Not currently on display at the V&A

The Queen of Spades

Set Design
1966 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

Design by Leslie Hurry for a statue in Act I, Scene I of Tchaikovsky's opera The Queen of Spades, Sadler's Wells, 1966.

This production of the three-act opera, The Queen of Spades by Peter Tchaikovsky, with its libretto based on Alexander Pushkin’s story by Modest Tchaikovsky, was performed in an English translation by Rosa Newmarch. The first production of this opera at Sadler’s Wells Theatre opened on 14 September 1966. The production was directed by Anthony Besch with choreography by Harry Haythorne and Leslie Hurry’s designs were lit by Charles Bristow.

Leslie Hurry (1909-1978) trained at the Royal Academy and during the 1930s became known as a surrealist painter. A one-man show in London in 1942 was seen by the theatre director, Michael Benthall, who recommended Hurry to the dancer and choreographer, Robert Helpmann, then planning a ballet based on Shakespeare's Hamlet. The success of his designs set Hurry on a second career as one of the most distinguished theatre designers of his generation. He designed operas, ballets and plays, notably Swan Lake for the Sadler's Wells Ballet in 1943, a production which stayed in the repertoire for thirty years; Venice Preserv'd for Peter Brook (1953); the Ring Cycle at Covent Garden (1954), and Troilus and Cressida at Stratford for Peter Hall (1960), famous for being staged in a sand pit.



Object details

Categories
Object type
TitleThe Queen of Spades (generic title)
Materials and techniques
Ink, pencil crayon and pencil
Brief description
Design by Leslie Hurry for a statue in Act I, Scene I of Tchaikovsky's opera The Queen of Spades, Sadler's Wells Theatre, 1966
Physical description
Design by Leslie Hurry for a statue of a woman, used as set dressing in Act I, Scene I of the 1966 production of The Queen of Spades at Sadler's Wells Theatre.

The woman is unclothed but in her left hand she holds a length of fabric which is draped from her left hip around her lower legs.
Dimensions
  • Height: 34.4cm
  • Width: 19.9cm
Marks and inscriptions
  • 'Q of S' Statue Act 1 2"-1 (Handwritten annotation in ink, at centre top)
  • '10 ½ Radius Base' (Handwritten annotation in pencil at the base of the sketch)
  • 'Model 8' 6" high' (Handwritten annotation in pencil, left hand side of sketch)
Credit line
Given by Mrs Caro Rathbone
Literary referenceQueen of Spades
Summary
Design by Leslie Hurry for a statue in Act I, Scene I of Tchaikovsky's opera The Queen of Spades, Sadler's Wells, 1966.

This production of the three-act opera, The Queen of Spades by Peter Tchaikovsky, with its libretto based on Alexander Pushkin’s story by Modest Tchaikovsky, was performed in an English translation by Rosa Newmarch. The first production of this opera at Sadler’s Wells Theatre opened on 14 September 1966. The production was directed by Anthony Besch with choreography by Harry Haythorne and Leslie Hurry’s designs were lit by Charles Bristow.

Leslie Hurry (1909-1978) trained at the Royal Academy and during the 1930s became known as a surrealist painter. A one-man show in London in 1942 was seen by the theatre director, Michael Benthall, who recommended Hurry to the dancer and choreographer, Robert Helpmann, then planning a ballet based on Shakespeare's Hamlet. The success of his designs set Hurry on a second career as one of the most distinguished theatre designers of his generation. He designed operas, ballets and plays, notably Swan Lake for the Sadler's Wells Ballet in 1943, a production which stayed in the repertoire for thirty years; Venice Preserv'd for Peter Brook (1953); the Ring Cycle at Covent Garden (1954), and Troilus and Cressida at Stratford for Peter Hall (1960), famous for being staged in a sand pit.

Collection
Accession number
S.1403-2014

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Record createdJuly 17, 2014
Record URL
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