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Onegin (Cranko) : ウィキペディア英語版 | Onegin (Cranko)
''Onegin'' is a ballet created by John Cranko for the Stuttgart Ballet in 1965. It was recreated for the Royal Ballet at the Royal Opera House in 2001 and remains in that company's repertoire . ==Background== Cranko first discovered Alexander Pushkin's verse-novel ''Eugene Onegin'' when he choreographed the dances for Tchaikovsky's opera of the same name in 1952. He first proposed a ballet based on Pushkin's story to the Royal Opera House board in the 1960s, but it was turned down, and he pursued the idea when he moved to Stuttgart. The Royal Ballet did not present the work until 2001.〔Crane, Debra. ("A trial of broken arts" ), ''The Times'', 20 November 2001〕 The choreography for his ballet includes a wide range of styles, including folk, modern, ballroom and acrobatic. The music takes inspiration from the composer he worked with when he was first introduced to the story – Kurt-Heinz Stolze arranged music by Tchaikovsky, which came principally from his piano works rather than his orchestral works, to accompany the dancers.〔("Onegin" ), Royal Opera House, revived 17 March 2015〕 The original principals were Marcia Haydée as Tatiana, Ray Barra as Onegin, Egon Madsen as Lensky and Ana Cardus as Olga.〔 Between 1965 and 1967 Cranko revised ''Onegin'' several times. His scenario originally ended with Tatiana kissing her children goodnight, which he decided lessened the drama of her final encounter with Onegin. Cranko also deleted the prologue, in which Onegin was seen at his uncle's deathbed. The standard version of the ballet was first performed by the Stuttgart company in October 1967.〔("Onegin" ), The Ballet Bag, retrieved 19 March 2015〕
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