
Gyula Harangozó / Léo Delibes
neoclassical Dance comedy 12 06. Leblanc Gergely season ticket
Events In Brief Details Cast Synopsis Media Reviews
Date
Day , Start time – End time
Location
Hungarian State Opera
Length , without intermissions
- Act I: 00:29:00
- Interval: 00:30:00
- Act II: 00:28:00
- interval: 00:43:00
In Brief
E. T. A.Hoffmannis widelyassociated withThe Nutcrackerwhile fewer know that the story ofCoppeliais based on his short story,The Sandman (Der Sandmann). The author,known to be a polymath himself, also designed various machines and automatons, and he was perfectly aware how easy it is to fall in love with your own creation. A ballet version ofCoppeliawas first premiered in Hungary in1877, later it was adapted byGyula Harangozó, in 1953. More thanseventy years afterwards, on the fiftieth anniversary of the choreographer’s death, the production returns to the Hungarian National Ballet’s repertoire to prove that classical ballet, pantomime, and magic tricks can co-exist just as perfectly asLéo Delibes’late romantic music and the Hungarian czardas.
Age restriction
The performance is not recommended for children under 12 years of age.
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Swanilda
Tatyjana Melnyik
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Franz, her fiancé
Motomi Kiyota
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Coppelius
Maxim Kovtun
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Wife of the Bellfounder
Eszter Lovisek
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Town clerk
Ricardo Vila M.
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Polish girl
Aglaja Sawatzki
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Her fiancé
Vlagyiszlav Melnyik
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Featuring the corps de ballet of the Hungarian National Ballet, the Hungarian State Opera Orchestra and the Hungarian Dance University.
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Swanilda
Claudia García Carriera, Maria Yakovleva, Tatyjana Melnyik
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Franz, her fiancé
András Rónai, Louis Scrivener, Motomi Kiyota
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Coppelius
Miklós Dávid Kerényi, András Szegő, Maxim Kovtun
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Coppelia
Carulla Jessica Leon, Soobin Lee, Diana Kosyreva
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Bellfounder
István Kohári
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Wife of the Bellfounder
Eszter Lovisek, Ágnes Riedl
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Mayor
Alekszandr Viktorovics Komarov
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Mayor's wife
Edit Darab-Fehér, Zsuzsanna Papp
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Billposter
Demeter Kóbor, Luca Massara
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Town clerk
Ricardo Vila M.
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Pas de six
Théa Solomon, Erina Yoshie, Matilde Noemi Barbaglia, Elena Sharipova, Yuliya Radziush, Lea Földi, Mattheus Bäckström, Alberto Ortega de Pablos, Vince Topolánszky, Gaetano Cottonaro, Viachaslau Hnedchyk
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Friends
Kateryna Horiaieva, Lilia Kaliko, Stefanida Ovcharenko, Adrienn Horányi, Anastasiia Konstantinova
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Friends
Valerio Palumbo, Dmitry Zhukov, Christian Mathot, Takaaki Okajima, Riku Yamamoto
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Hungarian Sergeant
Dumitru Taran, Iurii Kekalo
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Polish girl
Katerina Taraszova, Kristina Starostina, Aglaja Sawatzki
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Her fiancé
Tymofiy Bykovets, Demeter Kóbor, Vlagyiszlav Melnyik
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Featuring the corps de ballet of the Hungarian National Ballet, the Hungarian State Opera Orchestra and the Hungarian Dance University.
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Choreographer
Gyula Harangozó Jr.
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Composer
Léo Delibes
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Set designer
Attila Csikós
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Set designer
Zoltán Fülöp
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Costume designer
Tivadar Márk
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Costume designer
Rita Velich
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Costume designer
Irén Hamala
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Music revised by
Jenő Kenessey
Events
Premiere: April 24, 1953
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2024. October 10.
Hungarian State Opera
rehearsal
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2024. October 12.
Hungarian State Opera
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2024. October 12.
Hungarian State Opera
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2024. October 13.
Hungarian State Opera
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2024. October 18.
Hungarian State Opera
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2024. October 20.
Hungarian State Opera
Synopsis
Act 1
The scene is a small town in Poland, near the Galician border. The billposter sticks up a bill calling the people’s attention to the celebration of the inauguration of the bell and to the dancing competition. Swanilda the bell-founder’s daughter is going to take part in the competition and she is proud to show her new dress to her friends. The square fills with people. The young men’s attention is drawn by the girl sitting by the window in the house of the old jack-of-all-trades Coppelius. They start a virtuoso dance to arouse her interest. Swanilda’s fiancé Francois also takes part in the dance, at the end of which the unknown beauty drops a handkerchief to thank them for the performance. Francois picks it up proudly but, at this moment, Swanilda appears. She has seen everything and runs away wounded in her pride.
Driven by curiosity, the boys make noise around Coppelius’ house. The man sets out to chase them away but he loses the key to the gate, which is found by a friend of Swanilda’s. The girls are also curious about the house and the mysterious girl, so they creep into the house, Swanilda among them. Arriving in excitement, Coppelius hurries in through the open door of his house in bad suspicion.
Act 2
The girls look around Coppelius’s study in shy curiosity. Swanilda is interested in nobody but her rival. She steps closer to perceive that it is only a doll. Playing obliviously, the girls wind up the doll, which starts dancing. Coppelius arrives and drives the intruders out of the house. He is ready to get down to work to bring his favourite doll Coppelia to perfection. He carries her out of the window-niche. Later on he notices that a living person is hiding behind the mask. It is Swanilda – to escape Coppelius’ wrath she donned the doll’s clothes and mask. The old man becomes furious, but he is willing to pardon the girl if she puts on the doll’s mask again to teach Francois a lesson.
The boy soon rolls into the room through the chimney. Coppelius chases him, then threatens him with various devices, and eventually introduces Coppelia to him. Francois behaves shyly at first, but later he starts courting her with more and more passion. Swanilda cannot take any more. Tearing her mask off, she runs away. Coppelius watches the scene with malice: his plot has worked. The deceived boy smashes things to pieces in his rage and hurries away with the real Coppelia doll.
Act 3
The bell inauguration feast is about to start. Francois arrives at the square with the Coppelia doll. The girls watch the boys scornfully: Was all the excitement about this ‘girl’? Francois asks Swanilda to forgive him when suddenly confusion breaks out. Coppelius rushes in to complain to the mayor about the great wrong he has suffered, demanding satisfaction. The mayor pays for his damage and Coppelius leaves the scene with his doll. Everybody is happy about what has happened. The young people start dancing, and then they celebrate the winners of the competition, the betrothed Swanilda and Francois.
Media
Reviews
"Gyula Harangozó’s masterpiece of a choreography of Delibes’sCoppéliais so highly estimable, it’s as if they were taking out the crown jewels of ballet and offering them to the audience. At yet another evening in the ample space of the Hungarian State Opera, the worlds of dream and reality start to merge, and the audience finds itself drifting into the artistic workmanship of the past, into a reverie from which it hopes to never again wake."
Dieter Topp,Kulturforum Europa