Dancing Diana.It was inevitable that the story of Diana, ill-fated Princess of Wales Noun 1. Princess of Wales - English aristocrat who was the first wife of Prince Charles; her death in an automobile accident in Paris produced intense national mourning (1961-1997) Diana, Lady Diana Frances Spencer, Princess Diana , would one day become the subject of a motion picture or even a musical. Few people would have guessed that there would also be a ballet, but Danish audiences are currently enjoying the antics of Diana, Dodi Al-Fayed Emad El-Din Mohamed Abdel Moneim Fayed (Arabic: عماد الدين محمد عبد المنعم الفايد , and the members of the House of Windsor Noun 1. House of Windsor - the British royal family since 1917 Windsor dynasty - a sequence of powerful leaders in the same family Duke of Windsor, Edward, Edward VIII - King of England and Ireland in 1936; his marriage to Wallis Warfield Simpson in a new full-length ballet by Peter Schaufuss. Negotiations are underway to take the glamorous pointe-work tragedy to London for an extended run in a West End theater. "Creating Diana--The Princess was as big a challenge to me as an artist as anything else I've ever done," says Schaufuss about his work, which he realizes "is a very sensitive subject" and which he would characterize as a modern ballet. "I would never have faced this tremendous challenge had I not known the person behind Princess Diana Noun 1. Princess Diana - English aristocrat who was the first wife of Prince Charles; her death in an automobile accident in Paris produced intense national mourning (1961-1997) Diana, Lady Diana Frances Spencer, Princess of Wales to the extent that I did, and I am proud that the ballet has become such a success and generated international attention." Schaufuss, 54, first met Princess Diana in 1986 and, as artistic director of English National Ballet English National Ballet, founded in 1950 as the "Festival Ballet" inspired by the then imminent Festival of Britain, is one of the leading ballet companies in the United Kingdom founded by Alicia Markova and Anton Dolin, with the financial backing of Polish impresario Julian , later came to work with her when she became that company's patron. Since the 1970s and '80s, when he electrified audiences in Europe and the United States with his virtuoso dancing, considerable charm, and traditional Danish knack for dramatic interpretation, Schaufuss has proven himself an enterprising person with many unexpected talents. After hosting a four-part BBC BBC in full British Broadcasting Corp. Publicly financed broadcasting system in Britain. A private company at its founding in 1922, it was replaced by a public corporation under royal charter in 1927. documentary series about male dancing called Dancer in 1984, Schaufuss became something of a popular celebrity in the United Kingdom; in turn he directed the English National Ballet, the Ballet of the DeutscheOper in Berlin, and finally his alma mater, the Royal Danish Ballet Royal Danish Ballet, one of the oldest major ballet companies, established at the opening of Denmark's Royal Theater in Copenhagen in 1748. The company was developed over the centuries by three great masters. . He has created controversial versions of La Sylphide, Swan Lake, The Sleeping Beauty Sleeping Beauty sleeps for 100 years. [Fr. Fairy Tale, The Sleeping Beauty] See : Enchantment Sleeping Beauty enchanted heroine awakened from century of slumber by prince’s kiss. , and The Nutcracker. In 1997 he formed his own company, the Peter Schaufuss Ballet, which is based in the small town of Holstebro in one of Denmark's northern provinces and which tours the country extensively. He describes its genesis as a turning point. "I had had enough of running state companies. I was excited by the job when I was first with English National Ballet but later came to suffer from the limitations of working in opera house institutions. I enjoy the creative freedom I have now and my interaction with the dancers, and I am proud of what we have accomplished so far, establishing a school and a company and building a real audience for ballet where there was none." The Peter Schaufuss Ballet is funded not only by the borough of Holstebro and the county of Ringkjobing but by the state of Denmark, and gives more than 100 performances a year with total audiences numbering more than 100,000. Remarkably, those attendance figures are very close to those of the Royal Danish Ballet, based in Copenhagen, but Schaufuss feels that audiences for the two companies are probably not identical. Schaufuss has created thirteen full-length ballets for his twenty-member company in the past five years and has developed a particular type of ballet he has dubbed "dancicals," based on popular icons, films, or ballet classics. Schaufuss has put Elvis Presley (The King), The Beatles, the movie Midnight Express, and Romeo and Juliet Romeo and Juliet star-crossed lovers die as teenagers. [Br. Lit.: Romeo and Juliet] See : Death, Premature Romeo and Juliet archetypal star-crossed lovers. [Br. Lit. and Hamlet onstage, and told stories of isolation and loneliness and the price of fame. Schaufuss's plans for the future include a centenary tribute to Sir Frederick Ashton Noun 1. Sir Frederick Ashton - British choreographer (1906-1988) Ashton in 2004: "Something special, something a little out of the ordinary, just like our school is now doing Nursery Suite," he promises. "It's a masterpiece, but it's not seen anywhere else any more and that's a great shame. Ashton meant a lot to me as a person and I appreciate his work." |
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