The Nutcracker
tasseled book-bound vinyl LP album
photo by Styrous® 
At
 this time of year, beside Santa, Rudolph, Frosty the Snowman, Jesus, 
Mary & Joseph, one of the great holiday traditions is 
The Nutcracker ballet. Every little kid thrills at the sight of the tree 
growing (
or Clara shrinking, depending on your point of view) in the first act. Through the magic of clever staging, lighting, incredibly dramatic but exquisitely beautiful ascending modulating music I still get goose-bumps when I see it happening. Watch it in action on 
YouTube.
I saw my first performance of the Nutcracker in 1962, performed by the 
Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo at the 
San Francisco Opera House. It featured 
George Zorich.
 Zorich has been quoted as once saying, “Dance should live; if it doesn’t come from the heart, it is not dancing.”
 I had been dancing for four years by then and 
was about to dance in a production of the Nutcracker. I absorbed every 
move he made.
(click on any image to see larger size)
                                                                 April 11, 1942
The Nutcracker was in the Ballet Russe 
repertoire
 for almost the entirety of the company's existence, from 1940 to 1962, except in 1953 when it was not performed. I saw one of the last 
performances of it by the company. There is actually a DVD of the 
performance at the 
Chicago Public Library. It was originally filmed in 16 mm by 
Ann Barzel. She was 101 years old when she died as documented in the 
New York Times.
(1818-1910)                                       (1834–1901) 
                                                                                             photographer unknown
(1840-1893) 
photographer unknown
November, 1855
                                                                                         .
photo by Nadar                                                                                                             .
photographer unknown
Early images of the Nutcracker
original costume sketch
for The Nutcracker ca. 1890 
Photo of Stanislava Belinskaya as Clara (left), 
an unknown performer (center), & 
Vassily Stulkolin as Fritz (right) 
in the Imperial Ballet's original production of 
Circa December, 1892
Scanned from the book 
"The Life and Ballets of Lev Ivanov" 
St. Petersburg, Russian Empire
for the set of The Nutcracker (1892) 
Photographic postcard of the ballerina 
as the Sugarplum Fairy & 
as Prince Coqueluche in the 
original production of "The Nutcracker" 
(The Kirov Ballet under Soviet rule,
now the Mariinsky Ballet)
Circa 1900
Unknown photographer of the photography
 department of the Imperial Mariinsky Theatre 
Some critics
 called The Nutcracker "astonishingly rich in inspiration" and "from 
beginning to end, beautiful, melodious, original, and characteristic." 
But some critics found the party scene "ponderous" and the Grand Pas de 
Deux "insipid" (You can't please everyone).
Many
 recordings have been made since 1909 of the 
Nutcracker Suite (also see: 
Nutcracker Suite), which 
made its initial appearance on disc that year in what is now 
historically considered the first record album. 
Antal Doráti was especially well known for his recordings of Tchaikovsky's music. 
photographer unknown
Doráti
 was the first conductor to record the complete performances of all three of
 Tchaikovsky's ballets - 
Swan Lake, 
Sleeping Beauty and 
The Nutcracker. 
The albums were recorded in mono in 1954, for 
Mercury Records, with the 
Minneapolis Symphony Orchestra. All three ballets were first issued separately, but later re-issued in a 6-LP set. 
The
 photos below are of the first complete recording of the ballet issued in 1954, in mono, of course,
 with the red bookmark cord and tassel. I have loved looking at it all these years. It featured an elaborate and 
beautifully bound book with liner notes/descriptions of the story, the 
history of the Ballet and the recording of the ballet by Clair Van 
Ausdall; it has delicate line illustrations by Dorothy Maas and the 
cover design was by 
George Maas.
 
All photos of the Antal Dorati/Nutcracker album by Styrous® 
(click on any image to see larger size)
So,
 in closing, this is my way of wishing you all the best of the holiday 
season. Here's hoping happiness and love find you well and hit you up one 
good. All the best in the brand new year ahead of us. 
And don't forget, dance brightly on.
The entire collection is for sale. Interested? Contact Styrous®  
Styrous® ~ December 10, 2012
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