cannot enter into the presence of the light of Ormuzd. Upon this realization, Iskender delights at the power he now seemingly has over the Peri.
While in his hand, however, the Flower is transformed by Ormuzd to Iskender’s earthly and material desires. This is a sign to the Peri that possession of the Flower is not intended for Iskender, and so she performs a dance, gradually coming closer and closer until she is able wrest the Flower from him. As the Peri slowly disappears in the light and returns to Paradise, Iskender realizes with calmness that he has been stranded and left to die.
Music
The original music to La Péri was written in 1911 by
Paul Dukas as a "Poème dansé en un Tableau" ("dance poem in one scene"), his last published work. Although not as well-known as his famoussymphonic poem L'apprenti sorcier, the ballet is widely considered his most mature and skilled piece. The music's style can best be described as a mixture of Romantic tonalharmony andorchestration techniques with Impressionism, and is distinctly French. The ballet itself is preceded by a brilliantfanfare that employs only theorchestra 's brass section, and which is often performed separately.The work is scored for 3
flute s (one of which also plays thepiccolo ), 2oboe s and anEnglish horn , 2clarinet s in A and abass clarinet in B flat, 3bassoon s, 4French horn s in F, 3trumpet s in C, 3trombone s (2 tenors and a bass) and atuba , 3timpani , percussion (bass drum ,snare drum ,cymbal s, triangle,tambourine ,xylophone , andcelesta , 2harp s, and strings.Performances
Dukas had been commissioned to write the music for the
Ballets Russes with designs byLéon Bakst , withNatalia Trouhanova as the Peri andVaslav Nijinsky as Iskender. However, becauseSerge Diaghilev did not feel that Trouhanova was enough of a skilled dancer to be a partner to Nijinsky, the production was cancelled.Trouhanova eventually commissioned
Ivan Clustine to choreograph the music, and the work was premiered inParis , onApril 22 1912 , withBekefi as Iskender and designs byRené Piot .The ballet was performed in 1931 by the
Ballet Rambert at the Mercury Theatre inLondon , tochoreography byFrederick Ashton and costume design by William Chappell. Ashton himself danced the role of Iskender, withballerina Alicia Markova as the Peri. This production was short-lived, lasting only until 1932, but the same company performed the ballet again in 1938 to choreography byFrank Staff , and Ashton in 1956 designed a new version for The Royal Ballet. In this latter version, the two roles were played byMargot Fonteyn andMichael Somes withscenic design byIvon Hitchens andcostume design byAndré Lavasseur . In Britain it has also been performed at the Lyric Theatre Hammersmith and thePalace Theatre, Manchester .External links
* [http://www.rambert.org.uk/archive/repertoire/detail.asp?art=1542 Entry in the Ballet Rambert Archive]
*IMSLP2|id=La_P%C3%A9ri_%28po%C3%A8me_dans%C3%A9%29_%28Dukas%2C_Paul%29|cname=La Périources
#Dukas, Paul. "La Péri - Poème dansé en un Tableau" Paris: M.M. Durand & Cie, 1911. (synopsis, instrumentation)
#The Rambert Dance Company. [http://www.rambert.org.uk/archive/repertoire/detail.asp?art=1542 Archive - La Péri] . Retrieved February 25, 2006. (production information)
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