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Ballet by John Neumeier

Third Symphony of Gustav Mahler

Like Mahler's music, the ballet was not created according to a Libretto. The music itself is its theme. The following is therefore not a literal synopsis. These word-images are John Neumeier's spontaneous answers to the question of meaning in his ballet—written long after its creation.


Music: Gustav Mahler
Choreography, Set, Costumes and Lighting Concept: John Neumeier

2 hours | no intermission

WORLD PREMIERE:
The Hamburg Ballet, Hamburg, June 14, 1975

ORIGINAL CAST:
Mariana Eglevsky
Marianne Kruuse
Magali Messac
Zhandra Rodriguez
Persephone Samaropoulo

Salvatore Aiello
Truman Finney (for Maximo Barra)
Fred Howald
François Klaus
Tomislav Vukovic

ON TOUR:
1975 Venice, Stuttgart, Frankfurt-Hoechst, Luxemburg 1976 Paris, Tel Aviv, Jerusalem 1977 Gdánsk, Vienna Berlin, Brussels 1978 Helsinki, Leverkusen 1980 Bremerhaven, Ludwigshafen 1981 Dresden, Munich, São Paulo, Rio de Janeiro, Buenos Aires 1983 New York 1984 Toronto, Montreal, Chicago (Ravinia Festival) 1985 New York 1986 Tokyo, Nagoya, Osaka, Kyoto, Fukuoka, Budapest 1987 Lausanne, Marseille, Paris, Berlin, Leipzig 1988 Milwaukee, Barcelona 1989 Athens 2003 Baden-Baden 2012 Beijing, Hongkong 2014 Chicago 2015 Venice 2016 Chicago 2017 Florence

IM REPERTOIRE:
Ballet de l'Opéra National de Paris
Royal Danish Ballet
Royal Swedish Ballet

The program is available in our online shop

[Read more]
I—Yesterday
"And all our yesterdays have lighted fools The way to dusty death"
William Shakespeare, "Macbeth"

The following is not a literal synopsis. These word-images are John Neumeier's answers to the question of meaning in his ballet—written long after its creation.

Silence. The movement begins with lifeless nature. Stones? Trees?
The earth’s vibrations move and shape nature. Man—earth bound—senses rumblings of aggression and the seductive march rhythm is born.
Intimations of latent destruction.
The march towards violence and war cannot be held back.
But, there are also anima sounds—a breath lifting man off the earth. The soul.
The central figure senses contrary forces within himself—a journey of experience begins.



II—Summer

Flowers on a field of war.
The central figure is moved by their pure beauty. They inspire his dreams yet remain distant. Floral beauty may touch our emotions but cannot fulfill physical desire.



III—Autumn

People. Fragments of loving relationships—human warmth during the chill season of farewells. Longing for new beginnings—for a touch. The ghosts of lovers constantly parting introduce the theme of death.



IV—Night

Recovering from the experience of death we carry on—we carry each other.
This movement is dedicated to the memory of John Cranko and his company



V—Angel

The purity of a child speaks—like an angel, moving with transparent power—direct and aspiring. This song is an overture to the last movement of the symphony.



VI—What Love tells me

People reach towards each other—meet, touch, and desperately embrace.
The desire to connect bends their bodies. Brief encounters constantly collapse.

Touched by the Angel of the fifth movement, the central figure experiences an intense but fleeting relationship. Although their meeting is transient, the spirit of pure love colours his world. Moving towards love remains his ultimate journey.

John Neumeier

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