Orphee et Eurydice (recorded at the Palais Garnier February 2008)

Orphee et Eurydice (recorded at the Palais Garnier February 2008) cover $70.00 Out of Stock
2-4 weeks
add to cart

GLUCK
Orphee et Eurydice (recorded at the Palais Garnier February 2008)
Paris Opera Ballet / Maria Riccarda Wesseling / Julia Kleiter / Sunhae Im / Agnes Gillot / Yann Bridard / Thomas Hengelbrock (cond)

[ Bel Air Classiques DVD / DVD ]

Release Date: Monday 20 February 2012

This item is currently out of stock. We expect to be able to supply it to you within 2 - 4 weeks from when you place your order.

Filmed in HD at the Palais Garnier February 2008 Orpheus and Eurydice is Pina Bausch's masterpiece and the ultimate symbol of the genius of this German choreographer, who died last June, five days after being diagnosed with cancer. Bausch was the artistic director of the Tanztheater Wuppertal, which she founded in 1973. She had a formidable international reputation as one of modern dance's greatest innovators. Her dance-theatre works include the melancholic Café Müller (1978), in which dancers stumble around the stage crashing into tables and chairs, and a thrilling Rite of Spring (1975), which required the stage to be completely covered with soil. Excerpts from Bausch's Café Müller and another of her works, Masurca Fogo, reached a wider audience when they were featured in Pedro Almodóvar's film Talk to Her (2002). Bausch also appeared in Federico Fellini's 1983 film And the Ship Sails On. In recent months, she had been preparing a 3-D cinema project with Wim Wenders; shooting was slated to commence in September. Bausch continued to perform as a dancer throughout her 60s. Her company last visited the UK in 2008 for a sold-out series of performances, drawing long queues for returns at Sadler's Wells in London.

Choreography and Stage Direction: Pina Bausch

Set, costume and lighting designs: Rolf Borzik

Color, 16/9, NTSC - PCM STEREO, DOLBY

DIGITAL 5.1, DTS 5.1

"Even though I'm a bit allergic to Bausch's brand of Teutonic gloom, I can't deny that this has a rare emotional intensity which grows out of the music." (Daily Telegraph)

Guardian critic Judith Mackrell gave the show a five-star review, praising Bausch's ability to "combine movement of shocking visceral intensity with stage visions of often hallucinogenic strangeness".

"She was an artist of the kind that the world is only blessed with from time to time. Her repertoire of works has inspired generations of audiences and artists with an impact that is hard to overestimate." Alistair Spalding, artistic director, Sadler's Wells