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Marina Viotti | Anna I Judith Chemla | Anna II and narrator Yoann Le Lan | A brother Alban Legos | The father Victor Sicard | Another brother Jérôme Varnier | The mother
Marc Leroy-Calatayud | artistic conception and direction Laurent Delvert | artistic collaboration l’Orchestre de Chambre de Genève
Première partie Anna Kurt WeillYoukali [Judith Chemla] Charles IvesHymn for strings Aslı ErdoğanRequiem pour une ville perdue [extrait lu par Judith Chemla] Aaron CoplandZion’s walls [Marina Viotti] Aslı ErdoğanRequiem pour une ville perdue [extrait lu par Judith Chemla] Aaron Copland Music for movies : V. Threshing machines Aslı ErdoğanLe Mandarin Miraculeux [extrait lu par Judith Chemla et Marina Viotti] Kurt Weill Je ne t’aime pas [Judith Chemla] Charles IvesThree Places in New England : II. Putnam’s Camp near Redding, Connecticut Joseph Edgar Howard/Ida EmersonHello my baby Aslı ErdoğanLe Silence même n’est plus à toi [extrait lu par Judith Chemla] Aaron CoplandSimple gifts [Marina Viotti] Kurt WeillNannas Lied [Judith Chemla] Aslı ErdoğanLe Silence même n’est plus à toi [extrait lu par Judith Chemla] Deuxième partie Kurt Weill Die Sieben Todsünden Les Sept péchés capitaux 1. Prolog (Prologue) - 2. Faulheit (La paresse ) - 3. Stolz (L’orgueil ) - 4. Zorn (La colère) - 5. Völlerei (La gourmandise) - 6. Unzucht (La luxure) - 7. Habsucht (L’avarice) - 8. Neid (L’envie) - 9. Epilog (Epilogue)
After being banned from involvement in any form of musical activity under the Nazi regime, Kurt Weill moved to Paris in 1933. Shortly after his arrival, Boris Kochno, co-director of the Ballets 33 company alongside a young Balanchine, commissioned a ballet from him. Weill initially considered working with Cocteau, but eventually joined forces with Bertolt Brecht, with whom he had fallen out several years previously, on what would be their last collaboration. An unflinching indictment of a society in decline, this work is divided into seven sequences featuring a waltz, foxtrot, march, tarantella and a male vocal quartet. This parable of social dualism (authoritarianism versus anarchy) is embodied by the female character, Anna I, and her dancing doppelganger Anna II. In a combination of part-spoken and part-sung banter, and choral song in the pure Lutheran tradition, Kurt Weill explores the full spectrum of a musical piece which is riddled with instability to echo the society he is depicting.
Coproduction Théâtre des Champs-Elysées | L’Orchestre de Chambre de Genève
La collaboration entre le compositeur Kurt Weill et le dramaturge Bertolt Brecht dura tout juste six ans (1927-1933) mais fut l’une des plus fécondes dans l’histoire du théâtre musical au XXe siècle.