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Oeuvre: Coppélia

Rechercher des événements de musique classique, opéra et ballet
Fichier de données
CompositeurDelibes, Léo (1836-1891)
ÉpoqueRomantique
Type d'œuvreDanse
Événements à venirEn voir plus...

BudapestLittle Coppélia

© No credit
Delibes: Coppélia
Dace Radina; Hungarian National Ballet; Hungarian National Ballet Institute; Nóra Rományi; Zsombor Czeglédi

PragueCoppélia

© Serghei Gherciu
Delibes: Coppélia
Ronald Hynd; Arthur Saint-Léon; Marius Petipa; The Czech National Ballet; Václav Zahradník; Roberta Guidi di Bagno

VilniusCoppélia

© Marijus Jacovkis
Delibes: Coppélia
Martynas Rimeikis; Lithuanian National Ballet; Ričardas Šumila; Modestas Barkauskas; Marijus Jacovskis; Elvita Brazdylytė
Critiques récentesEn voir plus...

BRB’s Sir Peter Wright Centenary: a fitting tribute

Sir Peter Wright Centenary with Birmingham Royal Ballet © Johan Persson
A splendid evening of celebration for Sir Peter Wright at the Birmingham Hippodrome focusing on excerpts from his own classical ballets and The Green Table by Kurt Jooss.

At NYCB, Fairchild bids adieu in her final performances of Coppélia

Megan Fairchild as Swanilda and Robert La Fosse as Dr Coppélius in Balanchine’s Coppélia © Erin Baiano
Megan Fairchild pours her heart into her final performances of Coppélia at New York City Ballet.

ENBS Summer Performance highlights versatility and technical skill

English National Ballet School in Graduation Ball © Pierre Tappon
English National Ballet School presented a full summer programme with excerpts from traditional ballets and new works showing the technical proficiency of the students as they aim for jobs in the profession.
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Bachtrack top ten: ETA Hoffmann

Self-portrait of ETA Hoffmann © Public domain
Mark and Elisabeth travel to the sinister worlds of singing automata and seven-headed mouse kings to bring you the best works inspired – and composed – by ETA Hoffmann.

Sugar-coating the sinister: ETA Hoffmann at the ballet

Nußknacker und Mausekönig, illustrated copper plates after original drawings by P. C. Geißler © Staatsbibliothek Bamberg (CC BY-SA 4.0)
Jenifer Sarver looks at the disturbing short stories, which, ironically, inspired two of the lightest confections of the ballet repertoire: The Nutcracker and Coppélia.