Saturday, 12 November 2011

Giselle - the storyline

Boston Ballet’s production of Giselle, one of the most famous ballets every composed, contains more than enough emotion and virtuosity to satisfy any fan of the ballet. For those who prefer technically-difficult, plotless ballets, the demanding solos and variations in Giselle give the dance-lover a chance to “ooh” and “aah” at the dazzling skill of the dancers. And for those who prefer acting-filled story ballets, Giselle has enough drama to fulfill regular watchers of soap operas.
The basic storyline of Giselle follows a peasant girl, Giselle, who is cruelly betrayed. She discovers that her poor lover is not who he appears and is already engaged to another woman. Upon learning the truth, Giselle goes mad with grief and dies after a fit of frenetic dancing.
If this weren’t tragic enough, Giselle’s spirit then enters a fantastic world of limbo where she must dance every night with other maidens who have experienced the same heartache. If any man crosses their path, these women, the Wilis, revenge themselves by forcing him to dance until he dies.
Of course, Giselle’s lover, Count Albrecht, skillfully played by Gaël Lambiotte, comes to visit her grave, repentant of his deceitful behavior. He stumbles into the fatal rituals of the Wilis, doomed to die unless the woman he wronged intervenes or he dances non-stop until dawn breaks.
With such a melodramatic piece, the principals face the potential of delivering overwrought performances. To their credit, though, the dancers remain steadfastly earnest. The result is powerful. Audiences see the real pain of Giselle and the deep regret of Count Albrecht.
Giselle’s descent into insanity, danced to a haunting effect by principle dancer Larissa Ponomarenko, is wonderfully powerful. When she finally collapses in the arms of her mother, the audience almost heaves a sigh of relief that Giselle has found some support.
The production’s marriage of acting and dancing is perfectly balanced. After Giselle has been formally converted into a Wili, she encounters Count Albrecht at her grave and the two dance a pas de deux of regret and longing on Count Albrecht’s part and of cautious forgiveness on Giselle’s part. The lifts of the pas de deux are breathtaking in their fluidity and perfect line. Ponomarenko’s extensions during promenade defy gravity.
Since the ballet involves dance integrally in its plot, many scenes face the difficulty of displaying dancing for the sake of dancing—the scenes impress nonetheless.
In the first act, a peasant couple entertain local nobility. The wife, portrayed by Sarah Lamb, must perform a series of difficult, technical maneuvers: She hops across the stage en pointe while performing a ronde de jambe. Such flawless, joyful execution is simply awe-inspiring http://www.thecrimson.com/article/2002/2/22/giselle-beautiful-dance-of-death-boston/

1 comment:

  1. Giselle is also known as the "dance of death". The story is a typical ballet story, with the magical and surreal feel to it. Using the "willis" is an example, of how ballet back then used magical things for the audience to use as an escapism.
    There is the clear themes of love and death in Giselle. With Giselle (a peasant) loving an upperclass man. While Hillarion is in love with Giselle, but giselle doesn't love him back.
    Death - When Giselle kills herself, when she finds out loys is actually Count Albrecht. And when Hillarion is killed by the "willis".
    There is also the theme of class/society - as Gislle a peasant is in love with Count Albrecht a higher class man. However he is pretending to be lower class, as he knows he cannot be with Giselle otherwise.
    Also when Count Albrecht is about to be killed by the Queen, Giselle says no and stops her, this shows the lower class standing up to the upper class indicating the power.
    This links into the period of time in real life, as at that time there were changes in control of power in the world: Conflicts between class.

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