Summaries

In his position as the king's composer, Jean Baptiste Lully (1632-1687) created the opera Persée for Louis XIV. The opera was considered the crowning achievement of 17th century French music theatre and was widely recognized as Lully's greatest work. Filled with dancing, fight scenes, monsters and special effects, this truly spectacular music drama recounts the thrilling story of Perseus, son of Zeus and heroic vanquisher of the snake-haired Gorgon Medusa. More than half a century after its premiere, Louis XV chose "Persée" to open the new Royal Opera House at the Chateau de Versailles, an event that formed part of the celebrations for the future Louis XVI's marriage to Marie Antoinette. Recorded live at the Elgin Theatre, Toronto in April 2004, this staging is a dazzling spectacle of gods and goddesses, dancing scenes, flying machines and monsters with fight scenes and special effects inspired by designs from the original 17th century performance. The excellent singer-actors and the "Tafelmusik Baroque Orchestra and Chamber Choir" are leading specialists in early music.

Details

Keywords
  • opera
  • live performance
  • baroque
  • french opera
  • baroque opera
Genres
  • Drama
  • Music
Release date Dec 1, 2004
Motion Picture Rating (MPA) Unrated
Countries of origin Canada
Language French
Filming locations Paris, France
Production companies DocuTainment Plus Productions Atlantic 18 Productions Inc.

Box office

Tech specs

Runtime 2h 7m
Color Color
Sound mix Stereo
Aspect ratio

Synopsis

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