Cinderella (Prokofiev) GudangMovies21 Rebahinxxi LK21

      Cinderella (Russian: Золушка, tr. Zolushka; French: Cendrillon) Op. 87, is a ballet composed by Sergei Prokofiev to a scenario by Nikolai Volkov. It is one of his most popular and melodious compositions, and has inspired a great many choreographers since its inception. The piece was composed between 1940 and 1944. Part way through writing it Prokofiev broke off to write his opera War and Peace. The premiere of Cinderella was conducted by Yuri Fayer on 21 November, 1945, at the Bolshoi Theatre, with choreography by Rostislav Zakharov and Galina Ulanova in the title role. Cinderella is notable for its jubilant music, lush scenery, and for the comic double-roles of the stepmother and the two stepsisters (which can be performed in travesti), more mad than bad in this treatment.


      Story


      Act I
      Cinderella, a young woman whose domineering stepmother forces her to act as a servant in her own home, helps her stepmother and two stepsisters to prepare for the Spring Ball, at which it is rumoured that the Prince will choose his bride-to-be. As the two stepsisters work together to produce a new shawl, they get into an argument over who will wear it, and end up tearing it in two through their bickering. The pair storm off, while the step-mother orders Cinderella to clear up the remnants and finish her chores, as her father returns home from business. Since her father's remarriage, Cinderella has had to sleep by the kitchen fireplace, leaving her nothing to wear but rags covered in ashes. Her father has never moved past the grief of his first wife's death, and though he is concerned for his only daughter Cinderella, he is just as much under the stepmother's control as Cinderella herself is. Their brief peace is interrupted, however, as the stepmother and the two stepsisters reenter and begin ordering them about. During supper, a beggar woman turns up, asking for shelter. The two stepsisters and the stepmother try to chase her off, but Cinderella offers her a place by the kitchen fire and an old pair of slippers. The beggar thanks her for her kindness and departs, leaving the preparations for the ball to resume. After choosing dresses and a quick dancing lesson, the family finally sets off for the night with the father reluctantly in tow, leaving Cinderella behind.
      Although lonely at first, she cheers herself up by dancing with her broom, imagining the Prince himself has asked her for a dance. She is surprised, however, when the old beggar woman appears out of nowhere, wishing to return the slippers with her thanks. To Cinderella's amazement, the shoes have been transformed into dancing slippers of glass. The old beggar woman throws off her disguise and reveals herself as Cinderella's fairy godmother, come to grant her wish of going to the ball. Summoning the fairies of Spring, Summer, Autumn and Winter for assistance, she turns Cinderella's rags into a beautiful dress, a pumpkin and mice into a carriage and horses, and grasshoppers and dragonflies into a retinue of footmen. As she is about to leave, however, the fairy godmother warns her that the magic will only last until midnight, at which time the spell will break, and everything will revert to its original form. Only the glass slippers will remain as a gift for her kindness. She then summons twelve dwarfs, who will appear to repeat her message if she has not left by midnight. With this warning in mind, Cinderella departs for the ball.
      Act II
      The Spring Ball is in full swing, with guests arriving from all over the kingdom and beyond to dance and pay respect to the Prince. The two stepsisters attempt to win favour with the royal court by showing off their dancing skills, but have less than successful results, much to their mother's dismay. The Prince then joins the celebrations, but finding state events such as the Spring Ball dull, and being reluctant to enter a marriage without love, he declines any offers for a dance, particularly in the case of the obnoxious step-sisters.

      Cinderella arrives at the palace, transformed beyond recognition into a beautifully dressed princess. The Prince, along with everyone else, is entranced by her beauty and charm, and for the first time, he asks for a dance. As the evening passes, Cinderella quickly becomes beloved by the entire court for her graciousness and charm, and the enamoured Prince spends the entire evening by her side. When refreshments are served, he gives her the honour of taking one of three oranges, a delicacy imported to the kingdom from a far-off land. Cinderella offers the other two oranges to her two stepsisters, who are so flattered by the attention that they do not recognize the beautiful stranger as their stepsister. The Prince takes Cinderella out to the royal gardens for an evening walk, where they dance and proclaim the love blossoming between them.
      As they return to the ballroom for the next waltz, Cinderella has completely forgotten about the time in her happiness. However, at the first stroke of midnight, the twelve dwarfs spring from the great palace clock and remind Cinderella of her fairy godmother's warning. Terrified of being unmasked as a lowly servant in rags, she flees from the ballroom to the astonishment of the other guests. Though the Prince pursues her, she vanishes into the night moments before the spell breaks, losing one of her glass slippers in her haste and panic. The Prince is heartbroken at the thought of losing his love so soon after discovering her, but upon finding the lost slipper, he vows not to rest until he is once again reunited with her.
      Act III
      The morning after the ball, the Prince summons every shoemaker in the kingdom, in order to find out who the slipper was made for. However, none of them claim to have crafted the shoe, or sold it to anybody recently, and he concludes that the princess must be from a foreign land. His desperate search brings him first to the Mediterranean, then to the Orient, and lands further beyond. After travelling across the world and meeting various beautiful princesses with no success, the Prince begins to search his own kingdom, trying the slipper on every maiden who attended the ball.
      Back at Cinderella's home, love has allowed the Prince to defy the laws of time and space; though she is only awakening the morning after the ball, he has already traveled the world and back again in search of his lost love. Upon waking, Cinderella initially believes that the events of the previous night were only a dream. As she relives some of the dances of the ball, she discovers the remaining glass slipper and realizes that it was all true. At breakfast, the two stepsisters reminisce about the ball, and argue about who made the greater impression on the Prince at the ball. Their fighting is interrupted when the father and the stepmother hurry in with the news that the Prince is on his way to their house, desperately trying a glass slipper on every girl he encounters. Upon his arrival, he tries the slipper on the two stepsisters, to no avail. The stepmother, however, demands to be given a chance and tries to force her foot into the shoe, ordering Cinderella to help her. As she bends down to assist, the remaining slipper falls from her pocket and the Prince finally recognizes Cinderella for who she is. As Cinderella successfully tries on both glass slippers, her stepfamily beg for her forgiveness, which she happily bestows upon them. Overjoyed to have rediscovered each other, Cinderella and the Prince are then transported away to a secret garden by the fairy godmother, where they confess their love for one another and are happily married.


      Instrumentation


      The ballet is scored for a large orchestra consisting of piccolo, 2 flutes, 2 oboes, cor anglais, 2 clarinets, bass clarinet, 2 bassoons, contrabassoon, 4 horns, 3 trumpets, 3 trombones, tuba, timpani, triangle, castanets, snare drum, maracas, tambourine, tenor drum, cymbals, bass drum, tamtam, glockenspiel, xylophone, wood block, tubular bells, piano, harp, celesta, and strings.


      Sequence of numbers



      Act I

      No 1 Introduction
      No 2 Shawl Dance
      No 3 Cinderella
      No 4 The Father
      No 5 The Fairy Godmother
      No 6 The Sisters' New Clothes
      No 7 The Dancing Lesson
      No 8 Departure of the Stepmother and the Two Stepsisters for the Ball
      No 9 Cinderella Dreams of the Ball
      No 10 Gavotte
      No 11 Second Appearance of the Fairy Godmother
      No 12 Spring Fairy
      No 13 Summer Fairy
      No 14 Grasshoppers and Dragonflies
      No 15 Autumn Fairy
      No 16 Winter Fairy
      No 17 The Interrupted Departure
      No 18 The Clock
      No 19 Cinderella's Departure for the Ball
      Act II

      No 20 Dance of the Courtiers
      No 21 Passepied
      No 22 Bourrée
      No 23 Skinny's Variation
      No 24 Dumpy's Variation
      No 25 Dance of the Courtiers (Reprise)
      No 26 Mazurka and Entrance of the Prince
      No 27 Dance of the Prince's Four Companions
      No 28 Mazurka
      No 29 Cinderella's Arrival at the Ball
      No 30 Grand Waltz
      No 31 Promenade
      No 32 Cinderella's Dance
      No 33 Dance of the Prince
      No 34 Refreshments for the Guests (musical quote from the 1919 opera L'amour des trois oranges)
      No 35 Duet of the Two Stepsisters with the Oranges
      No 36 Duet of the Prince and Cinderella
      No 37 Waltz-Coda
      No 38 Midnight
      Act III, Scene 1
      The search for Cinderella

      No 39 The Prince and the Cobblers
      No 40 First Galop of the Prince
      No 41 Temptation
      No 42 Second Galop of the Prince
      No 43 Orientalia
      No 44 Third Galop of the Prince
      Act III, Scene 2
      The Prince with Cinderella

      No 45 Cinderella's Awakening
      No 46 The Morning After the Ball
      No 47 The Prince's Visit
      No 48 The Prince Recognizes Cinderella
      No 49 Slow Waltz
      No 50 Amoroso


      Piano suites


      Music from the ballet, published before its première

      Three Pieces from Cinderella, Op. 95 (1942)
      Ten Pieces from Cinderella, Op. 97 (1943)
      Six Pieces from Cinderella, Op. 102 (1944)


      Orchestral suites


      Extracts from Cinderella authorized by the composer

      Suite No. 1 from Cinderella, Op. 107
      Suite No. 2 from Cinderella, Op. 108
      Suite No. 3 from Cinderella, Op. 109
      Waltz Suite, Op. 110


      See also


      List of ballets by title


      Footnotes




      External links


      Rudolf Nureyev's version of Cinderella

    Kata Kunci Pencarian:

    cinderella prokofievcinderella prokofiev imslpcinderella prokofiev musiccinderella prokofiev balletcinderella prokofiev scorecinderella prokofiev suitecinderella prokofiev pianocinderella prokofiev youtubecinderella prokofiev waltzprokofiev cinderella suite 1
    ‎Prokofiev Cinderella (2012) directed by Christopher Wheeldon • Reviews ...

    ‎Prokofiev Cinderella (2012) directed by Christopher Wheeldon • Reviews ...

    Cinderella Prokofiev Download - slimgget

    Cinderella Prokofiev Download - slimgget

    Prokofiev: Cinderella | Warner Classics

    Prokofiev: Cinderella | Warner Classics

    Cinderella - Prokofiev

    Cinderella - Prokofiev

    Sergei Prokofieff | Musik | Prokofiev: Cinderella

    Sergei Prokofieff | Musik | Prokofiev: Cinderella

    Cinderella - Prokofiev (2008) — The Movie Database (TMDB)

    Cinderella - Prokofiev (2008) — The Movie Database (TMDB)

    Prokofiev* - Cinderella (Vinyl) | Discogs

    Prokofiev* - Cinderella (Vinyl) | Discogs

    Prokofiev* - Cinderella (1962, Vinyl) | Discogs

    Prokofiev* - Cinderella (1962, Vinyl) | Discogs

    Product Family | PROKOFIEV Cinderella

    Product Family | PROKOFIEV Cinderella

    Product Family | PROKOFIEV Cinderella

    Product Family | PROKOFIEV Cinderella

    Cinderella: Prokofiev: Amazon.ca: Music

    Cinderella: Prokofiev: Amazon.ca: Music

    „CINDERELLA“ Sergei Prokofiev - MKTickets : MKTickets

    „CINDERELLA“ Sergei Prokofiev - MKTickets : MKTickets

    Search Results

    cinderella prokofiev

    Daftar Isi

    The History Behind Sergei Prokofiev’s "Cinderella"

    Prokofiev’s Cinderella premiered November 21st, 1945 at the Bolshoi Theatre. The story of Cinderella was based off of the Perrault version, not of the Brothers Grimm. Illustrating the story in a different way, the four reasons are …

    Prokofiev - Cinderella, Op 87 - Rozhdestvensky - YouTube

    Dec 25, 2014 · Support us on Patreon and get more content: https://www.patreon.com/classicalvault --- Sergei ProkofievCinderella, Op 87USSR Radio & TV Symphony OrchestraGen...

    Cinderella – A Brief History of the Ballet

    Oct 11, 2020 · The lead role of Cinderella was danced by Italian ballerina Pierina Legnani, and this version marks the first performance of a ballet in Russia to include the execution of 32 consecutive fouettées. A few years after …

    Prokofiev: Cinderella (The Royal Ballet) - YouTube

    Nov 7, 2023 · Marianela Nuñez and Vadim Muntagirov star as Cinderella and The Prince in Frederick Ashton’s timeless reworking of Charles Perrault’s famous rags-to-riches story, …

    ABT - Cinderella - American Ballet Theatre

    Cinderella’s rags become a beautiful gown, but the Fairy Godmother shows her a clock and warns her that at midnight, the magic gown will change back into rags. She then transforms a …

    Cinderella, Op.87 (Prokofiev, Sergey) - IMSLP

    Cinderella, Op.87 (Prokofiev, Sergey) This work has been identified as being in the public domain in Canada, as well as countries where the copyright term is life+50 or life+70 years (including …

    Cinderella, Royal Ballet review - inspiring dancing, but not quite ...

    Dec 9, 2024 · The strains of the most stirring waltz Prokofiev ever penned swells the score for the first time, the pumpkin flies into the heavens and explodes in a shower of stars and finally the …

    Ballet: Cinderella (Sergei Prokofiev, 1945) - ballerinagallery.com

    Experience the enchanting ballet "Cinderella" by Sergei Prokofiev, 1945. A timeless tale of magic and romance brought to life through exquisite choreography and music.

    Cinderella Ballet Overview – Art de Ballet

    Dec 25, 2024 · Sergei Prokofiev’s version of Cinderella, which premiered in 1945, significantly shaped the ballet’s repertoire, showcasing a harmonious blend of emotional depth in music …