Shanghai Oriental Art Center tickets 15 November 2024 - Anna Karenina. Performed by Boris Eifman ballet | GoComGo.com

Anna Karenina. Performed by Boris Eifman ballet

Shanghai Oriental Art Center, Opera Hall, Shanghai, China
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7:15 PM

E-tickets: Print at home or at the box office of the event if so specified. You will find more information in your booking confirmation email.

You can only select the category, and not the exact seats.
If you order 2 or 3 tickets: your seats will be next to each other.
If you order 4 or more tickets: your seats will be next to each other, or, if this is not possible, we will provide a combination of groups of seats (at least in pairs, for example 2+2 or 2+3).

Important Info
Type: Modern Ballet
City: Shanghai, China
Starts at: 19:15
Acts: 2
Intervals: 1
Duration: 2h

E-tickets: Print at home or at the box office of the event if so specified. You will find more information in your booking confirmation email.

You can only select the category, and not the exact seats.
If you order 2 or 3 tickets: your seats will be next to each other.
If you order 4 or more tickets: your seats will be next to each other, or, if this is not possible, we will provide a combination of groups of seats (at least in pairs, for example 2+2 or 2+3).

Cast
Performers
Creators
Composer: Pyotr Tchaikovsky
Choreography: Boris Eifman
Writer: Leo Tolstoy
Overview

Boris Eifman’s ballet Anna Karenina is a true burst of inner psychological energy and is amazingly precise in delivering emotional impact upon its viewers. By setting aside all secondary storylines in Leo Tolstoy’s novel, the choreographer focused on the love triangle Anna – Karenin – Vronsky.

Using dance language, Boris Eifman in his ballet managed to portray the drama of a woman being reborn. According to the choreographer, it is the love passion, the “basic instinct” which has led the heroine to the breach of the then current norms of social morality, killed motherly love in Anna Karenina and destroyed her inner world. Being so completely consumed and crushed by passion, a woman is ready for any sacrifice.

The choreographer says that his ballet speaks not of previous times but of today: the timeless emotional content of the performance and obvious parallels to reality can’t leave the contemporary viewer indifferent. The brilliant technical mastery of the company’s dancers and Boris Eifman’s astounding choreography present to us in a remarkably impressive way all the aspects and peripeteias of the Tolstoy’s novel.

Boris Eifman

The founder of the Eifman Ballet, he created his own unique ballet style and ballet world, and is known as "one of the world's important choreographers" and "a master of dramatic magic."

Born in Siberia in 1946, Eifman has been expressing his feelings and thoughts through body language in dance since childhood. He once said: "Ballet is not only a profession for me, it is the meaning of my existence and my mission in this world. I can't help but want to use ballet to convey the inspiration I get from the heights. Most likely, if I don't have the possibility to express them through art, I will stifle these emotions. For me, choreography is an art with a profound religious color in the broadest sense."

After completing his studies at the Leningrad Conservatory and the Vaganova Ballet School, Eifman founded his own ballet company, the Leningrad New Ballet, in 1977, the predecessor of today's famous St. Petersburg Eifman Ballet. He and his dancers not only had a solid foundation in classical ballet, but also continued to innovate and enrich the ballet language, and were soon regarded as the backbone of the new generation of Russian ballet.

Eifman combines his cutting-edge achievements in the world of ballet with his original Russian classical ballet background. He defines his dance style as "psychological ballet". "All my dance creations are about seeking a broader space for ballet and a body language that can express the spiritual life of human beings."

St. Petersburg Eifman Ballet

In 1977, Boris Eifman founded the St. Petersburg Eifman Ballet (formerly known as the Leningrad New Ballet), and began a new artistic exploration. Since its inception, the company's artistic creation has updated the concept of Russian classical ballet, pushing the emotional expression and dramatic conflict of ballet to the limit, and is regarded as a choreographer's ballet theater.

The innovation of Eifman's ballets lies in his choice of literature and music, as well as the boldness of his body movement vocabulary, which earned him a reputation as an "unconventional choreographer".

From the late 1970s to the early 1980s, the company's unique style of work gradually took shape, with more and more repertoires based on the world's classical literary treasures. Eifman worked closely with his company, and with his unique style that not only maintained the rigorous norms of the Russian ballet school, but also was skilled in technique and lyrical, and combined it with the expression of film, he shocked every audience. The company explored new dance schools and development trends, and new works included "Defiance", "Fools", "March Madness", "The Marriage of Figaro", "Legend", "Twelfth Night", "The Master and Margherita", "The Murderer", etc., all of which featured elite choreography, interpreted the passion of ballet characters, and had extremely high artistic attainments.

Today, the works of the Efman Ballet have been embraced and praised by ballet lovers from Europe, America, Asia and Australia: "I, Don Quixote", "Red Giselle", "Russian Hamlet", "Anna Karenina", "The Seagull", "Eugene Onegin", "Rodin - The Eternal Idol", "The Brothers Karamazov", "Requiem", "Tender Is the Night", "Tchaikovsky" and other ballet works not only show the highest level of contemporary Russian ballet art, but also contain Russia's immortal spiritual heritage and the wisdom of world culture. The Efman Ballet continues to interpret the connotation of culture in an innovative way, leading the audience into an elegant art world.

For decades, the Eifman Ballet has achieved great success in the world's top theaters. Eifman's profound understanding and revelation of human nature and his interpretation of intricate and sharp contradictions immerse the audience in the boundless world of human passion. He has established a strong spiritual bond and demonstrated a choreographer's unique view of dance and his talent in controlling dance through his plasticity and amazing, just-right energy.

“Ballet is a very specific realm where psychological drama is reenacted and fulfilled; it is a chance to get an insight into the subconscious. Every new production is a search for the unknown.

The Anna Karenina novel by Tolstoy has always been the object of my keen interest. While reading Tolstoy, one can see how fully and intimately the author understands the inner world and psychology of his heroes, how keenly and precisely describes he the life in Russia. In the novel one will find a plunge into the psychological world of the chief character and also a psycho-erotic interpretation of her personality. Even in our contemporary literature we won’t find similar passions, metamorphoses and phantasmagoria. All this has become the gist and essence of my choreographic reflections upon the book.

The measured, regular life of the Karenin family – the husband’s public service, the strict high society conventions – produced an illusion that harmony and peace reign there. Anna’s passionate love for Vronsky destroyed the “matter of course” in their existence. Sincerity of the lovers’ feelings was doubted and rejected, their frankness was afraid of. Karenin’s hypocrisy was acceptable to everyone but Anna. She preferred the all-absorbing love for Vronsky to mother’s duties regarding her son. And thus she doomed herself to lead the life of an outcast. She saw no pleasure in traveling or in habitual high society entertainments. There was a feeling that a woman is tragically constrained by sensual relationships with a man. This sort of dependence – as any other one – brings pain and suffering. Anna committed suicide to set herself free, to end her dreadful and agonizing life.

For me Anna was sort of a “shape shifter” because two persons lived within her: externally she was a high society lady known to her husband Karenin, to her son and to everyone around. The other one was a woman immersed into the world of passions. 

What is a more important goal in life: to maintain the conventional illusion of existing harmony between duty and feelings, or surrender to a sincere passion?.. Do we have a right to destroy our family, to deprive a child of his mother’s care just for the sake of what our flesh lusts for?..

All these questions haunted Tolstoy in his times, and we can’t avoid thinking them over again and again today. But answers are still far-off! What remains there is only our thirst for being understood both in our life and death…”

Boris Eifman

History

“Anna Karenina” - a ballet to the music of Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky based on the novel by Leo Tolstoy “Anna Karenina”, staged by choreographers Andre Prokovsky (1979) and Boris Eifman (2005, in the film version in 2010).

 

Synopsis

Act I

The scene opens with Anna Karenina in the heart of her family in St. Petersburg.
At a high society ball, Anna meets a dashing young officer Count Vronsky.
In the Karenin household there is marital discord.
Anna and Vronsky meet again at the horse races, they fall deeply in love.
Anna’s life becomes difficult as rumours and gossip starts to spread about the Karenin’s relationship.
At a long-awaited assignation passion overcomes the lovers’ rational thoughts.
After a confrontation with Karenin Anna is overcome with dark thoughts foreboding.
The married couple makes a reconciliation.

Act II

Vronsky is at his officers club.
Following a meeting at the Karenins` home. Anna leaves her husband.
At a Carnival in Venice. The affection between Anna and Vronsky begins to break down
In St. Petersburg high society turns its back on Anna. She becomes shunned and isolated.
In an opium induced state of mind, Anna is in the grip of visions and fantasies.
Final despair. Anna’s suicide.

Venue Info

Shanghai Oriental Art Center - Shanghai
Location   425 Dingxiang Lu, near Century Blvd

The Shanghai Oriental Art Center is one of the leading performance and cultural facilities in Shanghai. The five interconnected hemispherical halls or "petals" are shaped to resemble a butterfly orchid from above. They comprise the Entrance Hall, the Concert Hall, the Opera Hall, the Performance Hall, and the Exhibition Hall. The high-tech ceiling changes color during the night to reflect the nature of the performances inside. Located off Century Avenue in Pudong, the SHOAC was opened with a New Year's Eve concert in 2004 and officially opened on July 1, 2005.

Various cultural and musical performances are held in the center, beginning from the 2005 Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra Shanghai Concert. It's a regular venue for concert performances and its popular "Chinese Traditional Opera Series" hosts performances by the China National Opera, the Shanghai Jingju Theatre Company and Shanghai Kunqu Company, and the Shanghai Yueju Opera Troupe. The OAC's Saturday Brunch Concerts claim audiences of over 100 000 every year.

The building was designed by French architect Paul Andreu and the Huadong Architectural Design & Research Institute. The façades are mainly laminated glass incorporating perforated metal sheets. The dark granite floors and multi-layered glass screen walls aim to create a softly diffused forest floor effect. The separate "petals" of the construction are hung with large distinctly colored pebbles to differentiate them. The backstage facilities include an Orchestra Rehearsal Hall, Choir Rehearsal Hall, Dance Rehearsal Hall, and Integrated Rehearsal Hall.

Concert Hall
The Concert Hall has 1953 seats, a computer-controlled elevating stage, and an 88-diapason 5-layer organ by Austria's Rieger Pipe Organ. It houses 2 VIP and 7 regular dressing rooms.

Opera Hall
The Opera Hall has 1015 seats, divided into three areas and designed to recreate the intimate experience of Italian opera houses. The orchestra pit is 120 m2 and able to accommodate up to 100 musicians. The central stage provides computer-controlled side, ice, and ballet platforms in addition to the main large-scale platform. It houses 2 VIP and 15 common dressing rooms.

Performance Hall
The Performance Hall has 333 seats and is modeled on semicircular Roman theaters. Its performance floor is golden Swiss pearwood. It has 4 dressing rooms.

Exhibition Hall
The Exhibition Hall is located on the second floor of its petal of the Oriental Art Center. It covers 250 m2 and has 9.8-meter  high walls.

Other facilities
The venue also features ancillary public facilities, including the 100-seat Paris Shanghai French restaurant open daily for lunch and dinner, the 530-square-meter (5,700 sq ft) Café Salon Etoile and an adjacent gift store, and 11 piano training classrooms. The Shanghai Gallery of Antique Music Boxes and Automata is located at the SHOAC, displaying over 200 antique music boxes and European automata, including the oldest extant music box in the world, constructed in 1796 by Antoine Favre-Salomon.

Important Info
Type: Modern Ballet
City: Shanghai, China
Starts at: 19:15
Acts: 2
Intervals: 1
Duration: 2h
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