The Royal Ballet has brought back a 60s cult classic ballet called Pierrot Lunaire, which was first performed in 1962 by US choreographer Glen Tetley and features music by Arnold Schoenberg's atonal song cycle of the same name.
In this distinctive, eccentric work, Marcelino Sambé is taking on the role of Pierrot, a childlike clown, who becomes wonderstruck by the sight of the moon. The ballet is set to deliver in sprechstimme – a vocal style halfway between song and speech that sounds like nursery rhymes at times but also like ghostly apparitions.
Sambé has found that he needed to tap into his more vulnerable side to connect with this piece, which can be challenging due to its unique sound. "I was horrified by it!" he says of Schoenberg's music when he first learned about the work, preferring Tetley's earlier string sextet Verklärte Nacht. However, after working with Christopher Bruce, who was a famed interpreter of the role in the 1960s, Sambé has discovered that unlocking this piece allows him to connect with it.
The ballet follows Pierrot as he navigates innocence into adulthood and confronts harsh realities, representing both his inner self through the shadow character Brighella. The performance is an intimate experience with just three people on stage and live music being played.
In this distinctive, eccentric work, Marcelino Sambé is taking on the role of Pierrot, a childlike clown, who becomes wonderstruck by the sight of the moon. The ballet is set to deliver in sprechstimme – a vocal style halfway between song and speech that sounds like nursery rhymes at times but also like ghostly apparitions.
Sambé has found that he needed to tap into his more vulnerable side to connect with this piece, which can be challenging due to its unique sound. "I was horrified by it!" he says of Schoenberg's music when he first learned about the work, preferring Tetley's earlier string sextet Verklärte Nacht. However, after working with Christopher Bruce, who was a famed interpreter of the role in the 1960s, Sambé has discovered that unlocking this piece allows him to connect with it.
The ballet follows Pierrot as he navigates innocence into adulthood and confronts harsh realities, representing both his inner self through the shadow character Brighella. The performance is an intimate experience with just three people on stage and live music being played.