MILHAUD Darius (1892 - 1974) - Lot 137

Lot 137
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5000 - 7000 EUR
MILHAUD Darius (1892 - 1974) - Lot 137
MILHAUD Darius (1892 - 1974) autograph musical manuscript signed "Darius Milhaud", 'adame Miroir, ballet (1948); 1 title page and 15 folio pages (34,5 x 27,5 cm). Ballet music for Roland Petit on a libretto by Jean Genet. It is for the New Ballets of Roland PETIT that Milhaud wrote this music, on a libretto of Jean GENET, whose it was the only ballet. The choreography was entrusted to Janine Charrat, with a set by Paul Delvaux and costumes by Léonor Fini. The creation took place at the Theater Marigny on May 30, 1948. Roland Petit danced the Sailor, with his refl and Serge Perrault (the Image) and the Domino (or Death) danced in alternation by Volodia Skouratoff and Léo Auer. It was "mounted with great care and taste by the New Ballets of Roland Petit. A beautiful set by Delvaux represented a labyrinth made of ice, a sailor got lost in it, constantly escorted by his double, and he suddenly found himself in the presence of Death" (Darius Milhaud, Ma vie heureuse). The critics hailed this work as "very carnal, very troubled, very endearing", as "the most powerful ballet that has been presented to us since the Liberation". This is the composer's opus 283; the score was immediately published by Heugel. This manuscript of the "piano reduction" is written in black ink on 20-line Belwin Parchment Band paper; it is signed and dated at the end "Paris, April 8, 1948", with the duration: "Total 18 minutes"; a detailed timing is given on the back of the title page. The score includes five numbers. I. Entrée et Danses du Matelot devant les Miroirs (p. 1); II. Le Matelot et son Image (Pas de deux), Modéré (p. 6); III. Entrance of the Woman (Death) and Dance with the Sailor (Pas de trois), Moderate (p. 8) ; IV. Dance of Death and the Sailor (p. 10); V. Death and the Sailor's Image (Final), Lively (p. 13). BIBLIOGRAPHY Edmund White, Jean Genet (Gallimard, 1993), p. 337-338; Jean Genet, Théâtre, Bibl. de la Pléiade (Gallimard, 2002), p. 245-253.
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