Bolshoi brings ‘La Bayadere’ to the Center
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Deirdre Newman
Out of the darkness, the shadows appear. From the mountains, 32
ballerinas dressed in white descend gracefully, one by one. Their
ethereal presence signifies the dreamlike state in which the warrior
Solor pines for his dead lover, Nikiya.
The “Kingdom of the Shades” is the signature dance in “La
Bayadere.” While this scene has been staged many times by itself, it
will be performed in the context of a full-length production by the
renowned Bolshoi Ballet at the Orange County Performing Arts Center
starting Tuesday.
“The shadows in the last act is one of the jewels of ballet
repertoire,” said David Eden, co-producer of the Bolshoi tour. “The
way the Bolshoi does it is unsurpassed.”
A company of more than 100 dancers will present the only Southern
California performances of “La Bayadere” during the Bolshoi’s
eight-city U.S. tour.
The exotic ballet is set in ancient India. The plot involves the
tragic love triangle of Nikiya, a “bayadere” or temple dancer, who
falls in love with Solor, who is then chosen by the Rajah to marry
his daughter, Gamzatti. Overwhelmed by Gamzatti’s beauty, Solor
forgets his vows of love to Nikiya.
When Nikiya dances at the engagement celebration of Gamzatti and
Solor, she is fatally bitten by a poisonous snake hidden in a basket
of flowers by Gamzatti and her father.
Solor has an hallucinatory vision of Nikiya in the “Kingdom of the
Shades.” Later, at his wedding ceremony, he is haunted again by the
vision of Nikiya. The gods, infuriated by the murder of Nikiya,
destroy the temple, killing everyone in it.
The spirits of Nikiya and Solor are reunited in eternal love.
The production, based on Yuri Grigorovich’s choreography and
Marius Petipa’s story, includes the elaborate processionals and
lavish pageantry of the original production, although live elephants
and tigers will not be making an appearance, as they did in earlier
Russian stagings.
The production demands two ballerinas with spectacular technique
to dance the roles of Nikiya and Gamzatti, Eden said.
“They are coached for their roles by previous interpreters,” Eden
said. “Some of the ballerinas doing it on this tour were coached by
the Bolshoi ballerinas who danced this as far back as the 1930s. It’s
passed from one generation to another.”
One of the biggest challenges of mounting this version is
conveying the gamut of emotion through pantomime as well as dance,
Eden said.
“It has a lot of pantomime, so you really need what the Russians
have -- this rich tradition of mime,” Eden said.
The “Kingdom of the Shades” scene is unique because it originally
pushed the boundaries of classical dance, providing an opportunity
for the corps de ballet to showcase their classical pointe technique
in contrast to the drama swirling around them.
“It’s one of Petipa’s earliest ballets, and in the shadows, he
really started introducing concepts which he later developed, [such
as] the symphonization of ballet,” Eden said. “It has an incredible
structure and connection. It really is a choreographed entity.”
The scene also has the distinction of having provided Rudolf
Nureyev the chance to defect to the West during the first production
of that part of “La Bayadere” outside of Russia. Nureyev defected in
1961 in Paris.
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