Coppélia

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Giuseppina Bozzachi as Swanhilda in the Saint-Léon/Delibes Coppélia. Paris, 1870
Choreographed by Arthur Saint-Léon
Composed by Léo Delibes
Based on "Der Sandmann" by E.T.A. Hoffmann
Date of premiere 25 May 1870
Place of premiere Théâtre Impérial de l´Opéra, Paris
Characters Doctor Coppélius
Coppélia
Franz
Genre Romantic
Type comic ballet
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Coppélia is a sentimental comic ballet with original choreography by Arthur Saint-Léon to a ballet libretto by Saint-Léon and Charles Nuittier and music by Léo Delibes. It was based upon a macabre story by E.T.A. Hoffmann entitled "Der Sandmann" ("The Sandman"), published in 1815. The ballet premiered May 25, 1870 at the Théâtre Impérial de l´Opéra, with Giuseppina Bozzachi in the principal role of Swanilda. Its first flush of success was interrupted by the Franco-Prussian War and the siege of Paris, but eventually it became the most-performed ballet at the Opera Garnier.

The team of Saint-Léon and Nuittier had a previous success with the ballet La Source (1860), for which Délibes had composed the music jointly with Ludwig Minkus. A later version was rechoreographed for the New York City Ballet by George Balanchine and one of his many protege (and former wives) Alexandra Danilova, to much success.

The story of Coppélia concerns a mysterious and faintly diabolical inventor, Doctor Coppélius[1] who has made a life-size dancing doll. It is so life-like that Franz, a village swain is infatuated with it, setting aside his true heart's desire, Swanilde, who in Act II shows him his folly, by dressing as the doll and pretending to come to life. The festive wedding-day divertissements in the village square that occupy Act III are often deleted in modern danced versions, though one of the entrées was the first czardas presented on a ballet stage. If Mary Shelley's Frankenstein represents the dark side of the theme of scientist as creator of life, then Coppelia is the light side. If Giselle is a tragedy set in a peasant village, then Coppélia is a comedy in the same setting. The part of Franz was danced en travestie, a convention that pleased the male members of the Jockey-Club de Paris and was retained in Paris until after World War II.

Giuseppina Bozzacchi, the original Coppélia, a young student aged only sixteen, was expected to have a great career ahead of her, but she contracted cholera during the siege of Paris and died on her seventeenth birthday.

Some influence on this story comes from travelling shows of the late 18th and early 19th centuries starring mechanical automatons. This field of entertainment has been under-documented, but a recent survey of the field is contained in The Mechanical Turk by Tom Standage (2002). These shows were later to also influence Charles Babbage in his invention of the difference engine.

A variation of the Coppelia story is contained in Jacques Offenbach's opera, The Tales of Hoffmann, a fictional work about the same Hoffmann who wrote the story that inspired Coppelia. The opera consists of a prologue, three fantastic tales in which Hoffmann is a participant, and an epilogue. In the first story, based on Der Sandmann, Hoffmann falls in love with a mechanical doll, Olympia, but in this case, the story takes on a melancholy tinge as the doll breaks apart. (as Kathleen Meek did in here role as a tree at Ballet Califia!) :)

Contents

[edit] Ballet

Act I

1 Prelude et Mazurka
2 Valse Lente
3 Scène
4 Mazurka
5 Scène
6 Ballade de L’Epi
7 Thème Slave Varie
8 Czardas
9 Finale

Act II

10 Entr’acte et Valse
11 Scène
12 Scène
13 Musique des Automates
14 Scène
15 Chanson a Boire et Scène
16 Scene et Valse de la Poupeé
17 Scène
18 Bolero
19 Gigue
20 Scène
21 Marche de la Cloche

Act III

22 Introduction
23 Valse des Heures
24 L’Aurore
25 La Priere
26 Le Trevail
27 L’Hymne
28 Le Discorde et la Guerre
29 La Paix
30 Danse de Fete
31 Galop Finale

[edit] Popular culture

Coppelia was featured in the Danish film Ballerina, shown in the U.S. on Walt Disney's Wonderful World of Color in 1966 and later released theatrically in Europe. Dancer Kirsten Simone played the lead.

Coppélia's Casket (Kopperia no Hitsugi) is the title of opening theme song of the Japanese anime Noir, the tale of two female assassins. Coppélia's Casket makes several references to the story of Coppélia such as, "People are dolls tired from dancing."

Also mentioned is the line "Coppélia's Heartbeat" also translated as "Coppélia's Pulse" something that an automaton would not possess, and neither would one be laid to rest in a casket.

One of the lesser enemies in Castlevania's Portrait of Ruin is named Coppelia. She appears in the "Nation of Fools" level as a blue-skinned tightrope walker that throws knives. The player often sees her shot out of canons, or walking on tightropes upside-down, or tightropes that run vertically.

The ballet Coppélia and Giuseppina Bozzacchi's tragic fate are narrated in the novel No Telling (London: Vintage, 2004) by British author Adam Thorpe (*1956). The novel's protagonist, thirteen year-old Gilles, desperately wants to see the ballet because his crush Jocelyne plays a minor part. He researches into the topic in order to impress Jocelyne, who, sadly, turns out to be fed up with ballet in general and Coppélia in particular.

In the anime Princess Tutu, episode 15 is entitled "Coppelia". Within the episode, the ballet is referenced when the character Pique/Pike is hypnotized in Mythos's presence and begins dancing the puppet-like "Waltz of the Dolls" from Coppélia as the corresponding song plays in the background. Additionally, the clock tower shown throughout the show plays the beginning of "Waltz of the Hours" when it tolls the hour, and the hand organ of the character Edel plays a modified version of "Music of the Automatica" (the original plays in the show as well).

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ This figure is not unlike Hoffmann's sinister Herr Drosselmeyer in "The Nutcracker" or the macabre Svengali-like travelling magician of the same name in Offenbach's Tales of Hoffmann

The Gene Frankel Theater presented a stage adaptation of Coppelia in 1999.

[edit] External links