Jump to content

Marius Petipa

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Mrlopez2681 (talk | contribs) at 07:58, 2 June 2008 (Premier Maître de Ballet of the Imperial Theatres). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Maestro Marius Ivanovich Petipa, Premier Maître de Ballet of the St. Petersburg Imperial Theatres. St. Petersburg, February 14, 1898. Photo reads - "Souvenir à Mlle. A. Vaganova. M. Petipa 14/2 98. St. Pétersbourg"

Marius Ivanovich Petipa (ru. Мариус Иванович Петипа) (born Victor Marius Alphonse Petipa on 11 March 1818 in Marseille, Kingdom of France — died in Gurzuf in the Crimea, Russian Empire, in what is today the Ukraine, on 14 July [O.S. 1 July] 1910) was a ballet dancer, teacher, and choreographer. Marius Petipa is cited nearly unanimously by the most noted artists of the classical ballet to be the most influential balletmaster and choreographer that has ever lived (among them George Balanchine, who cited Petipa as his primary influence).

Marius Petipa is noted for his long career as Premier Maître de Ballet of the St. Petersburg Imperial Theatres, a position he held from 1871 until 1903. Petipa created over fifty ballets, some of which have survived in versions either faithful to, inspired by, or reconstructed from the original — The Pharaoh's Daughter (1862); Don Quixote (1869); La Bayadère (1877); Le Talisman (1889); The Sleeping Beauty (1890); The Nutcracker (choreographed by Lev Ivanov?, with Petipa's counsel and instruction?) (1892); Le réveil de Flore (1894); Le Halte de Cavalerie (1896); Raymonda (1898); and Les millions d’Arlequin (a.k.a. Harlequinade) (1900).

Petipa also revived a substantial number of works created by other Ballet Masters. Petipa's productions would become the definitive versions from which nearly all subsequent revivals would be based — Le Corsaire, Giselle, La Esmeralda, Coppélia, La Fille Mal Gardée (with Lev Ivanov), The Little Humpbacked Horse and Swan Lake (with Lev Ivanov).

There are a number of various dances from Petipa's original works and revivals that have survived in an independent form in versions either based on the original or choreographed anew by others — the Grand Pas classique, Pas de trios and Mazurka des enfants from Paquita; La Carnaval de Venise Pas de deux from Satanella; The Talisman Pas de Deux; the La Esmeralda Pas de deux; the Diane and Actéon Pas de Deux; Le Halte de Cavalerie Pas de Deux; the Don Quixote Pas de Deux; the La Fille Mal Gardée Pas de Deux; and the Harlequinade Pas de Deux.

All of the full-length works and individual pieces which have survived in active performance are considered to be cornerstones of the ballet repertory.

Early Life and Career

Marius Petipa was born Victor Marius Alphonse Petipa in Marseilles on 11 March 1818. His mother Victorine Grasseau was a tragic actress and teacher of drama, while his father, Jean Antoine Petipa was a renowned Ballet Master and teacher. At the time of Marius's birth, Jean Petipa was engaged as Premier danseur (Principal Male Dancer) to the Salle Bauveau (known today as the Opéra de Marseille), and in 1819 he was appointed Maître de Ballet to that theatre.

Marius Petipa spent his early childhood traveling throughout Europe with his family, as his parents' professional engagements took them from city to city. By the time Marius was six years old his family had settled in Brussels, in what was then the United Kingdom of the Netherlands, where his father was appointed Maître de Ballet and Premier danseur to the Théâtre de la Monnaie. The young Marius received his general education at the Grand College in Brussels, while also attending the Brussels Conservatory where he studied music and learnt to play the violin.

Portrait of Marius Petipa at age nine in his début performance as a savoyard in his father Jean Petipa's production of La Dansomanie, Brussels, 1827

Jean Petipa began giving the young Marius lessons in ballet at the age of seven. At first the young boy resisted, caring very little for the artform. Nevertheless the he soon came to love this artform that was so much the life and identity of his family, and he excelled quickly. In 1827 at the age of nine Marius performed for the first time in a ballet production as a savoyard in his father's staging of Pierre Gardel's 1800 ballet La Dansomani.

On 25 August 1830, the Belgian Revolution erupted after a performance of Daniel Auber's opera La muette de Portici at the Théâtre de la Monnaie, where Marius's father served as Maître de Ballet. The violent street fighting that followed caused the theatre to be shut down for a time, and consequently Jean Petipa found himself without a position. The Petipa family was left in dire straits for some years.

In 1834 the Petipa family relocated to Bordeaux, France where Marius's father had secured the position of Maître de Ballet at the Grand Théâtre de Bordeaux. While in Bordeaux Marius completed his ballet training under the great Auguste Vestris. By 1838 he was appointed Premier danseur to the Ballet de Nantes in Nantes, France. During his time in Nantes the young Petipa began to try his hand at choreography by creating a number of one-act ballets and divertissements.

In July of 1839 the twenty-one year old Marius Petipa accompanied his father on a tour of the United States with a group of french dancers. Among the many engagements was a performance of Jean Coralli's La Tarentule at the National Theatre on Broadway, being the first ballet performance ever seen in New York City. The tour proved to be a complete disaster, as many in the uncultured American audiences of that time had never before seen ballet. To add to the fiasco, the American impresario who arranged the engagements stole a large portion of the troupe's receipts and subsequently disappeared without a trace. Upon leaving for France, Petipa's ticket only allowed him passage to Nantes, but instead of returning to that city he stowed away so that he could continue on to Paris.

By 1840, Petipa had made his début as a dancer with the famous Comédie Française in Paris, and during his first performance with the troupe he partnered the legendary Ballerina Carlotta Grisi in a benefit performance held for the actress Rachel. Petipa also took part in performances at the Théâtre de l’Académie Royale de Musique (known more popularly as the Paris Opéra) where his brother Lucien Petipa was engaged as Premier danseur.

Bordeaux

Petipa was offered the position of Premier danseur at the Grand Théâtre in Bordeaux in 1841. There, he studied further with the great Vestris, all the while dancing the leads in such ballets as La Fille Mal Gardée, La Péri and Giselle. While performing with the company his skills as not only a dancer but as a partner were much celebrated. His partnering of Carlotta Grisi during a performance of La Péri was talked about for years to come, particularly one acrobatic catch of the ballerina that dazzled the audience. While in Bordeaux Petipa began mounting his own original full-length productions — La Jolie Bordelaise (The Beauty of Bordeaux), La Vendange (The Grape Picker), L’Intrigue Amoureuse (The Intrigues of Love) and Le Langage des Fleurs (The Voice of the Flowers).

Madrid

In 1843 Petipa was offered the position Premier danseur at the King's Theatre in Madrid, Spain. For the next three years Petipa would acquire an acute knowledge of traditional Spanish Dancing while producing new works based on Spanish themes — Carmen et son toréro (Carmen and the Bullfighter), La Perle de Séville (The Pearl of Seville), L’Aventure d’une fille de Madrid (The Adventures of a Madrileña), La Fleur de Grenade (The Flower of Grenada) and Départ pour la course des taureaux (Leaving for the Bull Races). In 1846 he began a love affair with the wife of the Marquis de Chateaubriand, a prominent member of the French Embassy. Learning of the affair, the Marquis challenged Petipa to a duel. Rather than keep his fateful appointment, Petipa quickly left Spain, never to return. He then travelled to Paris where he stayed for a brief period. While in the city he took part in a performances at the Théâtre de l’Académie Royale de Musique where he partnered the ballerina Thérèse Elssler, sister of Fanny Elssler.

St. Petersburg, Russia

Early career

In 1847, Petipa accepted the position of Premier danseur to the Imperial Theatres of St. Peterburg, at that time the capital of the Russian Empire. The position of Premier danseur had become vacant upon the departure of the French Danseur Emile Gredlu, and Petipa soon relocated to Russia. On 5 June [O.S. 24 May] 1847 the twenty-nine year old Petipa arrived in the imperial capital. In 1848 Petipa's father also relocated to St. Petersburg, where he taught the Classe de perfection at the Imperial Ballet School until his death in 1855.

For his début, the director of the Imperial Theatres Alexander Gedeonov commissioned Petipa and the Ballet Master Pierre-Frédéric Malevergne to mount the first Russian production of Joseph Mazilier's celebrated ballet Paquita, first staged at the Paris Opéra in 1846. The ballet was given for the first time in St. Petersburg on 8 October [O.S. 26 September] 1847 with the Prima ballerina Yelena Andreyonova in the title role and Petipa himself in the largely mimed role of Lucien d’Hervilly.

The following season Petipa and his father staged a revival of Mazilier's 1840 ballet Le Diable amoureux (The Devil Inlove), which premiered as Satanella on 22 February [O.S. 10 February] 1848. The Prima ballerina Andreyonova performed the title role, with Petipa in the role of Fabio.

Students of the Imperial Ballet School in the Petipa/Minkus Mazurka des enfants from act II of Paquita. St. Petersburg, circa 1900

At the time Petipa had arrived in St. Petersburg, the Imperial Ballet had experienced a considerable decline in popularity with the public since the 1842 departure of Marie Taglioni, who had been engaged in the Imperial capital as guest ballerina. The productions of Paquita and Satanella brought about a measure of prestige and attention for the company. According to the critic Raphael Zotov:

Our lovely ballet company was reborn with the productions of Paquita and Satanella, and its superlative performances placed the company again at its former level of glory and universal affection.

In late 1849 Petipa staged the ballet sections of Friedrich von Flotow's Alessandro Stradella for the Moscow Imperial Bolshoi Opera, which would prove to be the last choreography he would stage for the next six years, as his duties as a dancer would soon take precedence over those of choreographer.

In the winter of 1849, the French Ballet Master Jules Perrot arrived in St. Petersburg, having accepted the position of Premier Maître de Ballet of the St. Petersburg Imperial Theatres. He was accompanied by his chief collaborator, the prolific Italian composer Cesare Pugni, who was appointed Ballet Composer of the Imperial Theatres, a position created especially for him. Aside from dancing the principal roles in many of Perrot's productions, Petipa rehearsed older works with the company and assisted Perrot in staging revivals (such as Giselle in 1850, and Le Corsaire in 1858), all the while learning a great deal from the man who was at that time the most celebrated choreographer in Europe. Although Petipa did not create his own original works during this period, he nevertheless staged many dances for various operas, and on occasion revised dances for Perrot's many revivals of older works.

By 1850 Petipa's first child, a son named Marius Mariusovich Petipa (1850-1919) was born. His mother, Marie Thérèse Bourdin—with whom Petipa had a brief liaison—died five years after the birth of their child. In 1854 Petipa married the Prima ballerina Mariia Surovshchikova-Petipa. Together they had two children: Marie Mariusovna Petipa (1857-1930), who would go on to become a celebrated dancer in her own right, and Jean Mariusovich Petipa (1859-1971?).

On 21 January [O.S. 9 January] 1855 Petipa presented his first original ballet in over six years, a ballet-divertissement titled L’Etoile de Grenade (The Star of Grenada), for which he collaborated for the first time with the composer Cesare Pugni. The work was presented for the first time at the Palace of the Grand Duchess Elena Pavlovna, a fanatic balletomane and patron of the arts. L’Etoile de Grenade was followed by La Rose, la violette et le papillon (The Rose, the Violet and the Butterfly) in 1857, Un Mariage sous la Régence (A Marriage Under the Regency) in 1858, Le Marché des parisien (The Parisian Market) in 1859, Le Dahlia Bleu (The Blue Dahlia) in 1860 and Terpsichore in 1861. All of Petipa's works during this period were tailored especially for the talents of his wife Maria, who performed the principal roles to considerable acclaim, and soon was named Prima ballerina to the St. Petersburg Imperial Theatres.

On the 29 May 1861 Petipa presented his 1859 ballet Le Marché des parisien at the Théâtre Impérial de l’Opéra in Paris as Le Marché des Innocents. Petipa's wife Maria reprised the principal role of Lizetta (re-named Gloriette) to great success.

In 1858 Jules Perrot retired to his native France, never to return to Russia again. Petipa anticipated succeeding Perrot as Premier Maître de Ballet. His years of serving as assistant to Perrot had taught him much. Choreography was a logical alternative to dancing for the now 41 year old Petipa, who was soon to retire from the stage. But it was not yet to be. In 1860 the renowned French Ballet Master Arthur Saint-Léon was given the coveted position by the director of the Imperial Theatres Andrei Saburov, and soon a healthy and productive rivalry between him and Petipa ensued, bringing the Imperial Ballet to new heights throughout the 1860s.

Second Maître de Ballet of the Imperial Theatres

The great Italian Ballerina Carolina Rosati had been engaged as guest artist with the Imperial Theatres since 1855. By 1861 the ballerina's contract with the company was set to expire, and upon leaving St. Petersburg she had decided to retire from the stage. By contract she was allowed one last benefit performance in a new production, and in late 1861 she requested from the director Saburov that preparations begin post haste. Saburov approached Petipa, and inquired as to whether or not he could stage a ballet for Rosati in only six weeks. Confidently, Petipa answered "Yes, I shall try, and probably succeed." Saburov immediately put all other projects on hold so that the company could concentrate on the production of the new ballet.

Julia Sedova costumed as the Princess Aspicia in the Grand pas des chasseresses from the Petipa/Pugni The Pharaoh's Daughter. St. Petersburg, circa 1905

During his sojourn in Paris for the staging of Le Marché des Innocents, Petipa acquired a scenario from the dramatist Jules-Henri Vernoy de Saint-Georges for a ballet titled The Pharaoh's Daughter, inspired by Théophile Gautier's Le Roman de la Momie. Petipa decided that this scenario, set in exotic ancient Egypt, would be perfect for the effective production Rosati so desired. Throughout the Victorian era Europe was fascinated with all things concerning the art and culture of ancient Egypt, and Petipa was sure that a ballet on such a subject would be a great success.

Petipa began work immediately, collaborating with the composer Pugni, who wrote his melodious and apt score with the quickness for which he was well known. The Pharaoh's Daughter premiered on 30 January [O.S. 18 January] 1862 to an unrivaled success. The work exceeded even the opulent tastes of the Tsarist audience, as so lavish and exotic a ballet had not been seen on the Imperial stage for some time. The work went on to become the most popular ballet in the entire repertory of the Imperial Theatres— by 1903 The Pharaoh's Daughter had been performed 203 times. The great success of The Pharaoh's Daughter earned for Petipa the position of Second Maître de Ballet to the Imperial Theatres.

Saint-Léon answered the success of Petipa's pseudo-Egyptian opus with the fantastical The Little Humpbacked Horse, a ballet adaptation of Pyotr Yershov's famous Russian poem. The work proved to be a success equal to that of The Pharaoh's Daughter, with its series of fantastical tableaux set under-water and on an enchanted isle, as well as the ballet's final Grand divertissement celebrating the many peoples of the Russian Empire.

Though Arthur Saint-Léon was by title and technicality Petipa's superior, the two men were viewed as equals by the critics and balletomanes of the day, and would rival one another with splendid productions throughout the 1860s. Not only did the Ballet Master's have their own respective audiences, but also their own ballerinas: Petipa mounted the majority of his works at that time for his wife, the Prima ballerina Mariia Surovshchikova-Petipa, while Saint-Léon mounted the majority of his works for the great ballerina Marfa Muravieva. Despite their rivalry, nearly every ballet staged by Petipa and Saint-Léon during the 1860s was set to the music of Cesare Pugni.

On 6 February [O.S. 25 January] 1868 Petipa presented a lavish revival of the ballet Le Corsaire for the visiting ballerina Adèle Grantzow, for which he included the celebrated scene Le jardin animé to the music of Léo Delibes. On 29 October [O.S. 17 October] 1868 Petipa presented his exotic grand ballet Le Roi Candaule, which was staged especially for Henriatte D'or. Le Roi Candaule, set to the music of Pugni, included the celebrated Pas de Vénus which was considered at that time be one of Petipa's ultimate masterpieces of classical choreography. The ballet also included the pas de caractéristique known as Les amours de Diane, a pas which would later be transformed by Agrippina Vaganova into the so-called Diane and Actéon Pas de Deux for her 1935 revival of La Esmeralda. Le Roi Candaule would go on to break attendance records at the St. Petersburg Imperial Bolshoi Kamenny Theatre, and by 1903 the work had been performed 194 times.

Petipa's final work of the 1860s remains a cornerstone of the classical ballet repertory. Don Quixote was mounted for the Ballet of the Moscow Imperial Bolshoi Theatre, with the famous ballerina Anna Sobeshchanskaya in the role of Kitri. The composer Ludwig Minkus was commissioned to write the ballet's score, marking the beginning a long and fruitful collaboration between he and Petipa.

Premier Maître de Ballet of the Imperial Theatres

In 1869 Saint-Léon's contract was set to expire. The failures of his two most recent ballets, Le Poisson doré (1866) and Le Lys (1869) lead the Minister of the Imperial Court to refuse renewal of the Ballet Master's contract. While in the Café de Divan in the Avenue de l'Opéra in Paris Saint-Léon died of a heart attack on 2 September, 1870. Not long before his death the composer Cesare Pugni—Petipa's chief collaborator for many years—died on 2 February [O.S. 26 January] 1870.

Petipa was officially named Premier Maître de Ballet on 12 March [O.S. 29 February] 1871). On 21 November [O.S. 9 November] 1871 Petipa presented Don Quixote at the St. Petersburg Imperial Bolshoi Kamenny Theatre in an expanded and far more lavish edition. Minkus's score was hailed unanimously as a masterwork of ballet music, earning the composer the post of Ballet Composer of the St. Petersburg Imperial Theatres. Petipa and Minkus created a series of original masterworks and celebrated revivals throughout the 1870s: La Camargo in 1872, Offenbach's Le Papillon in 1874, Les Brigands (The Bandits) in 1875, Les Aventures de Pélée (The Adventures of Peleus) in 1876, Roxana in 1878, La Fille des Neiges (The Daughter of the Snows) in 1879, and Mlada, also in 1879.

In 1877 Petipa staged the greatest masterwork of his career, the exotic La Bayadère to the music of Minkus, which premiered on 4 February [O.S. 23 January] 1877 for the benefit performance of the Prima ballerina Ekaterina Vazem. The ballet included Petipa's celebreated vision scene (or "Ballet blanc") known as The Kingdom of the Shades, for which the Ballet Master staged some of his most outstanding choreography. La Bayadère would prove to be among Petipa's most celebrated and enduring works. To this day his choreography for the scene The Kingdom of the Shades remains one of the ultimate challenges for the classical ballerina and danseur, and especially the corps de ballet.

Virginia Zucchi in the title role of Petipa's revival of the Perrot/Pugni La Esmeralda. St. Petersburg, 1886.

Petipa and his wife, the Prima ballerina Mariia Surovshchikova-Petipa separated in 1875, and in 1882 the ballerina died of virulent smallpox in Pyatigorsk. In 1876 Petipa married the ballerina Lyubov Savitskaya, who before she married Petipa had given birth to their first child. Together, they had six children: Nadezhda Mariusovna Petipa (1874-1945), Evgeniia Mariusovna Petipa (1877-1892), Victor Mariusovich Petipa (1879-1939), Lyubov Mariusovna Petipa (1880-1917), Marius Mariusovich Petipa II (1884-1922), and Vera Mariusovna Petipa (1885-1961). With so many children, Petipa stood at the head of a large family by the time he had reached his 70s, having many grandchildren, in-laws, and god-children. Although he was well provided for at the expense of the Imperial treasury, he was not rich, and lived strictly within his means. He kept track of all of his living expenses in journals, as well as box-office receipts at the theatre. He was well known for his generosity, always lavishing presents upon his children and grandchildren, and was known to purchase tea or lunch for the dancers during a rehearsal.

Throughout the 1880s Petipa staged revivals of older works with increasing regularity. In 1880 he revived Mazilier's Le Corsaire for the ballerina Eugenia Sokolova, and in 1881 he revived Mazilier's Paquita for the prima ballerina Vazem. For this production Petipa added the celebrated Paquita Grand pas classique, as well as the Paquita Pas de trois (a.k.a. Minkus Pas de trois) and the Mazurka des enfants (Children's Mazurka), all to the music of Minkus. The Paquita Grand pas classique is among Petipa's most celebrated divertissements, and is included in the repertories of ballet companies all over the world. In 1884 Petipa staged what is considered to be his definitive revival of the romantic masterwork Giselle, and in 1885 he mounted a new production of Arthur Saint-Léon's Coppélia.

In late 1885 the great Italian ballerina Virginia Zucchi began her two year engagement with the St. Petersburg Imperial Ballet, making her debut in a revival of Petipa's The Pharoah's Daughter. A few weeks later Zucchi appeared as Lise in a revival of Paul Talgioni's 1864 version of La Fille Mal Gardée, staged for the benefit performance of Pavel Gerdt by Petipa and Lev Ivanov, Second Maître de Ballet of the Imperial Theatres. The Petipa/Ivanov production of La Fille Mal Gardée would be retained in the repertory of the St. Petersburg Ballet for many years, serving as a useful vehicle for such noted ballerinas as Mathilde Kschessinskaya and Olga Preobrajenskaya. In 1886 Petipa mounted a revival of Jules Perrot's La Esmeralda especially for Zucchi, a production that is considered to be his definitive revival of the work. For her performance, Petipa interpolated the famous La Esmeralda pas de six to the music of Riccardo Drigo, a dramatic pas d'action that allowed Zucchi to display her incomparable flair for drama and mime. For Zucchi's benefit performance in February of 1887, Petipa staged the ballet L'Ordre du Roi (The King's Command), a work based on Delibes' operetta Le roi l'a dit. The score for L'Ordre du Roi was a musical pastiche created by the composer Albert Vinzentini typical of the early romantic ballet. Vinzentini adapted pieces taken from Delibes' score for Le roi l'a dit, as well as additional airs taken from the works of Johann Strauss II, Léo Delibes, Daniel Auber, Jules Massenet and Anton Rubinstein. Zucchi scored an enormous success in the principal role of Pepita when the ballet premiered on 26 February [O.S. 14 February] 1886. Nevertheless many critics complained that the ballet had a weak libretto and mise en scène. Petipa staged an abridgement of L'Ordre du Roi as Les Élèves de Dupré (The Pupils of Dupré) in 1900 for a special performance given at the Theatre of the Hermitage for the Imperial Family and their special guest, Kaiser Wilhelm II.

By 1885 the now sixty-seven year-old Petipa began to experience what appeared to be a severe case of eczema. The pain and suffering caused by his illness began to debilitate the Ballet Master a great deal, forcing him to be absent from work for long periods.

In 1881, the newly crowned Russian Emperor Alexander III appointed Ivan Vsevolozhsky director of the St. Petersburg Imperial Theatres. In 1885 the new director prompted the inspection of the Imperial Bolshoi Kamenny Theatre by architects who found the building to be unsafe. Rather than spend millions of roubles on renovations, the director ordered that both the ballet and opera companies be relocated to the Imperial Mariinsky Theatre of St. Petersburg, much to the chagrin of the orchestra and opera singers who found the theatre's acoustics to be weaker. In honor the move to the new theatre, a lavish gala performance was planned for February of 1886. Les Pilules magiques (The Magic Pills) was an elaborate work that combined singing and dance. The work included three danced tableaux staged by Petipa to the music of Minkus: the first tableau took place in a subterranean cave inhabited by sorceresses, while the second included various card games brought to life through dance. The third and final tableau was known as The Kingdom of the Laces in which a Grand divertissement of national dances from Belgium, England, Spain and Russia was performed.

The Golden Age of Russian Ballet

The ballets of Marius Petipa were lavish spectacles that could have only been produced in the opulent atmosphere of the Imperial Russian court, which was at the time the most resplendent in all Europe. The treasury of the Russian Emperor—who was at that time the wealthiest person in the world—lavished over 10,000,000 roubles a year on the Imperial Ballet, opera, and the Imperial Ballet School (today the Vaganova Academy of Russian Ballet). Each new theatrical season required that Petipa create a new Grand ballet. His duties also called upon him to stage the dance sections for various operas, and to prepare galas and divertissements for court performances, royal nuptuals, etc.

The Imperial Ballet performed before a fanatical public that adored the ballet and knew the artform very intimately. The audiences had the highest expectations and standards, with many critics from various newspapers reporting every performance in detail. To create ballets for such a public meant that Petipa and his company had to maintain the highest level of perfection and excellence in their work. With the art of ballet flourishing in this kind of an environment, the late 19th century saw what is considered to be the golden age of Russian ballet. In essence, what is now considered to be the art of Classical Ballet came into its own in the 1890s in St. Petersburg, where virtuoso ballerinas were finally met in technique by the danseurs, and lavish productions were designed by some of the Russian Empires most talented designers.

Upon the retirement of Ludwig Minkus in 1886, the director Vsevolozhsky abolished the post of Ballet Composer to the St. Petersburg Imperial Theatres in an effort to diversify the music supplied for the ballet. Soon, various composers began scoring music for the company.

In 1888 Petipa presented his colossal grand ballet set in ancient Rome La Vestale, set to the music of the composer Mikhail Ivanov, a noted nusic critic and student of Tchaikovsky. In 1889 Vsevolozhsky commissioned the Italian composer and conductor Riccardo Drigo to compose the score for Petipa's lavish Le Talisman. In 1886 Drigo was been appointed kapellmeister to the St. Petersburg Imperial Theatres and principal conductor of the Imperial Ballet.

In 1889, the director Vsevolozhsky commissioned the great composer Pyotr Illyich Tchaikovsky to compose the score for Petipa's The Sleeping Beauty. The ballet's premiere on 15 January [O.S. 3 January] 1890 was a resounding success, and is today considered to be the quintessential classical ballet, as well as one of Petipa's ultimate masterpieces of choreography. The ballet proved to be so popular in fact that by April of 1903 it had been performed 100 times in only thirteen years, being one of the most popular works in the Imperial Ballet's repertory, second only to Petipa's The Pharaoh's Daughter.

Nevertheless it appears that Riccardo Drigo was Petipa's preferred collaborator throughout the remainder of his career, as the composer/conductor had a considerable talent for creating the light, salon-styled musique dansante then in vogue for ballet. Although Drigo only scored five original ballets for Petipa in total, he was called upon to compose a nearly countless number of supplemental variations and pas for the Imperial Ballet's dancers, and by the turn of the 20th century there was hardly a work in the company's repertory that did not include an embellishment or supplemental number by the Italian maestro. Drigo was also commissioned to adapt a number of already existing scores for Petipa's revivals of older works — in 1892 he adapted Jean-Madeleine Schneitzhoeffer's score for Petipa's revival of Filippo Taglioni's original La Sylphide, and Cesare Pugni's score for The Little Humpbacked Horse in 1895. On occasion Petipa even engaged Drigo to add various numbers to new works when the Ballet Master found the scores provided not be suitably dansante. For example Drigo composed a number of additional pieces for Mikhail Ivanov's score for Petipa's 1888 La Vestale, as well as Arsenii Koreshchenko's score for Petipa's Le Miroir magique (The Magic Mirror) in 1903. Drigo even made adjustments to Tchaikovsky's score for The Sleeping Beauty in 1890. Today many of Drigo's supplemental pas and variations can be found in many ballets, including Le Corsaire and La Esmeralda.

In 1892 Petipa was diagnosed with a severe case of the skin disease pemphigus, which perforce caused the Ballet Master to refrain from choreography for the Imperial Ballet's entire 1892-1893 theatrical season. It has been widely accepted by history that the responsibility of staging Tchaikovsky's second ballet for the Imperial Ballet, The Nutcracker, fell to the Imperial Theatre's Second Maître de Ballet due to Petipa's continuing infirmity. Many sources argue to the contrary, claiming that Petipa was responsible for staging the ballet. The Nutcracker premiered 18 December [O.S. 6 December] 1892 on a double bill with Tchaikovsky's opera Iolanta at the Imperial Mariinsky Theatre. Many critics of the day considered the work to not even be a ballet at all, with far to much emphasis on spectacle rather than drama.

Petipa's illness kept him from composition for nearly the whole of 1893, and it was during this time that Enrico Cecchetti, the great Italian dancer and teacher, began to assist Lev Ivanov in substituting for Petipa in the staging of ballets and rehearsals.

In 1893 Petipa supervised Cecchetti and Ivanov's staging of a ballet adaptation of Charles Perrault's Cinderella (or Zolushka), set to the music of Baron Boris Fitinhof-Schell. In the title role the Italian virtuosa Pierina Legnani made her début, and on the evening of the premiere, 15 December [O.S. 3 December] 1893, her perfection of technique and execution caused a sensation, with many critics and balletomanes hailing her as the supreme ballerina of her generation. In the coda of the ballet's Grand Pas d'action of the last act she astounded the audience by performing a feat never before executed by any Ballerina: 32 fouettés en tournant. Petipa was so enamored with the steller ballerina that he bestowed upon her the rarely held title of Prima ballerina assoluta, and over the course of the next eight years, Petipa staged many new ballets especially for her talents.

In 1894 the Ballerina Mathilde Kschessinskaya was named Prima Ballerina of the Imperial Ballet, second only in rank to Legnani, and although she was eventually named Prima ballerina bssoluta it was nevertheless Legnani who proved to be Petipa's greatest muse, as nearly every new ballet he mounted throughout his remaining years with the Imperial Ballet featured her in the principal role. Among these works: Raymonda in 1898, and Les Ruses d'Amour (The Pranks of Love) in 1900. Kschessinskaya in turn was given almost all of the leads in Petipa's revivals of plder works, among them, his 1898 revival of The Pharaoh's Daughter and his 1899 revival of La Esmeralda.

In 1894 Petipa returned to choreography from his long infirmity with his first completely original ballet since The Sleeping Beauty. Set to a score by Drigo, the one-act La réveil de Flore (The Awakening of Flora) was mounted especially for the celebrations held at the Imperial Theatre of Peterhof in honor of the wedding of Tsar Alexander III's daughter, the Grand Duchess Xenia Alexandrovna to the Grand Duke Alexander Mikhailovich, premiering 9 August [O.S. 28 July] 1894.

In 1893 Tchaikovsky died, and in February 1894 a memorial concert was given in his honor at the Mariinsky Theatre. For the occasion Lev Ivanov mounted the second scene from Tchaikovsky's 1877 Swan Lake, a work first produced in Moscow. It was soon decided that a revival of the full-length work would be mounted for the 1894-1895 season, with Ivanov would staging the second and fourth tableaux, while Petipa would stage the remainder of the work. Drigo would revise Tchaikovsky's 1877 score in accordance with Petipa's instructions, and Tchaikovsky's brother Modeste would revise the ballet's scenario. The premiere on 27 January [O.S. 15 January] 1895 with Legnani in the dual role of Odette/Odile was a great success, and in Petipa and Ivanov's version Swan Lake would go on to become one of the greatest of all ballets, remaining one of the ultimate tests for the Classical Ballerina and the corps de ballet.

The Turn of the 20th Century

Petipa would spend the remainder of the turn of the 20th century devoting most of his energies into staging revivals. In the winter of 1895 Petipa presented lavish revivals of his 1889 ballet Le Talisman, and Saint-Léon's 1864 The Little Humpbacked Horse (as La Tsar-Demoiselle), both with Legnani in the principal roles. The turn of the 20th century saw Petipa present even more spectacular revivals: The Pharoah's Daughter in 1898; La Esmeralda, Giselle and Le Corsaire in 1899; and La Bayadère in 1900. These revivals would prove to be Petipa's final "finishing touch" on these works.

But Petipa also mounted new works. On 26 May [O.S. 14 May] 1896 the new Emperor and Empress, Tsar Nicholas II and the Empress Alexandra Feodorovna were crowned at the Uspensky Sobor Cathedral of the Moscow Kremlin. For the celebrations in honor of the event which were held at the Moscow Imperial Bolshoi Theatre three days later, Petipa presented the one-act ballet to Drigo's music, Le Perle. The ballet, set in an under-water kingdom, proved to be the greatest success on the bill.

On 19 January [O.S. 7 January] 1898 the near eighty year old Petipa presented one of his greatest ballets, Raymonda, set in Hungary during the middle ages to the music of Alexander Glazunov, which premiered to great success. Petipa's Pas classique hongrois (or Raymonda Pas de Dix) from the last act of the ballet would go on to be one of his most celebrated and enduring excerpts, with the challenging choreography he lavished onto Legnani (who danced the title role) becoming one of the ultimate tests of the classical ballerina.

Petipa presented what would prove to be his final masterpiece on 23 February [O.S. 10 February] 1900 at the Hermitage Theatre, Les Millions d'Arlequin (or Harlequinade), a balletic Harlequinade set to Drigo's music. Harlequinade was dedicated by both Drigo and Petipa to the new Empress, Alexandra Feodorovna, a work which would prove to be the last enduring flash of Petipa's choreographic ouvre.

Petipa's Final Years With the Imperial Ballet

In spite of his vast accomplishments, Petipa's final years with the Imperial Ballet were difficult. By the turn of the 20th century new innovations in the art of classical dance began to become apparent. With all of this, Petipa's rocky relationship with the new director of the Imperial Theatres, Vladimir Telyakovsky, appointed to the position in 1901, served as a catalyst to the Ballet Master's end. Telyakovsky made no effort in disguising his dislike of Petipa's art, as he felt that the art of classical ballet had become stagnant under him, and felt that other choreographers should have a chance at the helm of the Imperial Ballet. But even at the age of eighty-three, and suffering from the constant pain brought on by a severe case of the skin disease pemphigus, the old Maestro Petipa showed no signs of slowing down, much to Telyakovsky's chagrin.

One example of Telyakovsky's efforts in his attempt to "de-throne" Petipa came in 1902 when he invited Alexander Gorsky, former Premier danseur to the Imperial Ballet, to stage his own version of Petipa's 1869 ballet Don Quixote. Gorsky had been engaged as Ballet Master to the Ballet of the Moscow Imperial Bolshoi Theatre, and in 1900 he mounted a complete revision of Don Quixote in a version radically different from Petipa's original. Petipa became furious when he learned this new version would be staged for the St. Peterburg troupe, as he had not even been consulted on the production of a ballet that was originally his creation. While watching a rehearsal of Gorsky's production at the Mariinsky Theatre, Petipa was heard yelling out "Will someone tell that young man that I am not yet dead?!". Petipa was further frustrated by the fact that the Imperial Theatre's newly appointed régisseur Nicholas Sergeyev was being paid large sums to travel throughout the Russian Empire and stage many of the ageing Balet Master's works.

Funeral cortège for Marius Petipa, July 17, 1910, St. Petersburg, Russia

In late 1902 Petipa began work on a ballet adaptation of the tale Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs titled Le Miroir magique. Petipa mounted the work for his own benefit performance, which was to mark a "semi-retirement" for the Ballet Master. The ballet, set to the music of the avant-garde composer Arsenii Koreshchenko, was given on 22 February [O.S. 9 February] 1903 at the Mariinsky Theatre to an audience composed of the whole Imperial Family and many members of the St. Petersburg nobility. The production boasted an unorthodox score which from all accounts clashed with Petipa's classical, academic choreography. The bizarre décor and costumes were also considered to be unsuited for a classical ballet, and when they were revealed, the audeience broke out into laughter, hisses and whistles. From accounts of the dancers involved, Petipa's choreography was of great quality, but was unfortunately completely lost in the debacle of the unusual production. In spite of this Petipa received a roaring ovation from the audience at the end of the performance. Le Miroir magique was given scathing reviews in the press, and was considered to be an all-around failure. Petipa had created ballets before that had failed in eyes of the public, but at the age of eighty-four, and with severely strained relations with the director, the failure proved horrifically costly. Not long afterward rumour began to circulate that Petipa was to be replaced, and Telyakovsky even made an announcement to the Stock Trade Bulletin, a St. Petersburg newspaper, "The Ballet Company will have to get used to a new Balletmaster - Alexander Gorsky. He will stage his own versions of 'The Little Humpbacked Horse' and 'Swan Lake'. He has staged both ballets (for the Moscow Bolshoi Theatre) entirely differently and in a much more original manner." In the end Gorsky never succeeded Petipa as Premier Maître de Ballet. The coveted post would later go to Mikhail Fokine.

Telyakovsky knew that he could not legally end Petipa's employment, as he was still contracted as Premier Maître de Ballet, so he began a campaign in which to drive the aging Ballet Master from the theatre. In 1902 Telyakovsky set up a new committee made up of influential members of the Imperial Theatres that would in essence take away Petipa's powers with regard to casting, repertory, and the appointment of dancers, though much to Telyakovsky's chagrin the members of the committee appointed Petipa chairman. Soon after Telyakovsky began purposely not sending carriages to collect Petipa for a particular rehearsal, or not sending him lists of casting for various ballets, and even not informing Petipa of various rehearsals taking place, for which the Ballet Master was legally required to know about. Nevertheless Petipa's advanced age and failing health left him with little drive to fight with teh director. Petipa was invited in March of 1904 to stage The Pharoah's Daughter at the Paris Opéra (the Palais Garnier) by relatives of Jules-Henri Vernoy de Saint-Georges, who wrote the ballet's libretto, but his health prevented him from it.

File:Petipamarius.jpg
Petipa's grave in the Alexander Nevsky Monestery, St. Petersburg, Russia

Despite the situation with Telyakovsky and the condition of his health, Petipa still managed to work, as he was constantly sought by the dancers of the Imperial Ballet for coaching, and he even managed to revise some of the dances in his old works. In 1904 Petipa coached the great Anna Pavlova for her performance in Giselle and her début in Paquita. For the performance Petipa created a new variation for the ballerina to Drigo's music that is still danced today by the lead Ballerina in the famous Paquita Grand Pas Classique. According to the Ballerina Olga Preobrajenskaya, "...by the time I entered His Majety's ballet in 1889, (Petipa) was a true master. I have always found myself fortunate to have witnessed such genius, for by the time Petipa reached his 80s, his art had reached a perfection unparalleled. Our ballet was unrivaled anywhere in Europe due to his genius."

Petipa's diaries reflect the constant fear of his aging body, and that his he had little time left to live. In light this, the Ballet Master spent nearly every minute he could creating variations and various numbers, as well as reworking many of the dances in his older works. In 1903 Petipa presented completely new choreography for many of the pas in his 1868 ballet Le Roi Candaule. For this revival Petipa created a new version of the celebrated pas Les amours de Diane that would later be transformed by Agrippina Vaganova into the famous Diane and Actéon Pas de Deux. Such work prompted the Ballet Master to write in his diaries "I am amazing."

Petipa then set to work on what would prove to be his final ballet. L'amour de la rose et le papillon to the music of Drigo was, according to Olga Preobrajenskaya, "...a little masterpiece." The work was scheduled to be presented on 5 February [O.S. 23 January] 1904 for a performance at the Imperial Theatre of the Hermitage, but the director Telyakovsky abruptly cancelled the performance only two weeks prior to the premiere, the official explanation being the outbreak of the Russo-Japanese War. For Petipa this was the final straw, and soon afterward he was rarely seen at the theatre or the Imperial Ballet School (where rehearsals were held). The minister of the Imperial Court, the aristocrat Baron Fredericks gave Petipa the title "Ballet Master for life", and granted him a yearly pension of 9,000 roubles.

In his diaries Petipa noted his final composition on 17 January, 1905: a variation to the music of Pugni for the Prima ballerina Olga Preobrajenskaya from the old ballet La Danseuse en voyage. Petipa worte next to this entry " ... its finished!".

Petipa remained in St. Petersburg until 1907, and then, at the suggestion of his physicians, left with his family to Yalta in southern Russia where the air was more agreeable with his health. Not long after the family relocated to the resort Gurzuf in the Crimea, where the Ballet Master spent his remaining years. In 1907 Petipa wrote in his diary "I can state that I created a ballet company of which everyone said: St. Petersburg has the greatest ballet in all Europe." Petipa died on 14 July [O.S. 1 July] 1910 at the age of ninety-two, and was interred three days later in the Alexander Nevsky Monastery in St. Petersburg.

The Notation of Petipa's Work

It was in 1891 that many of Petipa's original ballets, revivals, and dances from operas began to be notated in the method of Dance Notation created by Vladimir Stepanov. The project began with a demonstration to the committee of the Imperial Ballet (consisting of Petipa, Lev Ivanov, the former Prima Ballerina Ekaterina Vazem, the Jeune Premier Danseur Noble Pavel Gerdt, and the great teacher Christian Johansson) with Stepanov himself notating Lev Ivanov and Riccardo Drigo's 1893 ballet The Magic Flute, and not long afterward the project was set into motion with a revival of Jules Perrot's ballet An Artist's Dream. After Stepanov's death in 1896 Alexander Gorsky took over the project, all the while perfecting the system. After Gorsky departed St. Petersburg in 1900 to take up the post of Balletmaster to the Moscow Imperial Bolshoi Theatre, the project was taken over by Nicholas Sergeyev, former Danseur of the Imperial Ballet (and later régisseur in 1903) with his team of notators - Alexander Chekrygin joined the project in 1903, and Victor Rakhmanov in 1904.

A Page of the Stepanov choreographic notation from the Sergeyev Collection for the Petipa/Minkus La Bayadère, circa 1900

After the Russian Revolution of 1917 Nicholas Sergeyev left Russia with the notations in hand. In 1921 Sergeyev took over the post of régisseur to the Latvian National Opera Ballet in Riga, and during his appointment there he added a substantial amount of the musical scores belonging to the notated ballets. In the 1930s, with the aid of the notations, Sergeyev went on to stage Petipa's The Sleeping Beauty, his definitive version of Giselle, Coppelia (as danced by the Imperial Ballet), and The Nutcracker for the Vic-Wells Ballet of London (later the Royal Ballet) who still almost religiously perform many of these ballets with little changes from when they were first staged. It was through these revivals by Sergeyev in London with aid of these notations that the ballets of Petipa where first staged in the west, forming the nucleus of what is now known as the Classical Ballet reperotry for not only the ballet of England but for the world.

In 1969 the Harvard University Library purchased the collection, which is today known as the Sergeyev Collection. The collection consists of choreographic notations documenting the compositions of Marius Petipa for his original ballets and revivals (the collection also includes two notations for ballets by Lev Ivanov - his 1893 The Magic Flute and 1887 The Enchanted Forest), and one by the brothers Nikolai and Sergai Legat (their 1903 revival of The Fairy Doll), as well as Petipa's choreography for dances from operas, along with various Pas, incidental dances, etc. from other works. Not all of the notations are complete, with some being rather vague in sections, leading some historians who have studied the collection to theorize that they were made to function simply as "reminders" for the Balletmaster or régisseur already familiar with these works. The collection also includes photos, set and costume designs, and music for many of the ballets in their performance score editions (mostly in piano and/or violin reduction), many of which include a substantial number of dances, variations, etc. interpolated from other works.

Petipa's Memoirs and Biographies

Below is a listing for further reading on Marius Petipa. To date there is no publication which is currently in print.

  • Russian Ballet Master: The Memoirs of Marius Petipa (English) translated by Helen Whittaker/Introduction by Lillian Moore. Out-of-print. NOTE - Petipa's memoirs were first published in 1907 in Russia, and were then published in the west many years later. The current publication is out-of-print, and was released in 1971.
File:Petipamemoirs.jpg
Petipa's memoirs in their french translation, published in 1992.
  • The Diaries of Marius Petipa translated, edited, and introduction by Lynn Garafola. Published in Studies in Dance History. 3.1 (Spring 1992). Out-of-print. NOTE - this publication includes Petipa's diaries from the last years of his life, beginning in 1903 until 1907. It also includes a complete list of his works for the Imperial Ballet, as well as the dances he staged for the works of the Imperial Opera. It also includes extensive notes for all of the diary entries and the works mentioned.
  • Mémoires (French) trans. by Galia Ackerman, Pierre Lorrain. Out-of-print. - Petipa's memoirs in French.
  • Memuary Mariusa Petipa solista ego imperatorskogo velichestva i baletmeistera imperatorskikh teatrov (The Memoirs of Marius Petipa, Soloist of His Imperial Majesty and Ballet Master of the Imperial Theatres) (Russian). Out-of-print. NOTE - Petipa's memoirs in Russian as originally published in 1907.
  • A Century of Russian Ballet: Documents and Eyewitness Accounts 1810-1910 translated, and written by Roland John Wiley. Out-of-print. NOTE - This book discusses the most important productions presented by the Imperial Ballet from 1810 in the time of Charles Didelot on through until Mikhail Fokine's Le Pavillon d'Armide in 1907. It includes accounts of the company and the Imperial Ballet School as well as discussions of Petipa himself from dancers, composers, and historians.
  • Currently the scholar and ballet historian Roland John Wiley is working on a full biography of Marius Petipa.

The Ballets of Marius Petipa

Nantes, France
  • Le Droit du seigneur (1838)
  • La Petite Bohémienne (1838)
  • La Noce à Nantes (1838)
Bordeaux, France
  • La Jolie Bordelaise (1840)
  • L'Intrigue amoureuse (1841)
  • La Vendange (1842)
  • Le Langage des fleurs (1844)
Madrid, Spain
  • Carmen et son toréro (1845)
  • La Perle de Séville (1845)
  • L'Aventure d'une fille de Madrid (1845)
  • Départ pour la course des taureaux (1845)
  • La Fleur de Grenade (1846)
  • Forfasella ó la hija del infierno (1846)
  • Alba-Flor la pesarosa (1847)
Russia
  • Giselle (revival). Staged with Jules Perrot. Music by Adolphe Adam and Cesare Pugni. 7 February [O.S. 26 January] 1850.
  • Florida. Music by Cesare Pugni. 22 January [O.S. 10 January] 1866.
  • Titania. Music by Cesare Pugni. 30 November [O.S. 18 November] 1866.
  • Catarina. Music by Cesare Pugni. 13 November [O.S. 1 November] 1870.
  • La Camargo. Music by Ludwig Minkus. 29 December [O.S. 17 December] 1872.
  • La Bayadère - Grand Ballet in 4 Acts-7 Scenes with apotheosis. Music by Ludwig Minkus]]. 4 February [O.S. 23 January] 1877.
  • Ariadne (revival). Music by Yuli Gerber. 26 December [O.S. 14 December] 1878.
  • Mlada. Music by Ludwig Minkus. 14 December [O.S. 2 December] 1879.
  • Pâquerette (revival). Music by Francois Benoist and Ludwig Minkus. 22 January [O.S. 10 January] 1882.
  • Les Pilules magiques - Ballet-Féerie in 3 Acts-13 Scenes. Music by Ludwig Minkus. 21 February [O.S. 9 February] 1886.
  • La Esmeralda (revival). Music by Cesare Pugni. 29 December [O.S. 17 December] 1886.
  • Nénuphar. Music by Nikolai Krotkov. 23 November [O.S. 11 November] 1890.
  • Le Lac des cygnes (revival). Staged with Lev Ivanov. Music by Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky in a revision by Riccardo Drigo. 27 January [O.S. 15 January] 1895.
  • La Perle. Music by Riccardo Drigo. 29 May [O.S. 17 May] 1896.
  • Les Saisons. Music by Alexander Glazunov. 20 February [O.S. 7 February] 1900.
Dances for Operas

Sources

  • Beaumont, Cyrl W. Complete Book of Ballets.
  • Garafola, Lynn / Petipa, Marius. The Diaries of Marius Petipa. Trans, Ed., and introduction by Lynn Garafola. Published in Studies in Dance History. 3.1 (Spring 1992).
  • Guest, Ivor Forbes. Jules Perrot - Master of the Romantic Ballet.
  • Guest, Ivor Forbes. Letters from a Ballet Master - The Correspondence of Arthur Saint-Léon. Introduction by, and Edited by Ivor Guest.
  • Petipa, Marius. Memuary Mariusa Petipa solista ego imperatorskogo velichestva i baletmeistera imperatorskikh teatrov (The Memoirs of Marius Petipa, Soloist of His Imperial Majesty and Ballet Master of the Imperial Theatres).
  • Wiley, Roland John. Dances from Russia: An Introduction to the Sergeyev Collection Published in The Harvard Library Bulletin, 24.1 January 1976.
  • Wiley, Roland John, ed. and translator. A Century of Russian Ballet: Documents and Eyewitness Accounts 1810-1910.
  • Wiley, Roland John. The Life and Ballets of Lev Ivanov.
  • Wiley, Roland John. Tchaikovsky's Ballets.