LINCOLN CENTER
David Koch Theater
New York City Ballet
Midsummer Night's Dream
The pas de deux from the divertissement from the 2nd act...
The above video is why we want to see this ballet as often as possible.
"Behind an ivied curtain lies Shakespeare’s gossamer world of magic and merriment. A cherished springtime tradition, this bewitching tale entangles and enthralls with its feuding fairy kingdoms and quixotic lovers for the quintessential romantic comedy."
"Midsummer night has long been associated with love and magic. In European folklore it is the one night of the year when supernatural beings such as fairies are about and can interact with the real world. It is also a date that falls near the summer solstice, which was traditionally a time for fertility rites and festivals devoted to love. Shakespeare’s 1595 play has been the source for films, an opera by Benjamin Britten (1960), and a one-act ballet by Frederick Ashton, called The Dream (1964). George Balanchine’s version, which premiered in 1962, was the first wholly original evening-length ballet he choreographed in America. Two years later, on April 24, A Midsummer Night’s Dream opened the New York City Ballet’s first repertory season at the New York State Theater (now the David H. Koch Theater)."
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