Ancient Theater of Orange 22 July 2021 - Ballet for Life / Queen + Béjart | GoComGo.com

Ballet for Life / Queen + Béjart

Ancient Theater of Orange, Orange, France
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9:30 PM
Important Info
Type: Modern Ballet
City: Orange, France
Starts at: 21:30
Duration:

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Festival

Chorégies d'Orange 2021

The Chorégies d'Orange lift the veil on the 2021 edition with La Scala in Milan as the highlight.

Overview

In case of bad weather, the performance is postponed to the following day.

A little more than thirty years ago, right in the middle of the music of Berlioz surprisingly interrupted by noise of bombing and of machine-gun fire, a rather unconventional Brother Laurent was crying out in front of Jorge Donn and Hitomi Asakawa “Make love, not war!”

Today, Gil Roman, about as old as is the creation of my Romeo and Juliet, surrounded by dancers who have never seen this ballet, answers: “You told us to make love, not war. We made love. Why is love making us war?” – the anguished cry of a youth for which the problem of death by love is added to that of the many wars that have not stopped raging since the so-called END of the last world war!

My ballets are encounters first of all: with a music, with life, with death, with love – with beings whose past and work are reincarnating in me, just as the dancer I no longer am is reincarnated every time in performers that go beyond him.

Instant love for Queen’s music. Inventiveness, violence, humour, love – everything is there. I love them, they inspire me, they guide me and, from time to time in that no man’s land where we are all destined to go one day, Freddy Mercury, I’m sure, is playing the piano with Mozart.

A ballet about youth and hope, since, a hopeless optimist, I also believe that, in spite of all, the show must go on, as Queen sings.

Maurice Béjart

Venue Info

Ancient Theater of Orange - Orange
Location   Rue Madeleine Roch

The Roman Theatre of Orange (Théâtre antique d'Orange) is a Roman theatre in Orange, Vaucluse, France. It was built early in the 1st century AD. The structure is owned by the municipality of Orange and is the home of the summer opera festival, the Chorégies d'Orange.

It is one of the best preserved of all Roman theatres, and served the Roman colony of Arausio (or, more specifically, Colonia Julia Firma Secundanorum Arausio: "the Julian colony of Arausio established by the soldiers of the second legion") which was founded in 40 BC. Playing a major role in the life of the citizens, who spent a large part of their free time there, the theatre was seen by the Roman authorities not only as a means of spreading Roman culture to the colonies, but also as a way of distracting them from all political activities.

Mime, pantomime, poetry readings and the "attelana" (a kind of farce rather like the commedia dell'arte) were the dominant forms of entertainment, much of which lasted all day. For the common people, who were fond of spectacular effects, magnificent stage sets became very important, as was the use of stage machinery. The entertainment offered was open to all and free of charge.

As the Western Roman Empire declined during the 4th century, by which time Christianity had become the official religion, the theatre was closed by official edict in AD 391, since the Church opposed what it regarded at the time as uncivilized spectacles. It was probably pillaged by the Visigoths in 412, and like most Roman buildings was certainly stripped of its better stone over the centuries for reuse. It was used as a defensive post in the early Middle Ages, and by the 12th century began to be used by the Church for religious plays. During the 16th-century religious wars, it became a refuge for the townspeople. It has since been restored to its former function, primarily for opera, along side its use as a tourist spot.

Important Info
Type: Modern Ballet
City: Orange, France
Starts at: 21:30
Duration:
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