The stone flower / music by Sergei Prokofiev ; director Valery Gorbatsevich ; choreography: Yuri Grigorovich ; Bolshoi Ballet; Bolshoi Theater Orchestra ; Alexander Kopilov, Conductor
Material type:
FilmPublisher number: 4411 | VAIPublisher: New York : Video Artists International, 2007Description: 1 videodisc (DVD) (111 min): color, so; 19 cmContent type: - imatge en moviment bidimensional
- vídeo
- videodisc
- Skaz o kammenom tsvetke Coreografia
- Anyuta (Coreografia: Vasiliev)
- Produced by Literature and Drama Department of Gosteleradio, 1979
| Item type | Current library | Home library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Vídeo | Biblioteca Barcelona | Biblioteca Barcelona BCN Vídeo | V-DB FLO (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 1900089587 |
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Format de pantalla (4:3)
Inclou un bonus: Pas de Deux from Anyuta / music by Valery Cavrilin ; choreography by Vladimir Vasiliev ; danced by Ekaterina Maximova and Marat Daukayev ; produced by Lenfilm for Gosteleradio, 1982
Produced by Literature and Drama Department of Gosteleradio, 1979
Repartiment: Ekaterina Maximova (Katerina), Vladimimr Vasiliev (Danila), Svetlana Adirkhaeva (The Mistress of the Copper mountain), Vladimir Levashov (Severyan)
Enregistrat al Moscow's Bolshoi Theater el 1979
"In 1959, Yuri Grigorovich recreated his successful 1957 Kirov staging of The Stone Flower for the Bolshoi Ballet. The new version became the acclaimed centerpiece of the Bolshoi's first U.S. tour in that same year, featuring the stars of the premiere, Vladimir Vasiliev and Ekaterina Maximova as the lovers Danila and Katerina. Set to Prokofiev's last score for the ballet, The Stone Flower is regarded by Russian dancers, choreographers and critics as one of the greatest of Russian ballets. The compelling libretto, set by the composer's wife, derives from the book The Malachite Casket by P. Bazhov who based his stories on miners' tales from the Ural Mountains. In 1979, Maximova and Vasiliev were reunited for a gala performance at Moscow's Bolshoi Theater"--Contenidor
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