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Prodigal Son George Balanchine's Prodigal Son was first performed by Diaghilev's Ballets Russes in Paris on May 21, 1929 and was an instant success. The remarkable coming-together of music, dance and design was the product of the collaborative talents of Prokofiev, Rouault and Balanchine, modern masters of their respective arts. Composer Serge Prokofiev's vigorous and moving score, and painter George Rouault's bold lines and jeweled tones for set and costumes are, now as then, essential to the whole. The work as performed by the State Ballet of Missouri more than half a century later, is largely intact. Prodigal was the last work choreographed by Balanchine for the Ballets
Russes before Diaghilev's death. A ballet based on the Biblical
tale had been suggested by Diaghilev's assistant, Boris Kochno.
Infused with rigors of Russian character (i.e. folk) dance, acrobatics,
and mechanistic imagery, the ballet shares with the Bible only the broadest
outlines. In the color filling those lines, the work takes on its
extraordinary tone. The story suited Balanchine and he wrote: "
I think it is one of the best of all ballet libretti. It is simplicity
itself, in the form of A, B, and the A again. It is the story of
someone who has everything again. It seemed relatively simple to
portray the roles of the father and son: on one could mistake the identity.
The story of the older son was not interesting for the dance and we wisely
omitted it from the ballet."
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