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THE MARIUS PETIPA SOCIETY

La Bayadère

Grand ballet in four acts and seven scenes with an apotheosis


Music by Ludwig Minkus
Libretto by Marius Petipa and Sergei Khudekov
1877 décor by Mikhail Bocharov (Act 1, scene 1), Matvei Shishkov (Act 1,
scene 2 and Act 2), Ivan Andreyev (Act 3, scenes 1 and 3), Heinrich Wagner
(Act 3, scene 2) and Andrei Roller (Act 4 and apotheosis)
Costumes by Ivan Panov
1900 décor by Adolf Kvapp (Act 1, scene 1), Konstantin Ivanov (Act 1, scene 2,
Act 4 and apotheosis), Petr Lambin (Act 2, Act 3, scenes 1 and 2) and Orest
Allegri (Act 3, scene 2)

World Première
4th February [O.S. 23rd January] 1877
Imperial Bolshoi Kamenny Theatre, Saint Petersburg

Original 1877 Cast


Nikiya
Ekaterina Vazem
Solor
Lev Ivanov

Hamsatti
Maria Gorshenkova
The Great Brahmin
Nikolai Goltz

The Rajah
Christian Johansson

Première of Petipa’s final revival


16th December [O.S. 3rd December] 1900
Imperial Mariinsky Theatre
Original 1900 Cast
Nikiya
Matilda Kschessinskaya
Solor
Pavel Gerdt

Gamzatti
Olga Preobrazhenskaya

The Great Brahmin


Felix Kschessinsky

The Rajah
Nikolai Aistov

The Three Shades


Vera Trefilova
Varvara Rykhliakova
Anna Pavlova
Fig.1 – Ekaterina Vazem as Nikiya (1877)
History

The original production

La Bayadère is the most famous and celebrated of Petipa’s exotic ballets. Set in
Ancient India, it touches on the theme of the oriental exotic, which was a very
common theme used throughout 19th century ballet, with the creations of such
ballets as Filippo Taglioni’s Le Dieu et la Bayadère, which premièred in Paris in
1830. In 1838, the fascination with the exotic increased when a troupe of dancers
from India visited Paris. Ballets set in India were nothing new to Petipa; he had
danced in Le Dieu et La Bayadère in Bordeaux and his first wife Maria danced in a
revival that was staged in Saint Petersburg on the 22nd May [O.S.10th May]
1854. Petipa also claimed to have staged dances for Zina Richard’s performance
as the bayadère at the Paris Opéra in 1856 and he would have known his brother
Lucien’s ballet Sacountala, which premièred at the Paris Opèra on the 14th July
1858, which was based on the play of the same name by the Indian poet Kalidasa.
All these works could have been the inspiration for La Bayadère, though another
possible source was likely to have been the Prince of Wales’s visit to India in
1875, which was covered by every European newspaper and magazine. The
libretto was written by Sergei Khudekov, though years later, Petipa claimed sole
authorship in a letter to the Saint Petersburg Gazette. The likelihood is that the
writing of the libretto was probably a joint collaboration between the two men
since Petipa would have been more familiar with the aforementioned works than
Khudekov.

Despite the ballet’s setting in Ancient India, Ludwig Minkus’s music, even in the
character numbers, makes barely any gesture to traditional forms of Indian
dance and music. The ballet was essentially a vision of the Southern Orient
through 19th century European eyes. Although some sections of Minkus’s score
contain melodies that are reminiscent of the Southern Orient, his score is a
definitive example of the musique dansante in vogue at that time and does not
stray at all from the usual string of lightly orchestrated melodious polkas,
adagios, Viennese-style waltzes and the like. In that same regard, Petipa’s
choreography contained various elements that reminded the spectator of the
ballet’s setting, but never once did the Ballet Master stray from the canon of
classical ballet.

La Bayadère was created and staged for the benefit performance of Ekaterina
Vazem, who was cast as Nikiya. In her memoirs, Vazem reflects on how the ballet
was her favourite:

“In the ballet my next new part was that of the bayadère Nikiya in La Bayadère,
produced by Petipa for my benefit performance at the beginning of 1877. Of all the
ballets which I had occasion to create, this was my favourite. I liked its beautiful,
very theatrical scenario, its interesting, lively dances in the most varied genres, and
finally Minkus’s music, which the composer managed especially well as regards
melody and its co-ordination with the character of the scenes and
dances” – From Memoirs of a Ballerina of the St Petersburg Bolshoy Theatre,
1867-1884, Chapter 11, by Ekaterina Ottovna Vazem (quoted in A Century of
Russian Ballet, 1810-1910 by Roland John Wiley, 2007)

Petipa spent almost six months staging La Bayadère. During the rehearsals, he
clashed with Vazem, first over Nikiya’s dance with the basket of flowers and then,
the matter of her entrance in the ballet’s final Grand Pas d’action of the fourth act,
while also experiencing many problems with the set designers who constructed
the ballet’s elaborate stage effects. Vazem recollects the argument with Petipa
regarding her entrance in the Grand Pas d’action in her memoirs:
“… for my entrance Petipa again staged something absurd consisting of some small
pas. I did not hesitate to reject this version, which was “not in the music” and
neither did meet the general idea of this dance. Something more impressive was
required for the entrée of the shadow that appeared in the middle of the wedding
celebration than those indistinguishable trifles invented by Petipa. Petipa was
already irritated. The last act did not go well for him at all; he wanted to finish the
production of La Bayadère at all costs on that day. He hastily put on for me
something else, even less successful, and again I calmly objected that I would not
dance this. Then he completely lost his temper and shouted in rage:
“I don’t understand what you need to dance? You can’t do this, and you can’t do
anything else! .. What kind of talent you are?”
Without saying a word, I took my things and left the rehearsal, which thus came to
end.

The next day, as if nothing had happened, I again started a conversation with
Petipa about my entry in the last act. … Hurrying to finish the production, he told
me:

“If you can’t dance anything else do what Madame Gorshenkova does.”
Gorshenkova, who danced the princess [Gamzatti], was extremely light, and her
entrée consisted of a series of high jumps – jetés from the depths of the stage to the
ramp. By offering me to perform her pas, the choreographer wanted to “pinch” me:
I was a “terre-a-terre” ballerina, with expertise in technically complex, virtuoso
dances, but I had no ability to “fly” at all. But I didn’t give up.
“Very well,” I said, “but just to make it different, I will do the same pas not from the
last, but from the first coulisse.”

The latter is much more difficult because the slope of the stage cannot be used for
the prolonging effect of the jump.
“As you wish, as you wish,” replied Petipa and began the rehearsal.
At primary rehearsals I never danced [the entry], limiting myself to an approximate
outline of my pas and not even putting on dancing shoes. During the pas d’action, I
just walked around the stage among the dancers.

Then came the day of the first orchestra rehearsal at the theatre. Here, of course, I
had to take part in the dances. The choreographer, as if wishing to distance himself
from responsibility for pas d’action, repeated to the artists:
“I don’t know that Madame Vazem will dance, she never danced at rehearsals.”
The rehearsal went on as usual. Finally we got to the last action and to the pas
d’action. I stood in the first coulisse, waiting for my entry. Inside I was seething –
the true grit of passion spoke in me. I wanted to teach the arrogant Frenchman a
lesson and show him what a talent I am. Here comes my way out. At the first sounds
of accompanying music, I gathered all my strength – my nerves seemed to be tripled
– and literally flew onto the stage, jumping even over the heads of the kneeling
dancers in the group. After crossing the stage in three jumps, I stopped dead on the
spot. The entire troupe on stage and in the auditorium burst into thunderous
applause. Petipa, who was on the stage, apparently at once realized his unfair
attitude towards me. He came up to me and said:
“Madame, I am sorry. I am a fool…””

From Memoirs of a Ballerina of the St Petersburg Bolshoy Theatre, 1867-


1884, Chapter 11, by Ekaterina Ottovna Vazem (quoted in A Century of
Russian Ballet, 1810-1910 by Roland John Wiley, 2007)
Petipa was also worried that his new work would play to an empty house, as the
Director Karl Kister increased the ticket prices to be higher than the Italian
Opera, which at the time were expensive. Despite some of the difficulties
experienced during the period of the creation, when the ballet was completed,
what Petipa and Minkus presented was a great dramatic work set in an exotic
locale that told a story of love, betrayal, murder and vengeance.
Fig. 2 – Lev Ivanov as Solor (1877)
Libretto
The first scene of the first act takes place outside a Hindu temple (see fig. 3). A
group of warriors arrive and among them is Solor, the noblest of them all. They
are setting out on a tiger hunt. Solor stays behind, claiming he wishes to pray
alone by the sacred fire that burns outside the temple, but he really intends to
meet his secret lover, the beautiful bayadère Nikiya, who has been chosen as
head bayadère for a celebratory ritual that is about to take place. Solor implores
Madhavya, the head of the fakirs, to tell Nikiya he will wait for her. Madhavya
agrees and Solor hides as the priests and the Great Brahmin emerge from the
temple. Madhavya summons the other fakiers to prepare the sacred fire and the
bayadères arrive as the ritual begins. The ritual scene contains three dance
numbers – the Dance of the Bayadères, a simple dance with the women in heeled
shoes performing consistent tombés, the Dance of the Fakirs, which includes the
fakirs jétéing over the fire, and finally, the Variation of Nikiya. However, the Great
Brahmin, overwhelmed by Nikiya’s beauty, suddenly declares his love for her and
promises to lay all of India’s riches at her feet, but Nikiya rejects him, reminding
him of his place in the temple. The bayadères bring water from the sacred spring
to the fakirs and Madhavya delivers Solor’s message to Nikiya, who is delighted
that her beloved is close by. When everyone returns to the temple, Solor returns
and watches Nikiya as she sits at a window and plays a romantic melody on her
veena (an Indian guitar). The lovers then unite as the fakir guards their meeting.
Solor and Nikiya agree to elope and swear eternal love and fidelity to one
another over the sacred fire, unaware that the Great Brahmin has caught them.
Madhavya alerts them to the arrival of the other bayadères, who have come to
fetch water from the sacred spring. Nikiya sneaks back into the temple and the
warriors return, having successfully caught a tiger (in the original production,
the tiger was captured alive, not killed, and a real tiger was apparently used). As
the warriors depart, Nikiya reappears at the window and bids goodnight to Solor,
who promises to remember his vow. However, the Great Brahmin, fuelled with
anger and jealousy, emerges from the temple and begs the gods to help him
destroy his rival.
Fig. 3 – Act 1 of the 1900 revival: in the centre is Matilda Kschessinskaya as Nikiya
(1900)
The second scene takes place in the Rajah’s palace, opening with the warriors
playing chess when the Rajah enters, who has decided that the time has come for
Solor is to marry his daughter Gamzatti (in the original 1877 production, she was
called Hamsatti), who he has been betrothed to since childhood. The Danse
d’Jampe is performed by eight bayadères and afterwards, the Rajah summons
Gamzatti. He tells her that she is to marry Solor, presenting a portrait of her
intended groom and she is delighted. When the engagement is announced, Solor
is not happy for he has not forgotten his vows to Nikiya and attempts to refuse
the princess’s hand, but the Rajah is adamant and becomes angry; to deny his
wishes would be high treason. Solor has no choice but to comply. Just then, the
Great Brahmin enters, demanding a private audience with the Rajah. The Rajah
agrees, dismisses everyone and the Great Brahmin tells him of Solor and Nikiya’s
relationship and their vow of eternal love in an attempt to do away with his rival.
However, his plan horribly backfires when the Rajah to decides that Nikiya must
be the one to die. Horrified, the Great Brahmin warns him that to murder a
member of the temple will only provoke the wrath of the gods and he and his
household would pay a terrible price for such a crime, but the Rajah refuses to
back down. The two men depart, unaware that Gamzatti has overheard their
conversation and is stunned to learn of her fiancé’s love for another. She
summons Nikiya and spitefully invites her to dance at her upcoming wedding,
which Nikiya agrees to, before revealing the identity of her future husband. A
fight ensues between the women as Gamzatti begs Nikiya to give Solor up. When
she fails to persuade her, she offers her jewels, but Nikiya still refuses and, in the
heat of the moment, threatens Gamzatti with a dagger, but is stopped at the last
minute by a handmaid. As the horrified Nikiya flees, the act closes on Gamzatti
swearing to destroy her rival.

Fig. 4 – Act 2 of the 1900 revival: in the centre are Matilda Kschessinskaya as Nikiya and
Vera Trefilova as the Manu Dancer. On the right are Pavel Gerdt as Solor and Olga
Preobrazhenskaya as Gamzatti

The second act takes place in the garden of the Rajah’s palace, where a festival of
Badrinata is underway. The act begins with a grand procession that introduces
the dancers of the divertissements and presents an idol of the Hindu god Vishnu,
but the most distinctive feature is Solor entering on an elephant (just like Queen
Nisia in Act 2 of Le Roi Candaule), after which he presents the captured tiger to
the Rajah (see fig. 5). While the first act is mostly made up of pantomime, the
second act is almost entirely devoted to dance with its multiple divertissements –
the danse d’esclaves (dance of the slaves), the Pas des éventails (dance of the
fans), which includes among its dancers a group of male students, thevalse des
perroquets (waltz of the parrots), in which the dancers dance with prop parrots,
two pas de quatres performed by four bayadères and perhaps the two most
famous dances, the Danse manu and the Pas des guerriers – Danse infernale (aka
the Indian Dance). The Danse Manu is especially famous for its concept of a
woman balancing a jug of milk on the top of her head, with two female students
attempting in vain to retrieve some for themselves. In the end, she removes the
jug and tips it upside-down, only to reveal that it’s empty. The famous Danse
infernale features Madhavya playing a tabla (an Indian drum) with a group of
male dancers and a leading couple dancing to the drumbeats.

The divertissements come to a close with a coda générale. Afterwards, the story
resumes when Nikiya is brought in to dance and she expresses her heartbreak as
she dances with her veena, playing a variant of the melody she played the
previous night, which further plucks the strings of Solor’s remorse as he watches
her. Her mood brightens, however, when she is presented with a basket of
flowers, which she is told is a gift from Solor, unaware that it is really from the
Rajah and Gamzatti, who have concealed a poisonous snake among the flowers.
The snake bites Nikiya when she holds the basket to her chest. The Great
Brahmin makes her one last offer – an antidote to the poison if she will renounce
her love for Solor in favour of him, but Nikiya refuses and dies in Solor’s arms,
remaining true to her vow and pleading with Solor to remember his, while her
murder calls down the wrath of the gods on those responsible.
Fig. 5 – Act 2 of the original production (1877)

The third act contains the ballet’s most famous and celebrated scene – The
Kingdom of the Shades. The curtain rises revealing Solor in his room tormented
by grief and guilt by Nikiya’s death and his failure to remain true to his vow.
Madhavya enters with a snake charmer and, in an attempt to lift Solor’s spirits,
they perform a comic number in which Madhavya dances to the snake charmer’s
pungi, but Solor angrily dismisses them. He then receives an unwanted visit from
Gamzatti, who tries in vain to win him over. Suddenly, the shade of the weeping
Nikiya appears to a new variant of the melody she played on her veena in the first
act, but only Solor can see her. Gamzatti worries he is going mad, but Solor sends
her away and Nikiya’s shade continues to haunt him. Exhausted, Solor smokes
opium and falls asleep, dreaming of Nikiya in a glorious heavenly realm called the
Kingdom of the Shades. Petipa staged The Kingdom of the Shades scene as a Grand
Pas Classique, but the narrative did not cease. In the original 1877 production, the
scene was set in an illuminated castle in the sky and contained a huge corps de
ballet of sixty-four dancers. Petipa’s simple and academic choreography was to
become one of his most celebrated compositions, with the famous Entrance of the
Shades arguably his most celebrated composition of all.
The Entrance of the Shades was inspired by Gustav Doré’s illustrations for
Dante’s Paradiso from The Divine Comedy (see fig. 6), with each dancer of the
sixty-four strong corps de ballet clad in white tutus with veils stretched about
their arms. Each of the dancers makes her entrance one by one down a long
winding ramp from upstage right with a simple arabesque (fondu) and
into cambré,followed by an arching of the torso with arms in fifth position,
followed by two steps forward. With the last two steps, she makes room for her
sister shade and the combination continues thus in a serpentine pattern until the
entire corps de ballet has filled the stage in eight rows of eight. Then follows
simple movements en adage to the end. Petipa left the Entrance of the Shades free
of technical complexity – the unison of the whole and the effect of the descending
ballerinas is the challenge as a mistake from one dancer would spoil the entire
scenario.
Fig. 6 – Illustration for Paradiso by Gustave Doré, the inspiration for The Kingdom of the
Shades
When Solor enters, Nikiya appears, accompanied again by her melody, and Solor
begs for forgiveness. In a scène dansante to a solo violin accompaniment (one of
several composed especially for the violinist Leopold Auer), Nikiya forgives him
and the lovers reconcile in a grand adagio where they are accompanied by
the corps de ballet. After the variations of the three solo shades comes a very
interesting passage – the Variation of Nikiya with the Veil, which sees Nikiya
entering holding one end of a long tulle veil, while the other end is attached to a
wire in the rafters above the stage. When Nikiya releases the veil, it flies away up
into the rafters, as if it were “supernaturally guided” (see video 1). Ekaterina
Vazem briefly mentions this effect in her memoirs:
“I had a great success, in the variation, accompanied by [Leopold] Auer’s violin solo,
with the veil which flies upwards at the end” – From Memoirs of a Ballerina of
the St Petersburg Bolshoy Theatre, 1867-1884, Chapter 11, by Ekaterina
Ottovna Vazem (quoted in A Century of Russian Ballet, 1810-1910 by Roland
John Wiley, 2007).

The scene concludes with a coda, during which there is a moment where Solor
attempts in vain to grasp Nikiya, presenting the image of the hero pursuing the
elusive woman he loves. Nikiya performs a sequence of saut de
basques and jétés in a circle and when the music is repeated for Solor, he
performs the same sequence. According to Fyodor Lopukhov, the purpose for this
is that it is creating a dialogue between the two dancers; in other words, it
further deepens the connection between Solor and Nikiya as he pursues her in
his longing to be reunited with her. At the end of the coda, Solor catches Nikiya
when the stage goes dark and the dream comes to an end. The act closes with a
scene in which Solor is awakened from his dream by Madhavya and the warriors,
who remind him that the day of the wedding has arrived and he reluctantly
follows them.
Fig. 7 – The Kingdom of the Shades in the 1900 revival: in the centre are Matilda
Kschessinskaya as Nikiya and Pavel Gerdt as Solor. On the left are Varvara Rykhliakova,
Agrippina Vaganova and Anna Pavlova as the Three Shades.

The fourth and final act gives the ballet a perfect climatic ending to all the drama.
Taking place in the Rajah’s palace, the wedding is underway. The Rajah, Gamzati
and Solor arrive, but Solor is deeply distant as he can only think of Nikiya. The
wedding begins with a dance number called the Dance of the Lotus
Blossoms, which is danced by twenty-four female students with prop garlands. At
one point, the students make a circle in the middle of the stage and tap the floor
with their garlands, after which, Nikiya rises up onto the stage via a trap door and
dances the remainder of the dance alone. Solor, to whom she is only visible,
pursues her, which leaves everyone else thinking that he is losing his reason. This
is followed by the Grand Pas d’action performed by Gamzatti, Solor, four
bayadères, a cavalier and the shade of Nikiya, as she continues to haunt Solor,
reminding him of his vow. Petipa choreographed this number to be performed by
two premier danseurs – Lev Ivanov, who was the original Solor, and Pavel Gerdt,
who served as an additional cavalier to the aging Ivanov. Both men shared the
partnering of Gamzatti and Nikiya and Gerdt performed the dancing and Solor’s
variation and there were also moments when they would appear on stage at the
same time (see video 2). As the wedding continues, the horrors only escalate as
Gamzatti gets an unpleasant reminder of her crime when she is presented with a
basket of flowers identical to the one given to Nikiya and the shade of her rival
appears to all present. The terrified Gamzatti urges her father to complete the
wedding, but before the Great Brahmin can complete the ceremony, in a dramatic
climax, the palace is destroyed by a great earthquake sent by the angry gods to
avenge Nikiay’s murder, killing everyone within and burying them under the
rubble (see fig. 8). The ballet ends with an apotheosis that shows an image of the
god Vishnu and the shades of Solor and Nikiya are seen flying away together
above the rain to the Heavens, reunited in eternal love.
Fig. 8 – The Destruction of the Rajah’s Palace (1877)
World première

La Bayadère premièred on the 4th February [O.S. 23rd January] 1877 at the
Imperial Bolshoi Kamenny Theatre and it was a renowned success, with The
Kingdom of the Shades receiving the most praise. The fourth act was also highly
applauded, especially the works of the machinists for the destruction of the
palace. In 1900, Petipa staged his final revival of La Bayadère for the dual benefit
performances of Pavel Gerdt and Matilda Kschessinskaya, which premièred on
the 16th December [O.S. 3rd December], with Kschessinskaya as Nikiya, Gerdt as
Solor and Olga Preobrazhenskaya as Gamzatti.

For the 1900 revival, Petipa made some changes, including changing the name of
the Rajah’s daughter from Hamsatti to Gamzatti, but the most significant changes
were made to The Kingdom of the Shades: the setting was changed from an
enchanted castle in the sky on a full-lighted stage to the dark, rocky mountain
tops of the Himalayans (see fig. 7) and the number of dancers in the corps de
ballet was decreased from sixty-four to forty-eight. For the Grand Pas d’action in
the fourth act, new variations were added. Nikolai Legat, who acted as the
additional cavalier, interpolated a variation that was composed by Minkus for
Petipa’s 1874 revival of The Butterfly as Solor’s variation and this is the variation
of which the violin repetiteur score is included in the Sergeyev Collection. A new
variation may have been added for Gamzatti, but in this case, there is some
confusion. The variation that is included in the repetiteur score is what is today
known as the famous Variation of Dulcinea in the Dreamscene of Don
Quixote, which was composed by Riccardo Drigo in 1888 for Elena Cornalba’s
performance in The Vestal. It was later interpolated into La Bayadère as
the Variation of Gamzatti, possibly by Julia Sedova, who was dancing the role by
1902 and whose name is on the repetiteur score. However, it is unknown if this is
the same variation that was danced by Olga Preobrazhenskaya in 1900.
According to Col. Vladimir Teliakovsky, a new variation was also added for
Nikiya, which was interpolated by Kschessinskaya from Petipa and Minkus’s
ballet Mlada.

In 1903, the earliest known performance of The Kingdom of the Shades as an


independent piece took place at a gala performance held at Peterhof Palace in
honour of Kaiser Wilhelm II, who was on a state visit to Russia.
La Bayadère in the 20th Century

La Bayadère was staged by Alexander Gorsky for the Imperial Bolshoi Ballet in
Moscow on the 24th January 1904. Gorksy’s production subsequently underwent
three revivals (1907, 1910 and 1917) and in the 1917 revival, he presented a
more radical version of the ballet, which included finishing with a “wedding
feast” as the highlight with all kinds of quasi-authentic Indian arm and finger
positions. He also made some quite drastic changes to the Kingdom of the
Shades scene, including the use of much more quasi-authentic Indian-style
costumes for the shades. The scene was later restored to its original scenario, or
at least a version closer to it, by the Bolshoi Premier Danseur Vasily Tikhomirov
in 1923.
Fig. 9 – Marie Petipa in the Hindu Dance (1900)

Of all Petipa’s surviving ballets, La Bayadère is one of the most altered and the
alterations that became the standard and traditional choreography known today
began after the 1917 Revolution. The most infamous alteration that has since
become tradition is the omission of the fourth act. The first production to omit
the fourth act was Gorsky’s 1907 revival and his reason for omitting the act was
because by then, the Saint Petersburg Imperial Theatre’s administration had
stopped renting the sets. However, none of Gorsky’s revivals were staged outside
of Moscow, so it was not his production that gave way to the tradition. Under the
new Soviet regime, La Bayadère reappeared at the former Imperial Mariinsky
Theatre in a new production in 1920, with Olga Spessivtseva as Nikiya, Anatoly
Vilzak as Solor and Maria Romanova (the mother of Galina Ulanova) as Gamzatti
and Minkus’s score adapted and re-orchestrated by Boris Asafiev. This
production holds a significant place in ballet history; according to Lopuhkov, this
was the second production of La Bayadère to omit the fourth act and it was this
production that gave way to this most infamous tradition.
Lopukhov claimed that the fourth act was removed because the theatre now
lacked the technical staff needed to stage the destruction of the palace, but even
this claim does not explain why it was permanently removed from the ballet as it
later reappeared on the Russian stage. The fourth act of La Bayadère was
performed for the final time in Russia circa. 1924, after which, it disappeared
with no concrete explanation, but there are several theories:

• Petrograd was flooded in 1924 and many pieces of décor created for
the former Mariinsky Theatre’s stage were destroyed. Among these
may have been the décor for Act 4 of La Bayadère and perhaps the
post-revolution Saint Petersburg ballet were unable to obtain the
funds for new décor.
• A lack of funding supports the second theory, which is that the
Mariinsky Theatre lacked the technical staff needed to produce the
effects of the palace’s destruction, as Lopukhov claimed.
• A third and more curious theory tells of how the new Soviet regime
would not have allowed the performance of a theatrical presentation
that included Hindu gods destroying a palace.

It may very well be that all of this factored into the loss of Act 4, but the true
explanation for the act’s disappearance still remains unclear. Lopukhov further
claims that due to the omission of the fourth act, the 1920 revival was the first
production to present the Grand Pas d’action in the second act, giving way to
another modern tradition. In one of his many writings, Lopukhov wrote that
when the 1920 production was staged, the music for the Grand Pas d’action was
cut and rearranged, Nikiya was removed from the number and it was given to
Solor, Gamzatti, four bayadères and two cavaliers, completely changing the
scenario from Petipa’s pas d’action of Solor being haunted by Nikiya’s shade to a
standard pas de huit. In 1932, Agrippina Vaganova staged a new production for
the Kirov/Mariinsky Ballet, in which she heavily revised the dances for Nikiya,
especially for her star pupil Marina Semyonova. These features included
triple pirouettes sur la pointe and fast piqué turns en dehors, all of which would
find a permanent place in the ballet as the traditional choreography for Nikiya.
Eight years later, plans were made to revive La Bayadère again for the
Kirov/Mariinsky Ballet by Ballet Master Vladimir Ponomarev and the company’s
star Premier Danseur Vakhtang Chabukiani. One of the most famous productions
known today, it is from this staging that all modern productions of La
Bayadère derive. The production retains the original 1900 décor for the first and
second acts and it retained Vaganova’s revised choreographic passages for
Nikiya, with some new revisions by Natalia Dudinskaya. One of the most notable
changes was the transformation of the Variation of Nikiya with the Veil into what
is now known as the so-called “Scarf Duet” in The Kingdom of the Shades. Rather
than Nikiya performing the variation alone with the veil flying away into the
rafters, Solor was added, holding the other end of the veil and exiting halfway
through, leaving Nikiya to dance the remainder of the variation alone. It was
Dudinskaya who introduced the multiple tours en arabesque associated with this
variation today and she also added to the famous fast piqué turns in the Grand
coda. The choreography for Solor was completely revised by Chabukiani and it is
from his choreographic revisions that the traditional choreography for Solor
derives.
Fig. 10 – Nikolai Aistov as the Rajah, Julia Sedova as Gamzatti and Pavel Gerdt as Solor
(ca. 1902)

Ponomarev and Chabukiani introduced many other new changes that all became
standard. The first act, which was originally mostly made up of panntomime, was
almost completely changed with the majority of the pantomime being replaced
with new dances, something that became a Soviet tradition. For example,
Ponomarev rechoreographed the dance of the bayadères in the first scene,
transforming Petipa’s simple character dance into a more challenging classical
dance number with the dancers wearing pointe shoes. The number for solo flute
where Nikiya plays her veena at a window while Solor looks on before their
meeting was changed into another variation in which Nikiya looks for Solor
outside the temple while carrying her water jug on her shoulder. Solor and
Nikiya’s love scene, which was originally a purely mimed scene, was completely
transformed into the famous pas de deux known today, which was introduced
and choreographed by Chabukiani. The closing scene was shortened with the
omission of the return of the bayadères and the warriors and Solor and Nikiya’s
tender farewell.

Other changes included the retaining of the Grand Pas d’action in the second act.
Lopukhov wrote that it was in this revival that the Grand Pas d’action was heavily
revised into the traditional version danced today, with only a small fragment of
Petipa’s choreography still in use. Ponomarev and Chabukiani’s staging featured
new choreographic revisions for Solor by the latter and the replacing of the pas
d’action’s original coda with the Coda Générale of the divertissements, in which
they introduced the fouetté sequence for Gamzatti that has since become
standard. Among Chabukiani’s revisions for Solor was the introduction of the
famous variation that is danced in all modern productions, replacing the
variation that was introduce dby Nikolai Legat in 1900. The famous traditional
variation for Gamzatti is a variation composed by Riccardo Drigo for Queen Nisia
in the Pas d’Aphrodite from Le Roi Candaule and the choreography is by Pyotr
Gusev. However, it is unclear how this variation ended up in La Bayadère, but
there are two possibilities – it could have been interpolated into the ballet by
Olga Preobrazhenskaya for the 1900 revival and was then replaced by the
variation performed by Julia Sedova, or it is a Soviet addition. By 1940, the fourth
act was long gone and it had become tradition to end La Bayadère with The
Kingdom of the Shades in which the curtain falls on Solor and Nikiya surrounded
by the corps de ballet of shades. The production by Ponomarev and Chabukiani
premièred on the 10th February 1941 at the Kirov Theatre, with Natalia
Dudinskaya as Nikiya and Chabukiani as Solor and the Mariinsky company
continues to perform the production to this day.

In the years following the 1941 production, more new dance numbers were
introduced to La Bayadère in Russia and have remained in the ballet ever since.
One of the most famous additional numbers is the Dance of the Golden Idol. This
number was created by the Russian danseur Nikolai Zubkovsky in 1948 for the
1941 production. The music is by Minkus, but it is not from his score for La
Bayadère: it is a Persian march that he composed for Petipa’s revival of The
Butterfly. Interestingly, the music is not even a march, but a waltz in 5/4 time, for
in the nineteenth century, composers used the 5/4 time signature when they
needed to portray ‘the exotic’. In 1954, Konstantin Sergeyev choreographed and
added a new pas de deux for Dudinskaya in the second scene that is performed by
Nikiya, a male slave and two female students. This pas de deux is known as the so-
called Pas de deux for Nikiya and the Slave. The music for this number is not by
Minkus, but by Cesare Pugni: it is the adage for his Pas des fleurs from the second
act of Esmeralda.

Fig. 11 – Ekaterina Ofitserova in the Danse d’jampe (1900)


La Bayadère in the West

While La Bayadère was a prominent member of the Russian repertoire during the
20th century due to the success of Ponomarev and Chabukiani’s production, it
was not performed for many years in the west. In 1923, Nikolai Sergeyev staged a
new edition of The Kingdom of the Shades for the Riga Opera Ballet during his
tenure as Ballet Master in the Latvian capital. In this edition, the excerpt was
staged in two scenes under the title The Rajah’s Dream. In 1927, he was invited
by Anna Pavlova to stage La Bayadère for her company, but unfortunately, the
staging was never achieved because Pavlova’s dancers could not embrace the
ballet and/or take it seriously.

One of Pavlova’s dancers, Harcourt Algeranoff gives a very sarcastic account of


the failed attempt in his book My Years with Pavlova:

“A few days after the long English tour started Nicolai Sergueeff arrived to stage La
Bayadère for the Company. Pavlova began rehearsing the pas de deux, and I can see
her now as she held the à la seconde on point, while Novikoff left her and then
returned to her and took her hand. The corps de ballet had very dull work, and
Sergueeff, who could not speak any English at all at that time, kept trying to make
the character dancers do the classic work.
The English girls tried to say ”Ya Charakternaya” (I am a character dancer) but to
no effect. Then he started rehearsing the Fakir’s dance, with John Sergeieff and
Aubrey Hitchins. It was so démodé that the Company were having hysterics – only
Sergueeff was serious. Pavlova saw it, and then she realised that it was no good
trying to revive this old monstrosity which had once been good in Russia; the Fakir’s
dance settled it. Sergueeff was paid and returned to Paris. No diplomacy could
soothe his hurt. The Rajah’s Dream, as he often called it in later years, was a great
favourite of his (twenty years later he gave the choreography to Mona Inglesby as a
wedding present!). He never spoke kindly of Pavlova afterwards.” – Harcourt
Algeranoff: My Years with Pavlova, p.165

Sergeyev later staged The Rajah’s Dream for Olga Spessivtseva in Paris in 1926
when the Sultan of Morocco visited France and inaugurated the first Paris
Mosque. The performance took place on the 26th July 1926 with Spessivtseva as
Nikiya and Serge Peretti as Solor. In 1947, during his tenure as Ballet Master of
International Ballet, Sergeyev suggested to Mona Inglesby that he should
stage The Kingdom of the Shades for the company, but the staging never came to
fruition because Inglesby faced the same problems as Pavlova had, as she
recollected:
“Maestro had persuaded the management that it would be a good investment to
mount one act of La Bayadère – the well known Kingdom of the Shades sequence.
He asked me to dance the principal role, but I felt unable to take on any more work
at that time, and I also thought it would be a compliment to Nana Gollner, as our
guest artist, to offer her the role, and eventually this was agreed upon.
Ever conscious of the delicate financial balance of the company, Maestro offered us
costumes he had retained from his former group, which he had formed a short time
after leaving Russia, and we agreed to look them over. In the meantime rehearsals
progressed, and the company was fully rehearsed with Nana and Paul [Petroff]. I
gathered that they very much disliked the old fashioned music, but there was
nothing we could do about that.
When the dress rehearsal was called on stage, Maestro’s costumes proved to be
rather tired looking, and below the standard to which the company was
accustomed. Time was pressing, but it was an embarrassing situation, and after an
emergency meeting it was decided to call in Hein Heckroth to design some new
costumes at short notice.
But before any further steps could be taken, Nana suddenly expressed her extreme
dissatisfaction at the choreography as a whole. It was a little late for such a
pronouncement, yet unfortunately her opinion spread throughout the cast.
Maestro, having already spent considerable time and effort on the production, was
exceedingly upset. He begged me to take on the role as he had originally intended,
so the production might go on, but I was fully stretched and quite unable to take on
a heavier workload. He would not consider anyone else, so the ballet had to be
postponed indefinitely.
It was an extraordinary situation that two hitherto co-operative principal artists
had suddenly opposed him in this way, and at such a late stage, but sadly I was
quite unable to help him. The company ultimately decided to put all available
finances into the full length Sleeping Princess instead, so La Bayadère never came
to fruition, and the whole incident closed a sadly downbeat note. It did not,
however, detract from the warmth in all Nana and Paul’s other work, and we
continued with a pleasant collaboration throughout the rest of their time with the
company.
Unfortunately Maestro was not forgiving. “They do not understand”, he said, and his
eyes went very cold. Personally, I found the choreography of La Bayadère quite
enchanting in spite of the old fashioned music, and I was very sad that the ballet
never came to be performed by International Ballet.” – Mona Inglesby: Ballet in
the Blitz, p.96-98
Taking into account the experiences of Sergeyev, Pavlova and Inglesby, it is fair to
argue that had it not been for the tastes of English and American dancers in the
1920s, 30s and 40s, La Bayadère would probably have become a permanent and
celebrated member of the western repertoire much earlier than it did, but that
was not to happen until the 1960s.
Fig. 12 – Pavel Gerdt as Solor (1900)

In 1961, the ballet reappeared in the west when The Kingdom of the Shades was
staged for the Teatro Municipal in Rio de Janeiro by Eugenia Feodorova on the
12th April and that same year, on the 4th July, it was performed by the
Kirov/Mariinsky Ballet at the Palais Garnier in Paris and it was this staging that
won the ballet’s most famous scene widespread interest and recognition. In
1963, Sir Frederick Ashton commissioned Rudolf Nureyev to stage The Kingdom
of the Shades for the Royal Ballet, as Nureyev was very familiar with the scene
having danced in the full-length ballet in Russia. Sir John Lanchberry re-
orchestrated and arranged Minkus’s score and Nureyev danced the role of Solor
with Dame Margot Fonteyn in the role of Nikiya. The Royal Opera House
première of The Kingdom of the Shades was a huge success and is considered to
be one of the most important events in the history of ballet. However, it would
not be for another nineteen years that the first full-length western production
of La Bayadère would be staged when, in 1980, Natalia Makarova staged that
very production for American Ballet Theatre.

Makarova based her production on the Ponomarev/Chabukiani version, which


she had danced in during her career with the Kirov/Mariinsky Ballet. Makarova’s
production deviates further from Petipa’s version, however; the music was
completely rearranged and re-orchestrated by Lanchberry, nearly all of the
numbers of the Grand divertissements of the second act were cut and Makarova
introduced a brand new version of the missing final act that she completely
created and choreographed herself to a pastiche of Minkus’s music that
Lanchberry arranged and put together from various numbers in the ballet, most
notably the first scene from the third act. Makarova’s La Bayadère premièred on
the 21st May 1980 at the Metropolitan Opera House in New York and was
broadcast live on PBS. Makarova, herself, danced Nikiya, but sustained an injury
during the first act and had to be replaced by Marianna Tcherkassky. Dancing the
role of Solor was Sir Anthony Dowell and Cynthia Harvey danced Gamzatti.
Makarova’s production was a huge success and has remained a prominent
member of the ABT repertoire ever since. In 1990, Makarova staged her
production for the Royal Ballet and since then, has staged it for various
companies around the world.
Fig. 13 – Vera Trefilova in the Danse Manu (1900)
In 1991, Rudolf Nureyev began plans to stage a new production of La
Bayadère for the Paris Opera Ballet. This would be the final ballet that Nureyev
would stage since he was dying from AIDS and knowing this, the French cultural
administration granted him an enormous budget for the production and he
received more funding from private donors. Like Makarova’s production,
Nureyev’s staging is derived from the Ponomarev/Chabukiani version and he
turned to his old friend and dance partner, the former Kirov Prima
Ballerina Ninel Kurgapkina for assistance in staging the work. Nureyev staged the
traditional choreography with his own choreographic touches. It was also his
intention to stage the fourth act, but his failing health further deteriorated and he
ran short of money, so, in the end, he chose to remain faithful to the Soviet
tradition of ending the ballet with the Kingdom of the Shades scene. He
commissioned the opera designer Enzio Frigerio and his wife opera designer
Franca Squarciapino to design the décor and costumes. Frigerio took inspiration
from the Taj Mahal, the architecture of the Ottoman Empire and the designs for
the 1877 production for the décor, while Squarciapino took inspiration from
ancient Persian and Indian paintings for the costume designs. Nureyev’s
production of La Bayadère premièred on the 8th October 1992, with Isabelle
Guérin as Nikiya, Laurent Hilaire as Solor and Élisabeth Platel as Gamzatti. The
production was a huge success and Nureyev was awarded with the Ordre des
Arts et des Lettres from the French Minister of Culture. The première was also a
special occasion for many as Nureyev died three months later.
Fig. 14 – Alexandra Baldina as a bayadère (1900)

Since Makarova’s production, there have been various productions that


introduced a new version of the missing final act, but it was not until 2002 that
the fourth act returned to the stage when Sergei Vikharev staged a new
production for the Mariinsky Ballet. This was the second of Vikharev’s historical
productions that were based on the historical documents and the notation scores
of the Sergeyev Collection (the first being The Sleeping Beauty, staged in 1999).
Although this production was labelled as a “reconstruction”, Vikharev retained
most of the Soviet choreography and used only a small amount of the notated
choreographic passages. Vikharev’s production marked the return of the long-
lost fourth act to Russia, restoring the Dance of the Lotus Blossoms and the Grand
Pas d’action to its proper place and original scenario, but his stagings of these
numbers were not devoid of alterations from the notation scores. For example,
Nikiya’s part in the Dance of the Lotus Blossoms was omitted and the entrée and
coda of the Grand Pas d’action were expanded to add more dancing, which
included a fouettésequence for Gamzatti in the coda.

Vikharev’s production of La Bayadère premièred on the 31st May 2002, with


Daria Pavlenko as Nikiya, Igor Kolb as Solor and Elvira Tarasova as Gamzatti, but
was met with hostility in Saint Petersburg, especially from the Mariinsky dancers
and coaches, who were too reluctant to part ways with the version they were
familiar with, though it received a warmer reception in the west. The production
has since been retired from the Mariinsky repertoire and the company continues
to perform in the 1941 Ponomarev/Chabukiani staging.

In 2018, for Petipa’s bicentenary, the world saw a second historical production
of La Bayadère that was staged by Alexei Ratmansky for the Staatsballett Berlin.
Like Vikharev, Ratmansky consulted the Sergeyev Collection notation scores, but
unlike the former, he successfully reconstructed and staged the notated
choreographic and mime passages. Ratmansky also found help in notation scores
that were made by Alexander Gorsky, which were released from the Moscow
archives earlier that year. Many unknown and forgotten details were restored in
this production: for example, the love scene between Solor and Nikiya in the first
act was restored to a purely mime scene; the Danse des esclaves from
the divertissements of the second act returned to the stage after being absent for
decades; the Variation of Nikiya with the Veil was restored to its original concept,
including the flying away of the veil and Nikiya’s role in the Dance of the Lotus
Blossoms in the fourth act was restored, only a trap door was not used for
Nikiya’s entrance since the Berlin Opera House stage does not have one.

La Bayadère – Trailer – Staatsballett Berlin

Related pages
• Photo gallery
• Libretto
Sources
• Nadine Meisner (2019) Marius Petipa, The Emperor’s Ballet
Master. New York City, US: Oxford University Press
• Jane Pritchard with Caroline Hamilton (2012) Anna Pavlova:
Twentieth-Century Ballerina. London, UK: Booth-Clibborn Editions
• Harcourt Algeranoff (1957) My Years with Pavlova. Kingswood,
Surrey: William Heinemann Ltd
• Mona Inglesby with Kay Hunter (2008) Ballet in the Blitz. Debenham,
Suffolk, UK: Groundnut Publishing
• Tim Scholl (1994) From Petipa to Balanchine: Classical Revival and
the Modernization of Ballet. Abingdon, Oxfordshire, UK: Routledge
• Roland John Wiley (2007) A Century of Russian Ballet. Alton,
Hampshire, UK: Dance Books Ltd
• Michael Stegemann. CD Liner notes. Trans. Lionel Salter. Léon
Minkus. Paquita & La Bayadère. Boris Spassov Cond. Sofia National
Opera Orchestra. Capriccio 10 544.
• Staatsballett Berlin: Souvenir program for La Bayadère. Staatsoper
Berlin, 2018
• Royal Ballet: Souvenir program for La Bayadère. Royal Opera House,
1990
• Mariinsky Ballet: Souvenir program for La Bayadère. Mariinsky
Theatre, 2001

Photos and images: © Dansmuseet, Stockholm © Большой театр России ©


Victoria and Albert Museum, London © Государственный академический
Мариинский театр © CNCS/Pascal François © Bibliothèque nationale de France
© Musée l’Opéra © Colette Masson/Roger-Viollet © АРБ имени А. Я. Вагановой
© Михаил Логвинов © Михайловский театр, фотограф Стас Левшин.
Партнёры проекта: СПбГБУК «Санкт-Петербургская государственная
Театральная библиотека». ФГБОУВО «Академия русского балета имени А. Я.
Вагановой» СПбГБУК «Михайловский театр». Михаил Логвинов, фотограф.
Martine Kahane.

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