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Houston Ballet: The Many Faces of Pushkin’s Eugene Onegin
By Paula Citron
The writer takes a look at Onegin in all its guises. John Cranko's acclaimed ballet, often referred to as one of the finest narrative works of the late 20th century, plays Houston Ballet Sept. 4-14.
The film is something of a family affair. Acclaimed British actor Ralph Fiennes plays Onegin, sister Martha directs, while brother Magnus composed the music. The Fiennes see Onegin as a sympathetic character, and the film focuses on his emotional journey from indifferent snob to spurned lover. For Tchaikovsky and Cranko, Tatiana is the heart of the story and they had little compassion for Onegin. A film can more fully reflect Pushkin's novel by providing background detail. The financially embarrassed Onegin has arrived in the hinterland to claim the estate of his dead uncle. While out hunting, he meets Lensky whose family owns the neighboring estate and the two become immediate friends. The idealistic poet Lensky has attended Gottingen University in Germany, and Onegin cannot understand why he buries himself in the provinces. The film shows us that after Lensky's death, Olga becomes engaged to a Hussar, while Tatiana is sent to St. Petersburg where her rich relative Princess Alina presents the girl into society so she can find a husband. Film editing also allows foreshadowing and parallelism. As Onegin reads Tatiana's letter, the camera cuts to her ink-stained hands nervously kneading her white nightdress. Shots of the frozen wastes of St. Petersburg's Neva River are shown before we finally see Onegin make his lonely way through the snow at the film's end. The gorgeous exterior shots of St. Petersburg with its magnificent 18th-century architecture, the scores of extras, even the skating scene on the Neva--all make the film larger than anything that could ever be mounted on stage.
The secondary characters are also used for different effects. In the opera, M. Triquet, the French tutor, is a charming old man whose birthday ode to Tatiana serves as comic relief as the tension mounts between Lensky and Onegin. The film portrays Triquet as a pompous lecher with designs on Olga. Cranko, on the other hand, eliminates the character altogether. In both opera and film, Prince Gremin has no prior meeting with Tatiana before we meet him as her husband. Cranko's ballet has Gremin as a distant admirer of Tatiana's and a guest at her name-day party. The glory of the opera is its arias that let us touch the souls of the characters--Tatiana pouring her heart out in her letter, Lensky's sad lament before the duel, Gremin's loving paean to his young wife, Onegin's turbulent feelings after recognizing the mature Tatiana. Cranko's story is told in a series of magnificent duets. Tatiana's letter becomes an impassioned dream pas de deux with Onegin, while the final intense encounter has Tatiana as the stronger partner, loving Onegin but distancing herself from him. Olga's and Lensky's pas de deux is charming and light-hearted, while Tatiana's and Gremin's is stately and formal. Cranko has even included an emotionally charged duet for Tatiana and Olga at the duel scene. The movie with its close-ups and voice-overs, brings us face to face with the characters and their thoughts. Martha Fiennes has used a delicate brush. As the camera lingers on silent faces, what is not said becomes as important as what is spoken. The prevailing mood of melancholy is reflected in the blue-grey tint of the cinematography. As for poor Tchaikovsky, while he was composing Tatiana's "Letter Scene", he began to receive love missives from a former student, Antonina Ivanovna Milyukova. He identified himself with Onegin and Antonina with Tatiana. Not wanting to be a cruel Onegin, he agreed to meet her, and shortly after, proposed in July 1877. Unable to consummate his marriage, and being forced to recognize his true homosexual nature, Tchaikovsky attempted suicide in October that year. His brother Anatoly took him for a rest cure in Switzerland where he was able to complete the opera. Sadly, Pushkin's powerful and enduring story became the wellspring for life mirroring art.
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