The Ballet of the Paris Opera 1931.m4v

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  • Опубликовано: 28 ноя 2011
  • Excerpt from a Live performance of Les Sylphides by the Paris Opera Ballet.
  • РазвлеченияРазвлечения

Комментарии • 66

  • @todd-ut9sj
    @todd-ut9sj Год назад +15

    セルジュリファールの実写があるとは驚きです。正直言ってテクニックは現代とはめちゃくちゃ開きがありますが、ダンサーの姿が人間らしい、女性らしいだけに、今とは違ってステージの世界をより身近に感じるというか、印象派の絵画のような美しさがありますね。

  • @aliceputt3133
    @aliceputt3133 Год назад +54

    So great to see Serge Lifar actually dancing. Thank you for presenting this.

    • @georanger7641
      @georanger7641 Год назад +2

      So great to see Serge Lifar ? Really ? Rose water.

    • @pediatrapaola
      @pediatrapaola Год назад +1

      is not lifar is SERGE PERETTI

    • @pediatrapaola
      @pediatrapaola Год назад +1

      @@georanger7641 IS SERGE PERETTI NOT LIFAR

    • @georanger7641
      @georanger7641 Год назад

      @@pediatrapaola Oh dear, I'm so sorry !

    • @pediatrapaola
      @pediatrapaola Год назад +1

      @@georanger7641 peretti was the first male etoile in paris opera at his time and better dancer than lifar

  • @rmp7400
    @rmp7400 Год назад +37

    The Great Danish dancer, Erik Bruhn, was only 3 years of age in 1931, but a few years later he was already dancing.
    What an amazing era in Europe: before the Second World War caused so much devastation to people and to cultures....

  • @vivianazinetti7234
    @vivianazinetti7234 Год назад +13

    Bellissimo video che mi permette di viaggiare nel tempo e vedere com'era la danza molto tempo prima che io nascessi, e che iniziassi a fare il primi plié.
    Avrei voluto vivere in quell'epoca in cui la danza non era soltanto un perfetto esercizio ginnico, ma una semplice espressione di bellezza ed eleganza.

  • @TheRealCantaraBella
    @TheRealCantaraBella Год назад +2

    Ballet has changed wow

  • @BohoHobo948
    @BohoHobo948 6 лет назад +37

    Thankyou for sharing this. It is fascinating seeing the history and development of ballet in these early examples of film.

  • @siriusvenus8708
    @siriusvenus8708 Год назад +7

    Soft yet so powerful in grace and beauty.

  • @Elenaelok
    @Elenaelok Год назад +10

    Дааа... Балерины ещё были похожи на женщин...

    • @user-eo2yu7wg1c
      @user-eo2yu7wg1c Год назад +3

      А какие пачки. Костюмы!!!!!!

    • @svitlanamykhailovska6056
      @svitlanamykhailovska6056 Год назад +2

      Последней женщиной на российской сцене считали Авдотью Истомина ( за пышные формы).😀

    • @olgagav2801
      @olgagav2801 Год назад +6

      И балет ещё не был похож на художественную гимнастику )))

  • @irinakoptyaeva8918
    @irinakoptyaeva8918 Год назад +17

    Вдохновенный танец. Спасибо, получила огромное удовольствие

  • @kdiesler
    @kdiesler Год назад +14

    How much dancing and acrobatic skills have evolved since then!

  • @alessandropalazzani
    @alessandropalazzani Год назад +10

    Here’s the music pieces list:
    Dukas, fanfare pour preceder La Peri - titles
    Chopin, polonaise op 40 n1 “militaire” - theater entrance
    Chopin, nocturne op 48 n1 - pas de deux
    Chopin, waltz Op 34 n3 - corp de ballet and finale

  • @AgothInnCloth
    @AgothInnCloth 11 лет назад +17

    Such a Haunting Atmosphere Beautiful & Delicate Dancers What I Would Give To Sit on The Far Edge of The Stage In The Dark With a Bottle of Absinthe and Just Watch!!!!

  • @jiperezv
    @jiperezv 12 лет назад +54

    This is not Fokine's Les Sylphides. The music is an orchestrated version of Chopin's piano pieces. The choreography is likely by Lifar himself.

    • @r.r.c7692
      @r.r.c7692 3 года назад +16

      it is ivan clustine's "suite de danses" created in 1912 for Aveline and Zambelli. It's still danced by POB school.

    • @MarmaladeMuffin
      @MarmaladeMuffin Год назад +8

      Oh my gosh, thank you! It sounded so familiar, but I couldn’t place it within any ballet score I knew.
      This is Chopin’s Nocturne Op. 48 No. 1 in C Minor for anyone else who is looking :)

    • @gstavella
      @gstavella Год назад +3

      Hmmm…. Well, looks like M. Clustine must have been strongly ‘inspired’ by Les Sylphides/Chopinana, premiered by Diaghilev’s Ballet Russe in Paris only a few years before in 1909.

    • @dougr.2398
      @dougr.2398 Год назад

      Not the introductory pieces

    • @alessandropalazzani
      @alessandropalazzani Год назад

      @@dougr.2398 that piece is fanfare pour preceder la pery by dukas

  • @veronikashleyher9676
    @veronikashleyher9676 Год назад +1

    Amazing..

  • @karend169
    @karend169 Год назад

    She is so graceful.

  • @simonaperez1475
    @simonaperez1475 Год назад +3

    Какая прелесть!!! Легкость , музыкальность , красота!!!

  • @silenusut
    @silenusut Год назад +3

    Charmingly curious. Subbed.

  • @svitlanamykhailovska6056
    @svitlanamykhailovska6056 Год назад +8

    Танец, действительно, вдохновенный ! Но выворотность рабочих ног у солистки " ещё та.." ! Но ведь это 1931. Спасибо за ценные кадры. Выкладывайте, пожалуйста ещё.

    • @vko4090
      @vko4090 Год назад +1

      В сравнении с весьма странными кривляниями Карсавиной это самый настоящий балет.

  • @1614antuanna
    @1614antuanna Год назад +8

    Удивительное ощущение...Спасибо за публикацию. Интересно,на сколько камер снимали? Ведь 31 год!!! С ума сойти!

  • @user-fd1vq3rz4g
    @user-fd1vq3rz4g Год назад +4

    !!!!!!!!!!+++ Большое спасибо за видео !!!

  • @aranka10001
    @aranka10001 Год назад +3

    GYONYORU VOLT......🍒🍒🍒🍒🍒🍒🍒🍒🍒🍒🍒🍒

  • @yaelpalombo4093
    @yaelpalombo4093 Год назад +1

    ❤❤

  • @nbond
    @nbond Год назад +2

    Какая прелесть!

  • @brancalima1971
    @brancalima1971 Год назад +2

    Lindíssimos!!🇧🇷

  • @evangelinapancoteelias3591
    @evangelinapancoteelias3591 Год назад +1

    Maravilhosos 🤗

  • @user-mg2gu4vw3p
    @user-mg2gu4vw3p Год назад +1

    フランス流ですね。アラベスクが90度が基本。
    「もっとおみ足をコケティッシュに!!」という技法に疑問を持ったワガノワが解剖学や運動学を駆使してワガノワ・メソッドをロシアで確立させて世界中に広がりました。
    これはその前の貴重な映像ですね。

  • @susiechen335
    @susiechen335 Год назад +2

    肖邦的夜曲

  • @micheladessanti4278
    @micheladessanti4278 Год назад +6

    Certamente non è "Les Sylphides" con la coreografia di Fokine

  • @janaprocella8268
    @janaprocella8268 Год назад +4

    ballet was considered an art not a sport so now that they've started calling it a sport activity that's pretty disgusting but I think it has something to do with getting more dance classes into the public school that's got to be called a sports because they don't financially support much butt sports. the government is dropping a lot of the funding for the arts so they had to figure out a way to keep their grant money coming in by calling it sports. now days.

  • @kdiesler
    @kdiesler Год назад +36

    when ballerinas were still allowed to have breasts...

    • @kdiesler
      @kdiesler Год назад +8

      @@swangirl0962 What's the point to write an answer if the comment is not understood

    • @kdiesler
      @kdiesler Год назад

      @@swangirl0962 Ok, so I have to explain: A ballerina these days only has a chance at a career if she has very tiny breasts.

    • @katherenewedic8076
      @katherenewedic8076 Год назад +6

      @@swangirl0962 unwritten rules. Watch a few documentaries and learn

    • @brendareed8412
      @brendareed8412 Год назад +4

      Yes, no pinheads and skeletal here. It is nice to see women at a healthier weight.

  • @agnesflorence9893
    @agnesflorence9893 Год назад +5

    THIS IS NO LES SYLPHIDES BALLET .......The first piece of music played the is A Hungarian dance, ..the classical dances continue .in this clip ..
    The Les Sylphides , ballet begins with, the famous Waltz,, Danced by Margot Fontein ..Royal Ballet, London. It is not a good thing to give mis information on a public platform... BALLET LOVERS KNOW THE DIFFERENCE.

    • @georanger7641
      @georanger7641 Год назад

      Thanks a lot.

    • @cg6961
      @cg6961 Год назад +1

      It's not a waltz, it's a nocturne. The best La Sylphides with Margot Fonteyn and Rudolf Nureyev by Royal Opera House.

  • @barrettzbrowning
    @barrettzbrowning Год назад

    I was afraid of this. Balanchine had not yet trained a country and a world in proper ballet technique, vital to throughly master before performing.

  • @ekaterinalioubimova7329
    @ekaterinalioubimova7329 Год назад

    Шопениана ?

  • @janaprocella8268
    @janaprocella8268 Год назад

    that's what I think it's been about and that's why they switched to calling ballet a sport all about money all about money money money money money money money money money money money grant money grant money grant grant

  • @maryanncampbell3422
    @maryanncampbell3422 2 года назад

    Is this actually Nijinsky?

    • @luctinseau6612
      @luctinseau6612 2 года назад +5

      No, it is Serge Lifar

    • @agnesflorence9893
      @agnesflorence9893 Год назад +1

      no

    • @davidsturmer3646
      @davidsturmer3646 Год назад +1

      No he was well out of it by then! Question is was the female lead Olga Spesivtseva she left the opera in 1932! This is real dance history if it is her!