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Swan Lake

Swan Lake
theater tickets
Royal Opera House
Address
Royal Opera House
Bow Street
Covent Garden
London  WC2E 9DD
United Kingdom
Price
£24.20 - £121.00
Prices shown are a guide to standard adult prices generally available, including any applicable per ticket fees - other concessions may also be available.
Booking from
Fri, 27th February 2009
Booking to
Sat, 4th April 2009
Supplier
This item is supplied by Seatem Group and is subject to their terms & conditions. Terms & Conditions
Swan Lake is one of the most loved of all classical ballets and one of the most popular in the Royal Ballet repertory. It has that magical combination of Tchaikovsky’s music, a compelling story of tragic romance and choreography that allows the very best dancers to show just how impressive they can be.

It returns for a second time this Season in Anthony Dowell’s romantic production whose designs were inspired by Imperial Russia of 1895, when the ballet was first performed. Against this atmospheric setting, Marius Petipa and Lev Ivanov’s choreography provides an opportunity to see great dance partnerships in the leading roles and the whole Company in the dance ensembles. Illuminated by moonlight, the charged solos for the Prince and Odette and her alter-ego Odile, the machinations of Von Rothbart and the colour of a palace ball all combine with glorious music to make for an evening of inspiration and romance.

CREDITS
Choreography:
Marius Petipa
Lev Ivanov

Music:
Pyotr Il'yich Tchaikovsky

Production:
Anthony Dowell

Designs:
Yolanda Sonnabend

Lighting:
Mark Henderson

PERFORMERS
Conductor:
Valeriy Ovsyanikov

Odette/Odile:
Tamara Rojo
Zenaida Yanowsky
Lauren Cuthbertson
Marianela Nuñez
Alina Cojocaru
Sarah Lamb
Roberta Marquez

Prince Siegfried:
Viacheslav Samodurov
Ivan Putrov
Rupert Pennefather
Thiago Soares
Roberto Bolle
Carlos Acosta
Johan Kobborg
Federico Bonelli


The present theatre was built in 1858. During World War II it was used as a dance hall but after the war the decision was made to establish the Royal Opera House as the permanent year-round home of the opera and ballet companies now known as the Royal Opera and the Royal Ballet. The ballet company reopened the building on 20 February 1946 with The Sleeping Beauty. The two companies combined for Purcell's The Fairy Queen that December, and on 14 January 1947, Covent Garden Opera Company gave its first complete opera performance, Bizet's Carmen.

TRAVEL Info


Nearest Rail: Charing Cross

Nearest Tube: Covent Garden (Piccadilly line)