Directors, ballet masters, stage directors, choreographers, architects, ... Octave discovers the personalities that have marked the history of the Opera which continues to attract the great names of music and dance.
John
Neumeier was born in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, in 1939. He studied dance in his home
city, then in Copenhagen and at the Royal Ballet School in London. In 1963, he
was hired by John Cranko at the Stuttgart Ballet, where he created his first
choreographic works. He went on to become the director of the Frankfurt Ballet
in 1969. Neumeier likes to reinterpret the great classical ballets but he also
has a passion for legendary stories and characters, including The Lady of the Camellias (1978), which
entered the Paris Opera Ballet’s repertoire in 2006. The music of Bach and Mozart
has a special place in his choreographic research, however, there can be little
doubt that his most profound undertakings involve his exploration of the works of Gustav
Mahler. In 1973, he was appointed director and chief choreographer of the
Hamburg Ballet where he also ran the Ballet School which he created there in 1978.
Many of the Hamburg Ballet’s activities including the Ballet Days Festival and
the Nijinsky Gala, have become major events on the international calendar. In
1996, John Neumeier was made Intendant of the Hamburg Ballet. A Choreographer
invited to theatres the world over, he has created and passed on some major
works to the Paris Opera Ballet and its Ballet School: Vaslav (1980), A Midsummer
Night’s Dream (1982), Magnificat (1987),
Spring and Fall (1991 and then 2018 for
the Ballet School’s repertoire), The
Nutcracker (1993), Sylvia (world
premiere, 1997), Yondering (Ballet
School world premiere, 1999), The Lady of
the Camellias (2006), Gustav Mahler’s
Third Symphony (2009), and Song of
the Earth (2015).