Adolphe ADAM (1803-1856)
          Giselle - Ballet in two acts (1841) [105:00]
          Alessandra Ferri - Giselle
          Massimo Murru - Albrecht
          Maurizio Vanadia - Hilarion
          Isabel Seabra - Myrtha
          Marinella Carimati - Giselle’s mother
          Bryan Hewison - Wilfried
          Mairizia Luceri - Bathilde
          Matteo Buongiorno - Duke of Courland
          Beatrice Carbone and Roberto Bolle - Two peasants
          Silvia Scrivano and Gilda Gelati - Leading wilis
          Patrizia Milani, Laura Caccialanza, Silvia Scrivano, Sophie Sarrote, 
          Aglaia Lovetti, Emanuela Montanari - Giselle’s friends
          Corps de ballet of the Teatro alla Scala
          Orchestra of the Teatro alla Scala/Paul Connelly
          Choreography by Patrice Bart, after Jean Coralli and Jules Perrot
          Set and costume design by Alexandre Benois, recreated by Angelo Sala
          Directed for TV and video by Alexandre Tarta
          rec. Teatro alla Scala, Milan, 1996
          Sound formats: PCM stereo, DD 5.1
          Picture format: 16:9, NTSC
          Region code: 0
          
ARTHAUS MUSIK 100 061 
 
          [116:00]
 
        It was only a year ago that I encouraged MusicWeb International’s readers 
          to give three cheers for Arthaus Musik as it released two separate – 
          and both very worthwhile – DVD performances of Giselle. They 
          were a 2005 recording from La Scala, Milan, and another from the Opéra 
          national de Paris that dated from 2006 (see 
          here).
           
          Perhaps, then, four cheers are now in order as Arthaus offers 
          us a third version of Adam’s much-loved masterpiece, also originating 
          from La Scala but coincidentally sharing its conductor with the Paris 
          DVD. The performance dates from 1996, making it nine years older than 
          the other Milan performance and ten years older than the French staging. 
          As we all know, video recording technology has made immense strides 
          in the past couple of decades, not least with the introduction of Blu-ray 
          technology and High Definition Television (HDTV). I was very pleased 
          to find, nevertheless, that the quality of both the visual image and 
          the sound on this older recording was more than acceptable.
           
          This production’s biggest asset is undoubtedly Alessandra Ferri. After 
          beginning her career in London and then moving to New York, she had 
          switched her main focus to Milan in 1992, achieving the exalted and 
          very rare status of prima ballerina assoluta. In this performance 
          she grabs with both her elegant hands the full opportunities offered 
          by the role.
           
          The eponymous heroine of Giselle is put through the emotional 
          wringer far more thoroughly than most ballet heroines. Swanilde (Coppélia), 
          Kitri (Don Quixote) and Lise (La fille mal gardée) 
          carry on smiling resolutely through their – admittedly rather lesser 
          – romantic tribulations. Meanwhile, in Tchaikovsky’s scores, Odette 
          (Swan Lake), Aurora (The Sleeping Beauty) and Clara 
          (The Nutcracker) seem comparatively emotionally unaffected 
          - apart, perhaps, from dropping the odd feather or two – by the various 
          brickbats that life throws at them. Poor Giselle, on the other hand, 
          not only suffers from a weak constitution but is the victim of a two-faced 
          seducer who drives her to utter despair and madness before she meets 
          her merciful end.
           
          Given that we can take the quality of her dancing as a given, what is 
          so impressive about Ms. Ferri in this performance is her utterly moving 
          portrayal of the central role. She excels not just in the “losing her 
          mind” sequence that concludes the first Act and where some ballerinas 
          virtually chew the scenery in their overacting, but also earlier on 
          where the subtlety of her expressions and gestures establishes, within 
          just a few seconds, her character’s shyness, innocence and essential 
          naïveté. That is very effectively achieved in the sequence where Albrecht 
          courts her on the bench and where she plucks petals (“He loves me … 
          He loves me not …”), but look too at the brief moment when she admires 
          Bathilde’s clothes for an instance of finely judged characterisation.
           
          While Massimo Murru, as Albrecht, partners Ms. Ferri very well, he lacks 
          her on-stage charisma. I did, though, particularly enjoy his reaction 
          to Giselle’s death, as he convincingly portrays a mixture of grief, 
          violent anger and well-earned guilt that creates a genuinely thrilling 
          air of drama and excitement before the curtain falls. Maurizio Vanadia 
          is an effective and attractive Hilarion, to the extent that one actually 
          feels on occasion that he might be - and certainly ought to be - in 
          with a chance of getting the girl. Marinella Carimati also makes a stronger 
          than usual impact as Giselle’s mother, in part because this production, 
          in contrast to many, retains the elaborate mime sequence (18:05-19:06) 
          where she warns her daughter of the wilis in the woods. The effective 
          and completely assured Isabel Seabra, though clearly quite some way 
          from the embodiment of a constitutional monarch, makes a suitably imperious, 
          cruel Queen Myrthe.
           
          I must also mention the two peasants whose artistry in their Act 1 pas 
          de deux gives such delight to the Milan audience. That, though, 
          is hardly a surprise, given that one of them is no less than today’s 
          ballet superstar Roberto Bolle when he was aged just 21. Even at that 
          early stage of his career, he gives the impression of owning the stage 
          and he certainly looks far more of a born aristocrat than does Murru’s 
          Albrecht. It cannot have been a great surprise when, in the very year 
          of this performance, Bolle was promoted to principal dancer with the 
          company, soon thereafter to leave the ranks of the horny-handed village 
          peasantry for ever and to make the leading role of Albrecht his own, 
          as he does, in fact, on the 2005 DVD.
           
          The La Scala corps de ballet is on fine form here, whether 
          as rollicking – if rather too well dressed – peasants in the first Act 
          or, in the case of the women, as Act 2’s ghostly spirits. They add immensely 
          to our enjoyment. The orchestra also gives a good account of itself 
          under Paul Connelly’s direction, though the poor man may feel justifiably 
          miffed that his surname has been consistently misspelled with just a 
          single “n” on the DVD packaging and in parts of the enclosed – and otherwise 
          useful - booklet.
           
          I liked, too, Angelo Sala’s recreation of Alexandre Benois’s sets and 
          thought Maurizio Montobbio’s lighting especially effective in both Acts, 
          lending an attractive degree of autumnal shadow and contrast to the 
          Act 1 village while maintaining the air of supernatural mystery in Act 
          2.
           
          The presentation for TV and video is also well executed. Unlike some 
          other directors, Alexandre Tarta has clearly worked out where his cameras 
          ought to be placed, what they should be filming and when to switch them 
          from one to another. As a result, we see several interesting and useful 
          bits of stage business that a less well prepared director might not 
          have been ready for. To mention just a couple of examples, at 9:49 a 
          finely positioned shot catches Hilarion’s brief appearance at the rear 
          of the stage as Albrecht courts Giselle; and at 34:00 as Silvia Scivano 
          dances to the side of the stage we catch a glimpse of her partner Roberto 
          Bolle as he smiles encouragingly at her. The only glitch that might 
          have been avoided occurs very near the end: Giselle’s return into the 
          grave is a well executed bit of stage business and is well filmed, but 
          the subsequent medium-shot of Albrecht is held slightly too long so 
          that we actually see the trapdoor, through which the poor girl descended, 
          closing up.
           
          This has a strong claim to be one of the best filmed versions of Giselle 
          currently available and it is certainly among the most enjoyable. Browsing 
          a ballet internet chat room earlier today, I discovered an old post 
          from September 2007 when, it seems, this performance was temporarily 
          off the market. According to the poster, secondhand copies were selling 
          then at “astronomical” prices. Perhaps, if you’re a lover of Adam’s 
          long-lived ballet warhorse, it might be a good idea to snap up your 
          copy now.
           
          Rob Maynard