The New Yorker (Digital)

The New Yorker (Digital)

1 Issue, January 30, 2017

Dance: Kiss and Tell

Alexei Ratmansky revisits an old favorite.
Dance: Kiss and Tell
“The Fairy’s Kiss,” based on a bonechilling Hans Christian Andersen story and with a score combining the gifts of Tchaikovsky and Stravinsky, is something you would think that many choreographers would like to get their hands on, and many have. The first version, by Bronislava Nijinska, was made in 1928, for Ida Rubinstein’s company, in Paris. Rubinstein, not a great dancer but a great beauty, had lent her exotic presence to early productions of Serge Diaghilev’s Ballets Russes. By 1928, she was older, and stooped, and had had a bad face-lift. Still, she had the money to commission work from Europe’s best theatre artists, and so she got this piece from Stravinsky, who intended it as an allegory: the artist, in return for his gift—the “fairy’s kiss”— gave up his…
You're reading a preview of
The New Yorker (Digital) - 1 Issue, January 30, 2017

DiscountMags is a licensed distributor (not a publisher) of the above content and Publication through Zinio LLC. Accordingly, we have no editorial control over the Publications. Any opinions, advice, statements, services, offers or other information or content expressed or made available by third parties, including those made in Publications offered on our website, are those of the respective author(s) or publisher(s) and not of DiscountMags. DiscountMags does not guarantee the accuracy, completeness, truthfulness, or usefulness of all or any portion of any publication or any services or offers made by third parties, nor will we be liable for any loss or damage caused by your reliance on information contained in any Publication, or your use of services offered, or your acceptance of any offers made through the Service or the Publications. For content removal requests, please contact Zinio.

© 1999 – 2024 DiscountMags.com All rights reserved.