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| The dancer Eugénie Fiocre, seen here in Borri’s L’Etoile de Messine. Disdéri produced a carte showing twenty different portraits of dancers in various costumes and poses from the ballet, with the ballet identified within the print; this image is clearly identifiable as one of the portraits on that carte. A dancer of elegance and vitality, Pasquale Borri was equally successful as a choreographer. His L’Etoile de Messine [The Star of Messina], premiered in Vienna in 1856 as Die Gauklerin [The Juggler], was revived as La Giocoliera in Milan, Trieste, Rome and Venice, and was lavishly recreated (with a new score by Count Nicolò Gabrielli and a new libretto by Paul Foucher) at the Paris Opéra in 1860, its new title emphasizing its Sicilian setting. It became one of his best-known works. A high point of the Paris version was the rousing Tarantella led by Amalia Ferraris, in the tragic role of Gazella, and Louis Mérante. |
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condition: The tones of the print are a little uneven in the area of the background. price: not for sale code: ad497 |
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