Heroes - Biographies
Heroes
Terence Kohler
Choreography by Terence Kohler
Music by Lera Auerbach and Alfred Schnittke
New production
Nationaltheater
Friday, 31. May 2013
Choreography by Terence Kohler
Music by Lera Auerbach and Alfred Schnittke
New production
Nationaltheater
Friday, 31. May 2013
Choreographie und Inszenierung |
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Raum, Kostüme |
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Lighting |
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Music |
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Composer Lera Auerbach was born in the city of Chelyabinsk at the gateway to Siberia. After writing her first opera at twelve years of age, she was invited for a concert tour to the United States in 1991, where continued her studies in piano and composition at the Juilliard School in New York. Auerbach has been awarded the prestigious Hindemith Prize by the Schleswig-Holstein Musik Festival in Germany, and Deutschlandfunk’s Förderpreis. She received a Paul and Daisy Soros Fellowship, recently was selected as a Young Global Leader by the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland and received the ECHO Klassik award 2012 for The Little Mermaid. A virtuoso pianist and composer, Lera Auerbach is one of today’s most sought after and exciting creative voices. Her boldly imaginative and evocative compositions are championed by today's leading musicians, conductors, choreographers, and opera houses. Ms. Auerbach's uniquely personal interpretations of the standard keyboard repertoire are making her a favorite of audiences worldwide. She regularly appears as soloist in the world’s great halls, and her published oeuvre includes more than 90 works of opera, ballet, symphonic and chamber music. |
Music |
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Composer Alfred Schnittke was born on 24 November 1934 in Engels, on the Volga River, then in the Soviet Union. Schnittke began his musical education in 1946 in Vienna where his father, a journalist and translator, had been posted. In 1948 the family moved to Moscow, where Schnittke studied piano and received a diploma in choral conducting. From 1953 to 1958 he studied counterpoint and composition with Yevgeny Golubev and instrumentation with Nikolai Rakov at the Moscow Conservatory. Schnittke completed the postgraduate course in composition there in 1961. In 1962, Schnittke was appointed instructor in instrumentation at the Moscow Conservatory, a post which he held until 1972. Thereafter he supported himself as a composer of film scores; by 1984 he had scored more than 60 films. Noted, above all, for his hallmark "polystylistic" idiom, Schnittke has written in a wide range of genres and styles. His Concerto Grosso No. 1 (1977) was one of the first works to bring his name to prominence. It was popularized by Gidon Kremer, a tireless proponent of his music. Many of Schnittke's works have been inspired by Kremer and other prominent performers, including Yury Bashmet, Natalia Gutman, Gennady Rozhdestvensky and Mstislav Rostropovich. Schnittke first came to America in 1988 for the Making Music Together Festival in Boston and the American premiere of Symphony No. 1 by the Boston Symphony Orchestra. He came again in 1991 when Carnegie Hall commissioned Concerto Grosso No. 5 for the Cleveland Orchestra as part of its Centennial Festival, and again in 1994 for the world premiere of his Symphony No. 7 by the New York Philharmonic and the American premiere of his Symphony No. 6 by the National Symphony. Schnittke’s first opera, Life with an Idiot, was premiered in Amsterdam (April 1992). His two new operas, Gesualdo and Historia von D. Johann Fausten were unveiled in Vienna (May 1995) and Hamburg (June 1995) respectively. Schnittke has been the recipient of numerous awards and honors, including Austrian State Prize in 1991, Japan's Imperial Prize in 1992, and, most recently the Slava-Gloria-Prize in Moscow in June 1998. More than 50 compact discs devoted exclusively to his music have been released in the last ten years. Beginning in 1990, Schnittke resided in Hamburg where he died after a stroke in August 1998. Photo: Mara Eggert |
Conductor |
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Born in Baltimore,studied in Boston. Debut as piano soloist with Boston Symphony Orcherstra at age of 11 Performed as soloist and member of Boston Symphony Orchestra and Boston Pops Orchestra with Seiji Ozawa, Kurt Mazur, Arthur Fiedler, John Williams and others Won Grammy Award with New England Conservatory Ragtime Ensemble in 1973 for Best Classical Chamber Music. Assistant Music Director, Boston Lyric Opera Principal Conductor Boston Ballet Conductor & Solo Pianist, Stuttgart Ballet, 1985-1990 2. Kapellmeister & Assistant GMD, Badische Staatstheater Karlsruhe, 1990-1994 1. Kapellmeister & Stellvertreter GMD, Staatstheater Mainz, 1994-1997 1. Kapellmeister, Aalto Theater Essen Music Director, Fairbanks Summer Arts Festival, since 1985 Principal Guest Conductor, Central Massachusetts Symphony Orchestra, since 1985 Guest Conductor, Ankara State Theater, since 1999 Also play Cimbalom (Hungarian dulcimer), performed with Pierre Boulez & Speculum Musicae, and recorded film score to Gorky Park http://www.myron-romanul.com/ |
Prometheus |
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First Soloist Karen Azatyan, born in Armenia, started his dance education at the Yerevan Dancing Art State College and completed it in 2007 at the Dance Academy in Zurich. During his time in Zurich he received the second price at the competition “Tanz Olymp Berlin 2005” in the category classic variation and in the same year the Prix de Lausanne scholarship and won the young promising dancer award of the international ballet competition Varna in 2006. From the season 2007/2008 on, he has joined the Bavarian State Ballet as a member of the Corps de ballet and becam a soloist in autumn 2010. With the beginning of the season 2012/13 Karen Azatyan became First Soloist. Debut 2007/2008 Sebastian and Antonio in The Tempest (J. Mannes) Debut 2008/2009 Romeo in Romeo and Juliet (J. Cranko) Zugvögel (J. Kylián), creation Debut 2009/2010 Athlet in Les Biches (B. Nijinska) Debut 2010/2011 Albrecht in Once Upon an Ever After (T. Kohler) Daphnis in My Ravel: Daphnis and Chloé (T. Kohler) Hortensio in The Taming of the Shrew (J. Cranko) Count Alexander in Illusions - like Swan Lake (J. Neumeier) Basilio in Don Quijote (M. Petipa, new choreography by R. Barra, A. Gorski, Tradition) Debut 2011/2012 Fritz in The Nutcracker (J. Neumeier) Lucentio in The Taming of the Shrew (J. Cranko) Bluebird in Sleeping Beauty (M. Petipa / I. Liška) Voices of Spring-Pas de deux (F. Ahston) Gods and Dogs (J. Kylián) Pas de six and Russian dance in Swan Lake (R. Barra) Debut 2012/2013 Golden Idol in La Bayadère (M. Petipa/P. Bart) 4. Solo-Boy in Choreartium (L. Massine) Birthday Offering (F. Ashton) Prometheus in Heroes (T. Kohler) |
Epimetheus |
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First Soloist Wlademir Faccioni was born in Brazil and was trained in the Munich Ballett-Akademie/Heinz-Bosl-Stiftung. In 2002 he joined the Bavarian State Ballet as an apprentice and became a member of the corps de ballet in January 2003. His repertoire includes Jiří Kylián's Six Dances and Svadebka, Hans van Manen’s Solo and a prominent part in Itzik Galilis So nah so fern. His first choreography Vivace (on music by Vivaldi) was created in 2004 as part of the State Ballet’s Young Choreographers Programme. He was promoted to a Soloist at the beginning of the season 2007/2008 and dances as a First Soloist since the beginning of the season 2011/12. Debuts 2007/2008 Hilarion in Giselle (Ballett und Wildnis) Caliban in Der Sturm (Mannes), creation Ebony Concerto (J. Cranko) Cambio d´abito (S. Sandroni), creation Debut 2009/2010 Zugvögel (J. Kylián), creation Debut 2010/2011 Detective in Série Noire - A choreographic murder mystery (T. Kohler) Pan in My Ravel: Daphnis and Chloé (T. Kohler) Tom thumb in Sleeping Beauty (M. Petipa, I. Liška) Gremio in The Taming of the Shrew (J. Cranko) Debut 2011/2012 Paco in Don Quijote (M. Petipa, new choreography by R. Barra, A. Gorski, Tradition) The Knifethrower in The Girl and the Knifethrower (S. Sandroni) 2. Pas de trois in Goldberg-Variationen (J. Robbins) Gods and Dogs (J. Kylián) Debut 2012/2013 Joker in Choreartium (L. Massine) 3. Solo-Boy in Choreartium (L. Massine) Birthday Offering (F. Ashton) Epimetheus in Helden (T. Kohler) |
Athena Parthenos |
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First Soloist Séverine Ferrolier, born in Toulon/France, was trained in the Centre de Danse Christiane Espitalier de La Valette. Having graduated, she danced with the ballet at the Opéra de Toulon, the Ballet National de Nancy under the direction of Pierre Lacotte and with the English National Ballet in London. Between 1997 and 2004 she was engaged at Leipzig Ballet under the direction of Uwe Scholz, since 2002 as a first soloist. Scholz created several parts for her, e.g. in Bruckner 8, Non, je ne regrette rien and h-Moll- Messe. She also danced Mathilde in Scholz' Le Rouge et le Noir. In 2004 she became a member of the Bavarian State Ballet, giving her debut with the company in George Balanchine's Brahms-Schoenberg Quartet during the company's guest performances in Athens in June. Her Munich repertoire includes the Lilac Fairy in Sleeping Beauty (M. Petipa/I. Liška), Olympia in Neumeier's Lady of the Camellias and prominent solo parts in Forsythe's Limb's Theorem. Debut 2005/2006 Die Nacht, Pavlova solo (N. Legat) Marschallin in Die silberne Rose (G.Murphy) First and third solo in Schattenakt in La Bayadère (P. Bart) Clémence in Raymonda (R. Barra) Pas de quatre (L. Jacobson) Debut 2006/2007 Second Pas de deux in Century Rolls (D. Bombana) Charlotte, fiancé of Prince Siegfried in Swan lake (R. Barra) Odaliske and Gulnara in Le Corsaire (M. Petipa, I. Liška) Debut 2007/2008 Miranda in Der Sturm (J. Mannes), creation Große Fuge (H. van Manen) Pas de deux in the fourth movement of Brahms-Schönberg-Quartett (G. Balanchine) Adagio Hammerklavier (H. van Manen) Violakonzert/II (M. Schläpfer), creation Aus Holbergs Zeit (J. Cranko) Debut 2008/2009 Mutter in A Cinderella Story (J. Neumeier) Woman in Blue in Les Biches (B. Nijinska) Aurora in Once Upon An Ever After (T. Kohler), creation Marguerite in Die Kameliendame (J. Neumeier) Zugvögel (J. Kylián), Kreation Henriette in Raymonda (M. Petipa) Debut 2010/2011 Bathilde, Myrtha in Gisella-Mats Ek (M.Ek) Ballerina in Série Noire - A choreographic murder mystery (T. Kohler) Pas de deux in Artifact (W. Forsythe) Woman 2 in My Ravel: Whichever Way he Looks... (J. Mannes) Lykanion in My Ravel: Daphnis and Chloé (T. Kohler) Lady of the Street in The Taming of the Shrew (J. Cranko) The Queen Mother in Illusions - Like Swan Lake (J. Neumeier) Dulcinea in Don Quijote (M. Petipa, new choreography by R. Barra, A. Gorski, Tradition) Debut 2011/2012 Nieves in Don Quijote (M. Petipa, new choreography by R. Barra, A. Gorski, Tradition) Five Brahms Waltzes In The Manner Of Isadora Duncan (F. Ashton) Debut 2012/2013 The Moor's wife in The Moor's Pavane (José Limón) Soloist 2. suit in Choreartium (L. Massine) Athena Parthenos in Heroes (T. Kohler) |
Pandora |
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Soloist Mai Kono, born in Japan, started her dance education at the Hitomi Kikuchi Ballet Studio, and completed it at the Heinz-Bosl-Stiftung in Munich. During her young career she already won different kind of dance awards, such as the NBA Ballet Competition of Japan 2004, the Saitama Dance Competition of Japan 2005 and in 2007 she received the audience award at the Prix de Lausanne. She was promoted to a Soloist at the beginning of the season 2011/12. Debut 2010/2011 Chloé in My Ravel: Daphnis and Chloé (T. Kohler) Fairy Variation and Princess Florine in Sleeping Beauty (M. Petipa, I. Liška) Amor in Don Quijote (M. Petipa, new choreography by R. Barra, A. Gorski, Tradition) Debut 2011/2012 Rocio in Don Quijote (M. Petipa, new choreography by R. Barra, A. Gorski, Tradition) "The Chinese Bird" in The Nutcracker (J. Neumeier) Debut 2012/2013 Gods and Dogs (J. Kylián) 5. Solo-Girl in Choreartium (L. Massine) Pandora in Helden (T. Kohler) |


