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Le Bal

Theatre Costume
circa 1929 (designed)
Artist/Maker

Jacket of costume designed by Giorgio de Chirico for Serge Lifar in the Italian entrée in the Ballets Russes’ production of Le Bal, 1929, a duet he originally performed with Eugenie Lipovska. It was a dance in which as the critic of the Daily Telegraph wrote ‘M. Lifar is full of life of the vigorous kind in which that dancer excels’. The costumes of the Spanish and Italian divertissements picked up on national characteristics, here peasants dancing a tarantella. Lifar’s costume was completed with breeches white stockings with a cross-gartered detail, dark (black?) shoes a virtically striped undershirt and red head scarf.
Le Bal (The Ball), a modern ballet in one act and two scenes had sets and costumes designed Giorgio de Chirico, was created for Serge Diaghilev’s Ballets Russes at the Théâtre de Monte Carlo on 7 May 1929. The musical score was by Vittorio Rieti, the narrative by Boris Kochno, after a story by Count Vladimir Sologub, and it was choreographed in 1929 by George Balanchine. The costumes executed under the direction of Mme A. Youkine. The original ballet had 15 performances being presented only during the last season of Serge Diaghilev’s Ballets Russes in Monte Carlo, Paris, Berlin and London where it was first performed on 26 July 1929 also at the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden, London. When Massine created a new version of the ballet in 1935 using the original score, sets and costumes the Italian entrée was danced by Paul Petroff with Tamara Toumanova.


Object details

Categories
Object type
Parts
This object consists of 2 parts.
(Some alternative part names are also shown below)
  • Theatre Costume
  • Dance Costume
  • Jacket
  • Theatre Costume
  • Dance Costume
  • Breeches
TitleLe Bal (generic title)
Materials and techniques
Brief description
Costume for the Italian Boy in Balanchine's ballet Le Bal, designed by Giorgio de Chirico, Diaghilev Ballet 1929.
Physical description
Costume for the Italian Divertissement from the Ballets Russes production of Le Bal 1929.

Long cutaway jacket of white wool repp decorated front and back with bold elongated scrolls of black braid. The collar and long, deliberately distressed sleeves are of black silk. On the shoulders are padded upstanding sky-blue 'epaulettes'.
Knee-length breeches of bistre yellow wool trimmed at the knees with brown turnups.
Dimensions
  • Jacket, collar to hem length: 63cm
  • Jacket, shoulder width width: 49cm
  • Breeches, waist to hem length: 57cm
  • Breeches, width width: 41cm
  • Packed weight of object weight: 1kg
Object history
Jacket sold as Lot 102 at Sale of Costumes and Curtains from Diaghilev and de Basil Ballets at the Scala Theatre, London by Sotheby & Co 17 July 1968 purchased by Richard Buckle for £40 for the Friends of the Museum of Performance. Note there were no breeches with this jacket but they may have come from lot 96 which included Knee-length trousers in ochre cotton trimmed at the knee with brown turn-ups.
Literary referenceLe Bal
Summary
Jacket of costume designed by Giorgio de Chirico for Serge Lifar in the Italian entrée in the Ballets Russes’ production of Le Bal, 1929, a duet he originally performed with Eugenie Lipovska. It was a dance in which as the critic of the Daily Telegraph wrote ‘M. Lifar is full of life of the vigorous kind in which that dancer excels’. The costumes of the Spanish and Italian divertissements picked up on national characteristics, here peasants dancing a tarantella. Lifar’s costume was completed with breeches white stockings with a cross-gartered detail, dark (black?) shoes a virtically striped undershirt and red head scarf.
Le Bal (The Ball), a modern ballet in one act and two scenes had sets and costumes designed Giorgio de Chirico, was created for Serge Diaghilev’s Ballets Russes at the Théâtre de Monte Carlo on 7 May 1929. The musical score was by Vittorio Rieti, the narrative by Boris Kochno, after a story by Count Vladimir Sologub, and it was choreographed in 1929 by George Balanchine. The costumes executed under the direction of Mme A. Youkine. The original ballet had 15 performances being presented only during the last season of Serge Diaghilev’s Ballets Russes in Monte Carlo, Paris, Berlin and London where it was first performed on 26 July 1929 also at the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden, London. When Massine created a new version of the ballet in 1935 using the original score, sets and costumes the Italian entrée was danced by Paul Petroff with Tamara Toumanova.
Collection
Accession number
S.854&A-1980

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Record createdJuly 1, 2009
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