Continue without accepting

We respect your privacy

With your consent, we use cookies or similar technologies to store and access personal information such as your visit to this website. You can withdraw your consent or object to processin based on legitimate interest at any time by cliking on "Find out more" or in your privacy policy on this website.

Welcome to the Théâtre des Champs-Elysées website

The Théâtre des Champs-Elysées and its partners set cookies and use non-sensitive information from your device to improve our products and display personalized advertising and content. You can accept or refuse these different operations. To find out more about cookies, the data we use, the processing operations we carry out and the partners with whom we work, you can consult our cookies dedicated page.

    Calendar

    Lucas and Arthur Jussen | piano 

    We first met the Jussen brothers at a Sunday Morning Concert and they have now graduated to the evening recital schedule.

    Photo de Lucas et Arthur Jussen © Marco Borggreve
    Lucas et Arthur Jussen © Marco Borggreve

    Mendelssohn  Allegro brillant for piano four hands Op. 92
    Schubert  Fantaisie for piano four hands Op. 103 D. 940
    Ravel  La Valse, choreographic poem (version for two pianos)
    Stravinsky  The Rite of Spring (version for two pianos) 

    A “brillant” Opus 92 by Mendelssohn! But this is just a warm-up for Lucas and Arthur Jussen, who promise to offer us an evening of high emotional density and virtuosity. The Fantaisie which Schubert dedicated to Countess Caroline Esterházy in 1828, is metaphysical in a different way and explores the depths of the romantic soul. This makes way for dance. First of all in ¾ time with Ravel’s homage to Strauss’s Austria for Diaghilev’s Ballets russes. According to the composer, it was “a sort of apotheosis of the Viennese waltz, which merged in my mind with a fantastical and fatal whirlwind”. The Dutch performers will then take on the challenge of The Rite of Spring, which is etched in Théâtre des Champs-Elysées memory as it provoked outrage at its premiere on 29 May 1913.

    Production Jeanine Roze Production