Premiere of Darius Milhaud's ballet staged by Jean Cocteau – 21 February 1920, Théâtre des Champs Élysées, Paris
Premiere with choreography by Vladimir Varnava – 29 December 2020, Mariinsky Theatre
Running time: 20 minutes
In this ballet by Vladimir Varnava, the audience may expect to see dances of death on the stage. The music which provided the basis for the ballet was written by Darius Milhaud while under impressions from his travels in Brazil, and the idea to stage the production came to Vladimir Varnava in Mexico, where he was stunned by the local people's attitude to death – that being much brighter and happier than in our own Christian tradition. The choreographer envisaged depicting a carnival in Hell in his ballet, where fiends and people dance, and even unsmiling Death itself joins in, unable to resist the universal merriment. Regardless of the extravagant nature of the plot, the choreographer says that he does not plan to take members of the audience out of their comfort zone with this production: his aim is to discover an interesting synthesis of music and dance. "In Milhaud's work there is a surprising combination of the complex and the comprehensible, of classical and folk music," Varnava says. "I discovered this when I was working on the ballet Clay, which I staged to the music of Milhaud's La Création du monde which deals with the beginnings of life. In Le Bœuf sur le toit the reverse is true – here I am depicting what happens after life ends. They are two independent ballets, but for me they are to be seen as a single whole."
The highlighting of performances by age represents recommendations.
This highlighting is being used in accordance with Federal Law N436-FZ dated 29 December 2010 (edition dated 1 May 2019) "On the protection of children from information that may be harmful to their health"