The First Nutcracker, the Enchantment of International Relations, and the Franco-Russian Alliance Damien Mahiet

Por: Tipo de material: ArtículoArtículoDetalles de publicación: 2016 Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press,Descripción: 31 p En: Dance Research Vol. 34, núm. 2, Winter 2016, p. 119 - 149Resumen: RESUMEN: Despite the lively scholarly debate on the place of The Sleeping Beauty (1890) in the political and cultural history of the Franco-Russian alliance in the 1890s, the representation of international relations in the first production of The Nutcracker (1892) has so far received little attention. This representation includes the well-known series of character dances in the second act of the ballet, but also the use of French fashion from the revolutionary era to costume the party guests, the mechanical dolls, the toy soldiers, and even Prince Nutcracker. The fairy-tale world offered a frame that not only promoted the absolutist aspirations of Alexander III's regime, but also solved the symbolic challenge of a problematic alliance between republican France and tsarist Russia. The same visual repertoire informed diplomatic life: four years after The Nutcracker, in 1896, the décor for the state visit of Nicholas II and Alexandra Feodorovna in France duplicated that of the fairy-tale world on stage. PALABRAS CLAVE: Imperial ballet, ballet des nations, Alexander III, Tchaikovsky, Vsevlozhsky, Petipa, Ivanov, Third Republic, Franco-Russian alliance, diplomacy
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RESUMEN: Despite the lively scholarly debate on the place of The Sleeping Beauty (1890) in the political and cultural history of the Franco-Russian alliance in the 1890s, the representation of international relations in the first production of The Nutcracker (1892) has so far received little attention. This representation includes the well-known series of character dances in the second act of the ballet, but also the use of French fashion from the revolutionary era to costume the party guests, the mechanical dolls, the toy soldiers, and even Prince Nutcracker. The fairy-tale world offered a frame that not only promoted the absolutist aspirations of Alexander III's regime, but also solved the symbolic challenge of a problematic alliance between republican France and tsarist Russia. The same visual repertoire informed diplomatic life: four years after The Nutcracker, in 1896, the décor for the state visit of Nicholas II and Alexandra Feodorovna in France duplicated that of the fairy-tale world on stage. PALABRAS CLAVE: Imperial ballet, ballet des nations, Alexander III, Tchaikovsky, Vsevlozhsky, Petipa, Ivanov, Third Republic, Franco-Russian alliance, diplomacy