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Renard Balanchine used mostly mime and demi character steps to visualize Stravinsky's music "a burlesque in one act." Stravinsky adapted the comic bawdy tale from popular Russian folk tale about a fox brought low by a ram and a cat after trying one too many times to lure a rooster into his fatal clutches. The work was not a popular success, although New York Times critic John Martin considered it of "Greatest interest…a kind of milestone in modern ballet, treated handsomely." The ballet was abandoned after a few performances despite its extraordinary costumes, sets and masks by Esteban Francés. During the 1950's, Mr. Bolender staged the piece for a single outdoor performance in Boston and it was also in San Francisco Ballet repertory for a brief period.
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