With the premiere of Promethean Fire at the Volksoper, the Vienna State Ballet presents two outstanding artists of American modern dance for the first time: Paul Taylor and Mark Morris. Their ballets examine the outer contours of the Promethean motif – in between hubris and humanity, disaster and beauty, creation and transience.
Prometheus has formed a human being out of clay, given the humans fire and thereby created civilisation. For his rebellion against the father of the gods Zeus, he has had to pay with terrible suffering – chained to a rock where an eagle repeatedly feasts on his liver. Prometheus is a figure who symbolises liberation from ignorance and oppression: as “the forward thinker” he represents progress, but also control over nature and, not least, the grand delusions of humans who behave as if they were gods.
Paul Taylor’s Promethean Fire ought to be viewed as a direct reaction to the attacks on “Nine Eleven”. Even if the choreographer subsequently withdrew this specific allusion, a fundamental mood of disaster is present in the space: conflicts break out, emotions clash – but hope prevails in the end in this moving dance drama.
By contrast, with his wonderful sense of humour Mark Morris puts nine beaux on stage: men of beauty, real men, but also good mates, chivalrous gentlemen and innocent angels. At the same time, with its lightness of touch, Beaux is an example of ambitious, lucid “music-making with the body”.
Ballet Director Martin Schläpfer responds to the two Americans’ powerful language of modern dance with two miniatures: subtle movement studies that glow in delicate colours, dances that are like “the powder on butterflies’ wings.”
Cast
Promethean Fire
- Choreography
- Paul Taylor
- Musik
- Johann Sebastian Bach in der Orchestrierung von Leopold Stokowski
- Stage and costume design
- Santo Loquasto
- Lighting design
- Jennifer Tipton
- Einstudierung
- Richard Chen See
- Musical direction
- Jean-Michaël Lavoie
- Solodame
- Fiona McGee
- Soloherr
- Eno Peci
- Tänzerin
- Marie Breuilles
- Tänzerin
- Adi Hanan
- Tänzerin
- Sinthia Liz
- Tänzerin
- Alexandra Inculet
- Tänzerin
- Gloria Todeschini
- Tänzerin
- Chiara Uderzo
- Tänzerin
- Céline Janou Weder
- Tänzer
- Calogero Failla
- Tänzer
- Lourenço Ferreira
- Tänzer
- Marian Furnica
- Tänzer
- Trevor Hayden
- Tänzer
- François-Eloi Lavignac
- Tänzer
- Igor Milos
- Tänzer
- Géraud Wielick
Lontano
- Choreography
- Martin Schläpfer
- Musik
- György Ligeti
- Bühne und Kostüme
- Keso Dekker
- Lighting design
- Stefan Bolliger
- Einstudierung
- Julie Thirault
- Musical direction
- Jean-Michaël Lavoie
- Tänzerin
- Ketevan Papava
- Tänzerin
- Claudine Schoch
- Tänzer
- Masayu Kimoto
- Tänzer
- Marcos Menha
- Tänzer
- Brendan Saye
- Tänzer
- Arne Vandervelde
Ramifications
- Choreography
- Martin Schläpfer
- Musik
- György Ligeti
- Bühnenbild und Kostüm
- Thomas Ziegler
- Lighting design
- Stefan Bolliger
- Einstudierung
- Louisa Rachedi
- Musical direction
- Jean-Michaël Lavoie
- Tänzerin
- Sonia Dvořák
Beaux
- Choreography
- Mark Morris
- Musik
- Bohuslav Martinu
- Stage and costume design
- Isaac Mizrahi
- Lighting design
- Michael Chybowski
- Einstudierung
- Elisa Clark
- Musical direction
- Jean-Michaël Lavoie
- Tänzer
- Benjamin Alexander
- Tänzer
- Jackson Carroll
- Tänzer
- Javier González Cabrera
- Tänzer
- Junnosuke Nakamura
- Tänzer
- Hanno Opperman
- Tänzer
- Kristián Pokorný
- Tänzer
- Duccio Tariello
- Tänzer
- Zsolt Török
- Tänzer
- Daniel Vizcayo
- Cembalo
- Felix Lemke
Photos and Videos
Articles from our Weborello
Promethean Fire: The Vienna State Ballet is showing a new production!
With the premiere of Promethean Fire at the Volksoper, the Vienna State Ballet presents two outstanding artists of American modern dance for the first time: Paul Taylor and Mark Morris. Ballet Director Martin Schläpfer responds with two miniatures: subtle movement studies that glow in delicate colours.
A dance feast in three acts: The press on the premiere of Promethean Fire
The press on the premiere of „Promethean Fire“: „A dance feast in three acts: between hope and despair, classical and modern with music from Bach to Ligeti. “ (ORF 2)