Product Details
The Royal Ballet [1960] [DVD]

The Royal Ballet [1960] [DVD]
Directed by Paul Czinner

List Price: £9.99
Price: £7.48 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Delivery on orders over £5. Details

Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours
Dispatched from and sold by Amazon.co.uk

11 new or used available from £2.98

Average customer review:

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #10768 in DVD
  • Released on: 2007-03-26
  • Rating: Exempt
  • Format: PAL
  • Original language: English
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Running time: 128 minutes

Editorial Reviews

Synopsis
A set of great moments from the Royal Ballet, including excerpts from famous performances of 'The Nutcracker', 'Romeo and Juliet', and others.


Customer Reviews

Magnificent Documentary of Margot Fonteyn5
Paul Czinner was a visionary film maker who preserved a number of great historic performances. Among them are Furtwangler's Don Giovanni at Salzburg with Cesare Siepi and Elisabeth Grummer, Elisabeth Schwarzkopf's Marschallin in Der Rosenkavalier, an abridged Bolshoi Giselle with Galina Ulanova, and in this worthy company, Margot Fonteyn in The Royal Ballet.

Czinner invented an effective method for filming stage performances. Here he captures the pre-Rudi Fonteyn, lovely, creamy and with enough moist, bloom of youth for close and intimate shots. While the film is called The Royal Ballet, it's really a Fonteyn extravaganza.

There are three balletic excerpts that all feature Margot Fonteyn. In the Daneman biography "Margot", we learn that Fonteyn was closely identified with Ondine, but The Firebird should have gone to Nerina, whose "spectacular attack and ballon cast her as an obvious Firebird." Beriosova was an acclaimed and legendary Odette, but was overlooked. Sadly, there are almost no commercial films available of Beriosova's dancing.

Fonteyn is stunning, though, in Swan Lake. Her acting abilities and velvety power are mesmerizing in a gorgeous Act II, where she is partnered by the blandly handsome Michael Somes. However, she's not quite Firebird material. A bit too proper and ladylike to be believable as the mythological beast, even her costume seems to overpower her refined daintiness. But I love it anyway, although Nina Ananiashvilli has much more of the wild and sexual animal in her than Fonteyn could ever hope to muster on stage.

Ondine, written for Fonteyn by Sir Frederick Ashton, is a perfect vehicle for her gifts. She's at her best as the vulnerable nymph who emerges from the waterfall. The story is pretty dumb, and the ballet is too long, but it is a masterpiece nonetheless thanks to Fonteyn's silky eroticism and the spectacular dancing of the great Alexander Grant, considered the finest male dancer to emerge from The Royal Ballet. As brilliant a dancer as he was, it's tragic how few documents one can find of his dancing. He is featured, though, in the marvelous Sleeping Beauty telecast for NBC. In that performance he dances one of the Three Ivans. There, his power, grace and charisma are the high point in a ballet filled with high points. Here, in Ondine he dances the Sea King with such drama and intensity that he steals every scene.

This is a museum-quality document of an historic period of dance that will never be duplicated. Margot Fonteyn was the jewel around which de Valois built the Royal Ballet. Here in her prime, before Nureyev, we can see why she was worshipped as an immortal icon of dance. Later on, Czinner would make another film with her, a Romeo and Juliet with Nureyev. By this time the bloom is off the rose and in spite of critical praise for what was seen as her instant transformation into a teenager, I find her Juliet just too painful to watch. In this film, we have to thank Czinner in whatever world he's in now, for preserving a youthful, sensuous and unforgettable Margot. I hope this film will one day get transferred to an NTSC format and released in North America. It's a masterpiece.

'The Royal Ballet' with Margot Fonteyn and Michael Somes1
Excellent archive footage with excerpts from Swan Lake and more or less complete ballets for The Firebird and Ondine. Exquisitely filmed and showing Margot Fonteyn at her very best. Watch out for Somes 'supporting' in a pirouette spin with a single hand .. her balance rock solid !
Definitely a MUST AT THIS PRICE

Margot Fonteyn at her best4
This is a brilliant display of artistry by Margot Fonteyn at her peak. In particular in Ondine, a new ballet created for her, she shows both an exceptional technique and superb musicality. My only criticism is the title of the disc. It is not really about the Royal Ballet as a whole but a tribute to Fonteyn. I would have expected a disc with the title "Royal Ballet" to feature several more of their top artists even though of course Fonteyn was by far their undisputed Prima Ballerina Assoluta.