Difference between revisions of "Le Nid d'Amour"
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− | ''[[Le Nid d'Amour]]'' is a "ballet anacréontique" | + | ''[[Le Nid d'Amour]]'' is a "ballet anacréontique" by an unknown author. |
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== The original text == | == The original text == | ||
+ | The original text used by Riaux is obscure, since the Cape Town performance pre-dates the Belgian version by Hus. | ||
== Translations and adaptations == | == Translations and adaptations == | ||
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== South African performances == | == South African performances == | ||
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1810: Performed in Cape Town in [[Dutch]] (as ''[[Het Liefdenest]]'') , with new music composed by [[L. Meurant]], performed in Cape Town as an afterpiece to ''[[Le Somnambule ou Orgia]]'' (Pont-de-Vesle), by the pupils of [[J. Riaux]] on 13 October 1810. | 1810: Performed in Cape Town in [[Dutch]] (as ''[[Het Liefdenest]]'') , with new music composed by [[L. Meurant]], performed in Cape Town as an afterpiece to ''[[Le Somnambule ou Orgia]]'' (Pont-de-Vesle), by the pupils of [[J. Riaux]] on 13 October 1810. |
Revision as of 07:11, 31 December 2015
Le Nid d'Amour is a "ballet anacréontique" by an unknown author.
Contents
The original text
The original text used by Riaux is obscure, since the Cape Town performance pre-dates the Belgian version by Hus.
Translations and adaptations
Le Nid d’Amour, ou Les Amours Vengés is a "ballet anacréontique" by Eugène Hus. First performed Théâtre Royal, Bruxelles, 9 March 1818. Published in Brussels by L. Poublon, 1818.
Le Nid d'Amour, an opéra comique in one act by Jean Baptiste Edouard Montaubry opened in Paris in 1885.
South African performances
1810: Performed in Cape Town in Dutch (as Het Liefdenest) , with new music composed by L. Meurant, performed in Cape Town as an afterpiece to Le Somnambule ou Orgia (Pont-de-Vesle), by the pupils of J. Riaux on 13 October 1810.
1810: Repeated by the same company, but apparently in French as Le Nid d'Amour this time, on 27 October, as an afterpiece to Le Baiser (Florian).
Sources
Jean-Philippe Van Aelbrouck, 1994. Dictionnaire des danseurs: chorégraphes et maîtres de danse à Bruxelles de 1600 à 1830[1]
F.C.L. Bosman, 1928[2]: pp. 129
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