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Ondine

Ondine
Theater Tickets
Royal Opera House
Address
Royal Opera House
Bow Street
Covent Garden
London  WC2E 9DD
United Kingdom
Booking from
Wed, 27th May 2009
Booking to
Sat, 6th June 2009
A star role for a ballerina and enchanting choreography from a master – Ondine combines both of these – not surprising, as it was created in 1958 for Margot Fonteyn by Frederick Ashton.

This 50th anniversary revival by The Royal Ballet brings new stars as the water sprite Ondine and the young mortal Palemon with whom she falls in love to tragic ends. The whole Company take part in bringing to life the sea spirits and sailors of this Romantic story, with its wonderful scenes beneath the sea, in a Gothic castle and onboard a storm-tossed ship, all magically staged in Lila de Nobili’s impressionistic designs.

Through the ballet’s three acts the watery imagery pervades the choreography – ‘fluid like the rhythm of the sea’, as Ashton described it – and Hans Werner Henze’s specially commissioned score complements it perfectly with its rippling, flowing textures and translucent orchestrations, here under the baton of The Royal Ballet’s Music Director, Barry Wordsworth.

Whether for the technical demands of its solo roles, the famous Shadow Dance or the Act III celebration dances, this is a celebratory revival that brings together Royal Ballet history and Ashton’s distinctive style with the talents of today.

CREDITS
Lighting:
John B Read
Choreography:
Frederick Ashton
Music:
Hans Werner Henze
Designs:
Lila de Nobili

PERFORMERS
Conductor:
Barry Wordsworth

Ondine:
Miyako Yoshida
Alexandra Ansanelli
Alina Cojocaru
Tamara Rojo

Prince Palemon:
Valeri Hristov
Edward Watson
Federico Bonelli


The present theatre was built in 1858. During World War II it was used as a dance hall but after the war the decision was made to establish the Royal Opera House as the permanent year-round home of the opera and ballet companies now known as the Royal Opera and the Royal Ballet. The ballet company reopened the building on 20 February 1946 with The Sleeping Beauty. The two companies combined for Purcell's The Fairy Queen that December, and on 14 January 1947, Covent Garden Opera Company gave its first complete opera performance, Bizet's Carmen.

TRAVEL Info


Nearest Rail: Charing Cross

Nearest Tube: Covent Garden (Piccadilly line)