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Ann Ray / OnP

Ann Ray / OnP

Ballet

Mayerling

Kenneth MacMillan

Palais Garnier

from 29 October to 16 November 2024

from €115 to €170

2h45 with 2 intervals

Mayerling

Palais Garnier - from 29 October to 16 November 2024

Synopsis

Listen to the synopsis

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Mayerling is the name of the hunting lodge in which the heir to the Austro-Hungarian Empire, Rudolf, was found dead in 1889. Why did the son of Emperor Franz Joseph and Elisabeth (the famous Sissi) commit suicide in the company of his mistress, the young Mary Vetsera?

Kenneth MacMillan’s ballet inspired by this mystery‑shrouded historic event was first performed in London in 1978 and entered the Paris Opera’s repertoire in 2022. Plagued by addictions and suicidal thoughts, a tormented character buffeted by history, Rudolf provides an opportunity for the choreographer to develop themes dear to him.

Set to feverish music by Franz Liszt, Mayerling unfolds an immensely theatrical neo-classical choreography. Grandiose scenes are interwoven with intimate scenes in sumptuous costumes whose autumnal hues reflect the decline of a world destined to disappear.

Duration : 2h45 with 2 intervals

Show acts and characters

CHARACTERS

Rudolf: Heir to the Austrian crown
Mary Vetsera: Daughter of Baroness Helena Vetsera, Rudolf’s lover
Mary Larisch: Countess, Rudolf’s former lover and chaperone of Mary Vetsera
Stephanie: Princess, Rudolf’s wife
Franz Josef: Emperor of Austria, Rudolf’s father
Elisabeth: Empress of Austria, Rudolf’s mother
Mitzi Caspar: Rudolf’s mistress
Bratfisch: Rudolf’s coachman and friend
Bay Middleton: Colonel, Empress’s lover

First part

Prologue
In the middle of a rainy night, a coffin is buried in the cemetery of the abbey of Heiligenkreuz (Lower Austria).

Act 1

Scene 1: The ballroom at the Hofburg Imperial Palace
Crowned heads, political dignitaries and courtiers parade through the ballroom. At the party celebrating his marriage to Princess Stephanie of Belgium, the Austrian Crown Prince Rudolf offends his parents and his wife by openly flirting with Stephanie’s sister, Princess Louise. Left alone, Rudolf encounters Countess Larisch and Baroness Vetsera.
Baroness Vetsera introduces him to her young daughter Mary, aged seventeen. They are interrupted by four Hungarian officers, friends of Rudolf, who forcefully plead for their country’s separatist cause. Countess Larisch seeks to revive the intimacy of her past relationship with Rudolf. The emperor discovers them and orders Rudolf to return to his wife.

Scene 2: The empress’s apartments at the Hofburg
Empress Elisabeth has retired from the ball and is enjoying the company of her ladies-in-waiting. Rudolf visits her and tries to elicit his mother’s sympathy by sharing her grief.

Scene 3: Rudolf’s apartments at the Hofburg
Princess Stephanie is preparing for her wedding night. Rudolf finds her and, before making love to her, torments her with a skull and terrifies her with a revolver.

Second part

Act 2

Scene 1: A tavern
Rudolf takes Stephanie to a tavern where there are prostitutes and their customers. Seeing that Stéphanie is unhappy, their coachman Bratfisch does his best to amuse her, but she leaves the place in disgust. Rudolf devotes his attention to his mistress, Mitzi Caspar, and his Hungarian friends.

A police raid occurs, during which Rudolf, Mitzi and the Hungarian officers hide. In a mood of despair caused by the constant surveillance, Rudolf proposes a suicide pact to Mitzi. The Prime Minister, Count Taafe, arrives at the tavern, having been informed of Rudolf’s presence. The latter hides again, but Mitzi indicates his presence to the Count, with whom she leaves.


Scene 2: Outside the tavern
As Rudolf leaves the tavern, Countess Larisch introduces him to the young Mary Vetsera.

Scene 3: The Vetsera house
Countess Larisch visits her friend, Baroness Vetsera, and finds Mary absorbed by a portrait of Rudolf. She takes a pack of cards and tells Mary’s fortune. She assures Mary that her romantic dreams will come true. She encourages her to write a letter to Rudolf.

Scene 4: The Hofburg

During Emperor Franz Josef’s birthday celebrations, Count Taafe confronts Rudolf with a political pamphlet. At the same time, Colonel Bay Middleton offers the Prime Minister a joke cigar, which amuses Rudolf. A firework display is set off, which entertains everyone. Countess Larisch gives Rudolf Mary’s letter.

Scene 5: Rudolf’s apartments at the Hofburg

Mary and Rudolf meet in secret for the first time. Moved by Rudolf’s torments and fantasies, Mary takes the skull and revolver with which he had terrified Stephanie.

Third part

Act 3

Scene 1: In the countryside, in the snow
While out hunting, Rudolf accidentally shoots and kills a member of the court. He almost kills the emperor.

Scene 2: Rudolf’s apartments at the Hofburg
The empress discovers Countess Larisch and Rudolf together. She separates them, unaware that Mary is waiting outside. Mary joins Rudolf. The latter proposes a suicide pact.

Scene 3: The Mayerling hunting lodge
Rudolf, drinking with Count Hoyos and Prince Philipp, tells them that he is unwell. Bratfisch arrives with Mary, and Rudolf orders him to entertain them. But Bratfisch soon realises that he is losing their attention. In a frenzy of passion, Rudolf makes love to Mary.

Calming his nerves with an injection of morphine, he embraces her one last time and then shoots her. Loschek, Hoyos and Philipp, alerted by the shot, come running. But Rudolf hides the truth from them and reassures them. Left alone, the prince kills himself.

Epilogue
The final scene takes up the prologue and reveals its meaning. The coffin laid in the ground is that of Mary Vetsera, buried by night in the rain.

Artists

Ballet in three acts

Creative team

Cast

  • Tuesday 29 October 2024 at 19:30
  • Wednesday 30 October 2024 at 19:30
  • Friday 01 November 2024 at 19:30
  • Saturday 02 November 2024 at 19:30
  • Tuesday 05 November 2024 at 19:30
  • Wednesday 06 November 2024 at 19:30
  • Thursday 07 November 2024 at 19:30
  • Friday 08 November 2024 at 19:30
  • Saturday 09 November 2024 at 19:30
  • Sunday 10 November 2024 at 14:30
  • Tuesday 12 November 2024 at 19:30
  • Wednesday 13 November 2024 at 19:30
  • Thursday 14 November 2024 at 19:30
  • Friday 15 November 2024 at 19:30
  • Saturday 16 November 2024 at 19:30

Latest update 07 November 2024, cast is likely to change.

Latest update 07 November 2024, cast is likely to change.

Latest update 07 November 2024, cast is likely to change.

Latest update 07 November 2024, cast is likely to change.

Latest update 07 November 2024, cast is likely to change.

Latest update 07 November 2024, cast is likely to change.

Latest update 07 November 2024, cast is likely to change.

Latest update 07 November 2024, cast is likely to change.

Latest update 07 November 2024, cast is likely to change.

Latest update 07 November 2024, cast is likely to change.

Latest update 07 November 2024, cast is likely to change.

Latest update 07 November 2024, cast is likely to change.

Latest update 07 November 2024, cast is likely to change.

Latest update 07 November 2024, cast is likely to change.

Latest update 07 November 2024, cast is likely to change.

With the Paris Opera Étoiles, Premières Danseuses, Premiers Danseurs and Corps de Ballet
The Paris Opera Orchestra

Media

[TRAILER] MAYERLING by Kenneth MacMillan
[TRAILER] MAYERLING by Kenneth MacMillan
  • Behind the scenes of Mayerling, a documentary to watch on Paris Opera Play

    Behind the scenes of Mayerling, a documentary to watch on Paris Opera Play

    Watch the video

  • Mayerling, a psychological tour de force

    Mayerling, a psychological tour de force

    Watch the video

  • The Mayerling mystery: Dorothée Gilbert and Hugo Marchand in rehearsal

    The Mayerling mystery: Dorothée Gilbert and Hugo Marchand in rehearsal

    Watch the video

  • Stéphane Bern on Mayerling

    Stéphane Bern on Mayerling

    Read the article

  • Podcast Mayerling

    Podcast Mayerling

    Listen the podcast

Behind the scenes of Mayerling, a documentary to watch on Paris Opera Play

Watch the video

000:55 min

Behind the scenes of Mayerling, a documentary to watch on Paris Opera Play

By Octave

Behind the scenes of Mayerling, an exclusive documentary available for streaming on Paris Opera Play

In autumn 2022, Kenneth McMillan's Mayerling entered the Paris Opera repertoire. A challenge for both the dancers and artistic teams.

Sumptuous sets and costumes, breathtaking pas de deux, a unique male lead and a multitude of supporting roles... the ballet created by the British choreographer is a passionate love story, that is both emotionally intense and technically demanding.

Étoile dancers Mathieu Ganio and Ludmila Pagliero, along with the Paris Opera's artistic teams, share with us their journey through discovery, rehearsals, and preparations for this tour de force.

With Paris Opera Play, you can watch the Paris Opera's most beautiful productions live and in replay, and glimpse behind the scenes.

© Ann Ray / OnP

Mayerling, a psychological tour de force

Watch the video

MacMillan through the eyes of Karl Burnett

3:53 min

Mayerling, a psychological tour de force

By Antony Desvaux, Anne-Solen Douguet

Guest répétiteur Karl Burnett discusses his work in passing on the work to the Paris Opera Ballet dancers in 2022. A specialist in Benesh notation, he worked with Kenneth MacMillan and is currently directing the choreography for the Company's dancers.

He discusses MacMillan's virtuoso neo-classical style and the way in which each step is linked to the ballet's storyline.

The truly sombre role of Prince Rudolf, one of the repertoire's most complex, is a psychological and technical tour de force for the dancers.

The Mayerling mystery: Dorothée Gilbert and Hugo Marchand in rehearsal

Watch the video

8:01 min

The Mayerling mystery: Dorothée Gilbert and Hugo Marchand in rehearsal

By Antony Desvaux

On the occasion of the revival of Kenneth MacMillan's Mayerling, Dorothée Gilbert and Hugo Marchand talk about their roles as Prince Rodolphe and Mary Vetsera in this 1978 ballet.

The Étoiles dancers recall the historical and political context that helps us understand the ballet's stakes, and the various hypotheses put forward by historians concerning the death of the two lovers in the pavilion at Mayerling. 

They share their approach to the psychology of the characters and the relationships between men and women as depicted by MacMillan with darkness, brutality and passion.

Finally, they recount how they make the English choreographer's virtuoso language their own, and how theatrical and dramatic sense always prevail over technique.

© Ann Ray / OnP

Stéphane Bern on Mayerling

Read the article

Imagining Monarchy

06 min

Stéphane Bern on Mayerling

By Antony Desvaux

To mark the entry of Mayerling into the Paris Opera Ballet's repertoire, Stéphane Bern offers us qa number of keys to understanding the appeal of royal families. Kenneth MacMillan's ballet, created in 1978, is based on the true story of Rudolf, the crown prince of Austria-Hungary. Stéphane Bern discusses the symbolic role played by kings, queens, princes and princesses in our culture, from an early age through children's stories. Royal families, mirrors of everyone's families, offer everyone a common base, between political reality and mythology. Royal figures, which have become archetypes, continue to fascinate and keep alive a certain imaginary of the monarchy.

There are the historical facts and beyond their resonance, their impact. The Mayerling tragedy is therefore open to all manner of interpretations. Here is an heir who is unhappy in his domestic life, who has made a marriage of reason. Here is his lover Mary Vetsera. Both are found dead in the hunting lodge at Mayerling. Is this a romantic drama, an impossible love that ends in a double suicide? Does this suicide conceal a political drama? Rodolf frequented progressive circles, unlike his father. Was he murdered? All hypotheses are possible.

If this personal and family drama is of universal appeal, it is because these are emblematic figures who speak to our subconscious. As children, we are told stories about kings, queens, fairies, princesses... As Bruno Bettelheim said in Psychoanalysis of Fairy Tales, this takes us back to our collective imagination.

Rudolf represented more than his own self. He was meant to prolong a dynasty that drew its history from the deepest roots of an immense empire. For a time, his suicide overshadowed the future. Only at a symbolic level, of course, because there is always another heir, and others took his place. The death of the Hapsburg heir affected not only the Austrian people but all peoples. A whole mosaic of nationalities saw in him the bearer of the future. Rudolf no longer belonged to himself.

Kings and queens are historical figures who transcend themselves. In so doing they become symbolic. These characters believe they are human beings, but are in fact personalities who have sacrificed their personal lives in order to live a collective adventure. They are not always aware of this and do not necessarily accept it either. We saw this in the British royal family with Diana. She desperately needed to be happy, but we don't ask symbolic figures to be happy... They are sacrificial figures.

They hold up a mirror in which everyone reads what they want to read: ancestral virtues, for example, aristocratic values. Kings and queens are of a different essence, they rise above us mere mortals. This is what we want to believe, of course, but all operas, books, films, novels and all mythology have been made up of this, since the beginning of time. These personalities are above the human condition, halfway between the agora and Olympus.

Mayerling (saison 22/23)
Mayerling (saison 22/23) © Ann Ray / OnP

We need these figures. They come from elsewhere, they bear the patina of time, they have a stronger historical heritage than we perceive in our genealogy and our own history, they live over a long period of time, whereas today we live in the immediate. This is what the Queen of England represented, for example.

Royal families are bearers of history but also of identity, even national identity, since they generally bear the name of the country over which they reign. This is why they bring us together, symbolically, over time. These families offer us a whole palette of colours. Theodore Zeldin said: "If you take the royal family of England, you have every palette of society, everyone feels represented by one of the figures." So you have the supporters of Kate Middleton and those of Meghan Markle, the flawless or the rebellious. There's the black sheep, like Harry, and the "perfect boy", William. Of course, they are often neurotic figures. This family holds a mirror up to you, they are archetypes. That's what makes the myth.

Many works of art are inspired by the world of the monarchy and its imagery. How does a French observer feel about them? There is undoubtedly a bit of nostalgia, a bit of guilt too, because let's not forget that we cut off our King's head. The act of regicide is similar to parricide, which we can see in novels and operas. The father has been killed. There is something quite violent about it. Tragic. There is also a nostalgia for a golden age. There is something sacred about it, both mythological and religious. It touches on something that makes sense, and that makes a nation. In the United Kingdom, we recently saw a whole nation gather around a coffin. It is a very powerful image. We couldn't transpose that to France. It's becoming complicated to unite around a common value. All this fuels a kind of sweet nostalgia, an unfulfilled dream. De Gaulle said: "The French have a taste for princes and they go abroad to find them." Great Britain and Monaco are our substitute monarchies. We had the Sun King, they only have the Sleeping King: a symbolic figure, who doesn't do much, but as long as he's there, we can sleep easy. These figures anchor us in history and give us a sense of permanence.

I was lucky enough to see Nureyev and Baryshnikov dance and it was an unforgettable experience. I also remember a Swan Lake I was lucky enough to see at the Mariinsky. And what about the Paris Opera's Défilé du Ballet, with all the dancers, from the Étoiles to the pupils? It is a magnificent moment, showing off the Palais Garnier in all its depth. We were talking about the Sun King. It was Louis XIV who created the Royal Academy of Dance, the ancestor of the Paris Opera, and organised dance in France. It is both a very free and a very disciplined art. I have always been fascinated by the talent of dancers, the way they express with their bodies the emotions conveyed by music. Dance expresses all human passions, which can be personal, intimate, like Giselle, and at the same time historical, like Mayerling. These great dramas are the common basis of mythologies that move us all and bring us together.

Interview by Antony Desvaux (September 2022)

© Ann Ray / OnP

Podcast Mayerling

Listen the podcast

"Dance! Sing! 7 minutes at the Paris Opera" - by France Musique

07 min

Podcast Mayerling

By Jean-Baptiste Urbain

"Dance! Sing! 7 minutes at the Paris Opera" offers original incursions into the season thanks to broadcasts produced by France Musique and the Paris Opera. 

For each opera or ballet production, Charlotte Landru-Chandès (opera) and Jean-Baptiste Urbain (dance), present the works and artists you are going to discover when you attend performances in our theatres.

  • Dessine-moi MAYERLING | 1 minute pour comprendre l'intrigue

Press

  • Mayerling is probably the most demanding ballet in the repertoire for the male lead: three muscular pas de deux with Mary Vetsera and others with several female characters, including his wife, Princess Stephanie.

    Franceinfo, 2022
  • This is a perfectly successful entry into the repertoire, which means we can look forward to many more performances in the coming seasons.

    ResMusica, 2022
  • A ballet of luxurious sets and costumes - special mention to the Paris Opera workshops - "Mayerling" is an obstacle course for soloists.

    Les Rchos, 2022
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Behind the Scenes of Mayerling


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Access and services

Palais Garnier

Place de l'Opéra

75009 Paris

Public transport

Underground Opéra (lignes 3, 7 et 8), Chaussée d’Antin (lignes 7 et 9), Madeleine (lignes 8 et 14), Auber (RER A)

Bus 20, 21, 27, 29, 32, 45, 52, 66, 68, 95, N15, N16

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Car park

Q-Park Edouard VII16 16, rue Bruno Coquatrix 75009 Paris

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The highly virtuoso choreography features one of the repertoire’s most demanding male roles and masterfully conveys the emotions and torments of characters buffeted by history. Throughout the ballet, the pas de deux’s strikingly vivid and acrobatic movements accentuate MacMillan’s neo-classical style. Sexual desire, despair and rage take hold of the dancers’ bodies and do not let them go until the fatal double gunshot rings out.

BUY THE PROGRAM

At the Palais Garnier, buy €10 tickets for seats in the 6th category (very limited visibility, two tickets maximum per person) on the day of the performance at the Box offices.

In both our venues, discounted tickets are sold at the box offices from 30 minutes before the show:

  • €25 tickets for under-28s, unemployed people (with documentary proof less than 3 months old) and senior citizens over 65 with non-taxable income (proof of tax exemption for the current year required)
  • €40 tickets for senior citizens over 65

Get samples of the operas and ballets at the Paris Opera gift shops: programmes, books, recordings, and also stationery, jewellery, shirts, homeware and honey from Paris Opera.

Palais Garnier
  • Every day from 10:30 a.m. to 6 p.m. and until performances end
  • Get in from Place de l’Opéra or from within the theatre’s public areas
  • For more information: +33 1 53 43 03 97

Palais Garnier

Place de l'Opéra

75009 Paris

Public transport

Underground Opéra (lignes 3, 7 et 8), Chaussée d’Antin (lignes 7 et 9), Madeleine (lignes 8 et 14), Auber (RER A)

Bus 20, 21, 27, 29, 32, 45, 52, 66, 68, 95, N15, N16

Calculate my route
Car park

Q-Park Edouard VII16 16, rue Bruno Coquatrix 75009 Paris

Book your parking spot
super alt text
super alt text
super alt text
super alt text
super alt text

The highly virtuoso choreography features one of the repertoire’s most demanding male roles and masterfully conveys the emotions and torments of characters buffeted by history. Throughout the ballet, the pas de deux’s strikingly vivid and acrobatic movements accentuate MacMillan’s neo-classical style. Sexual desire, despair and rage take hold of the dancers’ bodies and do not let them go until the fatal double gunshot rings out.

BUY THE PROGRAM

At the Palais Garnier, buy €10 tickets for seats in the 6th category (very limited visibility, two tickets maximum per person) on the day of the performance at the Box offices.

In both our venues, discounted tickets are sold at the box offices from 30 minutes before the show:

  • €25 tickets for under-28s, unemployed people (with documentary proof less than 3 months old) and senior citizens over 65 with non-taxable income (proof of tax exemption for the current year required)
  • €40 tickets for senior citizens over 65

Get samples of the operas and ballets at the Paris Opera gift shops: programmes, books, recordings, and also stationery, jewellery, shirts, homeware and honey from Paris Opera.

Palais Garnier
  • Every day from 10:30 a.m. to 6 p.m. and until performances end
  • Get in from Place de l’Opéra or from within the theatre’s public areas
  • For more information: +33 1 53 43 03 97

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3 min

Mayerling

Mayerling: the true/false story

Debauchery, dark plots, tears and blood: welcome in the world of Mayerling, a stormy, erotic, and convoluted-story ballet. Can you sort facts from fiction?

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