Nicola Guerra (1865–1942) at the Budapest Opera: A Crucial Turning Point for Hungarian Ballet
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Text
2.1. A Short Biography
2.2. From Vienna to Budapest
2.3. Guerra as a Novelist and Ballet Librettist
2.4. Building a Ballet School
2.5. Guerra and His Dancers
2.6. The Master of Ballabili
Alas! That unfortunately today, our theatre is full of this race of boastful and shameless asses. Manzotti is to blame for this. He had no education and no knowledge of dance and was—oh, the genius! Oh the will—the Bonaparte of dance! We are to blame for his Excelsior, which brought Italian choreography to the highest triumph in both worlds and marked its decadence; we are to blame for his mechanical and easy dance system, which, although wonderful, excluded art and attracted so many little monsters to the theatre.
2.7. Modernist Suggestions
2.8. A Career in Constant Motion
3. Conclusions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Correction Statement
1 | This ballet was commissioned by the Director and Maestro di Cappella, Roaul Máder, in April 1902. Guerra was officially appointed in September 1902. |
2 | L.D, Szinház és Művészet, Opera, in Független Majarország, [n.d.], 1902 (Guerra Archive, from now on, G.A.) |
3 | V., Operház, “Pesti Hirlap”, [n.d.], 1902, G.A. |
4 | Guerra sketches the character and activity of Paris in his novella (Guerra 1899), pp. 187–224. |
5 | The ballo was staged at the Teatro Municipale in Piacenza by Antonio Giuri. |
6 | Vittorio Guerriero, Italiani a Parigi. Serata con Nicola Guerra, in Roma, 18 September 1931, Year IX. |
7 | The Italian dancer and choreographer Ugo Dell’Ara (1921–2009), who had just entered the Opera House Ballet School in 1931 and had only studied there with Nicola Guerra for a short time, told me about this in an interview in May 1997. A documentary, La Scuola di ballo del Teatro Reale dell’Opera di Roma (Giornale Luce (1932) B0056, 4 March 1932) shows the master giving his lesson with a stick to pupils of different levels ((24) Roma. La scuola di ballo del Teatro reale dell’opera—YouTube). |
8 | See Léopold Adice (1859), pp. 72–75. |
9 | Performing in The Black Crook at the Academy of Music in New York (12 December 1892), he was noticed by the English master and dancer Edouard Espinosa as “the best grand premier danseur of his day, combining correct technique and fine effects” (E. Espinosa (1946)). |
10 | Guerra was invited together with other Italian dancers to perform at the celebrations organised for the coronation of Tsar Nicholas II in May 1896. |
11 | Julius Von Stern, Das Wiener Hof-Opernballet in Wortbildern, in Rudolph Lothar and Julius Stern, 50 Jahre Hoftheater. Geschichte der bieden Wiener Hoftheater under der Regierungzeit des Kaisers, Joseph I, ed. by Alexander Duschnitz and Julius Stern, II Vol., Julius Stern, Hof-Openrtheater 1848–1898, Druck und Verlag der Buch Wien, [1898?], p. 172. |
12 | In the brief summer interlude of 1898, on 21 July, Guerra married in a civil ceremony in Naples ‘Die vollendete Mima’ (Expert Mima, J. Von Stern, cit. p. 172) Maria Camilla Pagliero (who had been engaged at the Hoftheater since 1879). Aniello Ammaturo was the wedding witness [Municipio di Napoli, estratto dal registro degli atti di matrimonio dell’anno 1898 (Naples City Hall, Extract from the register of marriage, acts of the year 1898)], G.A. |
13 | [-ld], Pesti Hirlap. Művészfurfang [16 January 1903], G.A. |
14 | The youngest who were previously in the last rows are advanced to the first Quadrille (Tagblatt. Theater, Kunst und Literatur, Opernhaus [15 December 1903]. |
15 | The dancer’s official debut took place on 6 April 1906 with Táncegyveleg (Dance Company), choreography by Guerra and music by Adolf Sziklás. |
16 | D.A., Alkotmagyr, Szináz és Művészet [n.d.] G.A. |
17 | Körtvélyes Ágnes, Guerra Miklós ballettmester operházi müködése, in Vályi Rózsi, A majar ballett történetébö, Zeneműkiádo, Budapest, 1956, pp. 175–90, p. 176. |
18 | Nicola Guerra (1901), Tersicoreide, cit.; N. Guerra, Cavalleria forzata, Tipografia cooperativa, Firenze 1901. |
19 | Cf. F. Falcone, La danza della scrittura. Nicola Guerra (1865–1942) e il balletto Siama (1913), in Il libretto di ballo. Riflessioni storiche e teoriche in omaggio ad Alberto Testa, ed. by Patrizia Veroli, in collaboration with Mattia Scarpulla, Massimiliano Piretti, Bologna 2017, pp. 57–73. |
20 | I am soon to edit a volume containing some of Guerra’s unpublished novellas from his family archives, as well as republishing some of the most famous novellas from Tersicoreide and Cavalleria forzata. |
21 | [-Idi], Pesti Hirlap, [24 December 1903], G. A. |
22 | There are no documents in the Guerra archive containing regulations and dance didactics principles written by Guerra in his Hungarian period. In his Méthode (1928), written later when Guerra was maître de ballet and teacher in Paris, he felt himself as the repository of a hereditary lineage that started with Blasis. In these brief typewritten notes—addressed to teachers of the first and second elementary classes of the Opéra School—movements at the barre, and exercises and steps and centre are succinctly listed, as part of the lesson conceived by Guerra on the principles of progression. Several quotations from Blasis’ most famous treatise (Traité élémentaire théorique et pratique de l’Art de la danse, Beati and Tenenti, Milan, 1820) always stand out among the Instructions and Exhortations. (Méthode à suivre strictement par les Professeurs de la première et deuxième classe élémentaire soit des jeune filles, soit des petits garçons, Paris, 28 février 1928 (G.A.).) |
23 | [Passepartout], Tagbaltt, Budapester Leben. Rekrutierung zum Ballet [17 October 1903], G.A. |
24 | Ibidem. |
25 | Ibidem. |
26 | Ibidem. |
27 | Ibidem. The duration of the last study period is not specified here. The division of the courses into preparatory, lower and higher was probably taken from the regulations in force at La Scala (cf., e.g., the later Regolamento per la Accademia di Ballo del Teatro alla Scala in Milano, Pirola, Milano 1911). It seems that in the classes run at the Hungarian Opera House, the period of perfection did not exist, whereas it was present at La Scala and brought the ballerina’s course of study to 10 years. |
28 | [Passepartout], Tagbaltt, cit. |
29 | […], Tagblatt, Budapesten Leben, Die Ballettschule des Opernhauses [17 October 1903], G. A. |
30 | Ibidem. |
31 | Ibidem. |
32 | […] Gerichtshalle, Graf und Ballettmeister, 17 December 1904, G.A. |
33 | Ten years later, a complaint by Guerra for slander dragged into the Budapest Criminal Court another of his students, prima ballerina Térest Sebesi, who had accused him of discriminatory behavior against her for her refusal to take private lessons for a fee. Guerra, who in 1909 had overseen her debut as prima ballerina ([N.N.], Pester Lloyd, Theater und Kunst, 2 novembre 1909) and cared about making her a talented dancer, now found fault with her behavior that was undisciplined (she often missed rehearsals) and irreverent toward him (she teased him). For these facts, the dancer had been fined half her monthly salary by a committee set up in the theatre, but the matter had then continued in the Criminal Court ([N.N.], Esti Ujzág, A balletmester pöre, 10 giugno 1914). |
34 | In this case, Guerra proposed to Máder that Balogh be paid the same as the older Schmideck, both being on the same artistic level. But this request at that time was not granted (untitled and undated article, [Album reviews, p. 51], G.A. |
35 | [m.a.], Magyarorzág. Szinház és Művészet, Tánczegyveleg, 20 April [1906]. |
36 | Although later than the date taken into account, the information provided by this chronicler is interesting for understanding the exceptional technical level reached by Nirschy. [N.N.] Nirschy Emilia és Guerra Miklós [1914], G.A. |
37 | [N.N.], Majar Hirlap. Szinház és Művészet. Première az Operában [N.D.], G.A. |
38 | Famous performance in Harlekin als Elektriker (Harlequin or the Electrician, 3 October 1896) at the Hoftheater. |
39 | Ibidem. |
40 | [N.N.], Pesti Hirlap. Szinház és zene, Pierrette Fátyola, 7 May 1910, G. A. |
41 | Ibidem. |
42 | [m.a.], Magyarorzág, A csodavása [9 May 1908], G.A. |
43 | Ibidem. |
44 | For the staging of Siama at La Scala., cf. F. Falcone, La danza della scrittura. Nicola Guerra (1865–1942) e il balletto Siama (1913), cit. |
45 | Nicola Guerra, Edelweiss, Second Act, [Manuscript autographed by Nicola Guerra] [N.D.], G. A., pp. 117–87. Page numbering indicates the existence of another manuscript containing an annotation of the choreographic movements also relating to the first act, which has not yet been found. |
46 | Cf., for example, the notations of the Excelsior by Cammarano, Casati and Cecchetti (Flavia Pappacena, La trascrizione del Ballo Excelsior e i manoscritti del Museo Teatrale alla Scala, in Excelsior Documenti e Saggi/Documents and Essays, Chorégraphie. Studi e Ricerche sulla danza, Di Giacomo, Roma 1998, pp. 55–74.) |
47 | The second act of Edelweiss is divided into five parts, including the Ballabile delle fate, the Dance of the Eagles and the Mimed Action, which includes the arrival of Mary, the ballet’s protagonist, on the mountain peaks, and her encounter with Edelweiss, the beautiful and treacherous mountain fairy. The last part consists of the Snowstorm Dance and the Epilogue. |
48 | Cf. F. Falcone, Dalla notazione alla scena: Edelweiss di Nicola Guerra. Analisi e ricostruzione, in Flavia Pappacena, Recupero, ricostruzione, conservazione del patrimonio coreutico italiano del XIX secolo, Proceedings of The Conference, 10 December 1999, Consiglio Nazionale della Ricerche, Associazione culturale Chorégraphie, Roma, 2000, p. 212. |
49 | Cf. Olivia Sabée, Re-envisioning the Paris Opéra’s Corps de Ballet, 1856–1860, in Times of Change: Artistic Perspectives and Cultural Crossings in Nineteenth-Century Ballet, ed. by Irene Brandenburg, Francesca Falcone, Claudia Jeschke and Bruno Ligore, Piretti, Bologna 2022, pp. 177–96. |
50 | In addition, this would result in the migration of prima ballerinas from traditional theatres to variety theatres, turning them into vedettes à la page. See, for example, the case of Giovannina Pitteri: Madison U. Sowell, From Italian Opera Houses to English Music Halls: How Prima ballerina Giovannina Pitteri became Variety Ballet Performer Jeanne Pitteri, in Times of Change, cit. pp. 283–301. |
51 | Cf. Guerra, Tersicoreide, cit. p. 307. It was not until the beginning of his tenure at the Budapest Opera House, when he still did not have a proper corps de ballet composed only of dancers, that Guerra resorted to large masses consisting mainly of actors and singers. |
52 | “[…] en fait d’école il n’y a aucune différence: tout au plus il ne s’agit que de forme; et celle-ci a été entièrement absorbée, il ya un siècle (à l’epoque d’or de la danse) par l’école italienne” (Nicola Guerra, Danse: l’école italienne, l’école française et l’école russe, Opéra, 11 January 1929). |
53 | For reasons of space, it is not possible here to address an exhaustive analysis of the entire choreography, for which I refer to my text published for the journal Chorégraphie (F. Falcone, Dalla notazione alla scena: Edelweiss di Nicola Guerra. Analisi e ricostruzione, cit.). |
54 | Carlo Ritorni, Commentarii della vita e delle opere coreodrammatiche di Salvatore Viganò e della coreografia e de’ corepei scritti da Carlo Ritorni, reggiano, Tipografia Guglielmi e Redaelli, Milano 1838. |
55 | [N.N.], A Vilag [19 March 1913]. |
56 | [N.N.], Pesti Hirlap [19 marzo 1913]. Nirschy danced in the part of Psyche, Tesszát Sebesi in that of Pandora, and Anna Pallai, another great dancer trained by Guerra, in the Bacchante. |
57 | Ibidem. |
58 | For the first term, cf. F. Falcone, Nicola Guerra coreografo all’Opéra di Parigi: gli esordi degli anni 1918–1922, Chorégraphie. Studi e ricerche sulla danza (Year 5, n. 10, 1997), pp. 7–30. For the second term, cf. Francesca Falcone, Nicola Guerra maître de ballet all’Opéra di Parigi: gli anni 1927–1929, Chorégraphie. Studi e ricerche sulla danza (Year 6, n. 12, 1998), pp. 39–78. |
59 | The first company was called Pastelli coreografici, founded as soon as Guerra returned to Italy, and the second, I nuovi balli italiani. |
60 | However, Guerra’s activity had also been spent in other theatres in Budapest. A thank-you letter sent to Guerra by Gábor Faludi, among the founders as well as director of the Vígszínház Theater, in 1907 attests that Guerra worked on the choreographic staging of Salome with Madame Goth in the leading parts (signed letter from Faludi to Guerra, 26 March 1907), G.A. |
61 | I sincerely thank the Guerra family and in particular Livio, who passed away in 2008, for giving me the opportunity to consult the family archives, on which I was able to base much of my studies on Nicola Guerra. My deepest gratitude to Madison U. Sowell who generously proofread the final text in English. |
References
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Falcone, F. Nicola Guerra (1865–1942) at the Budapest Opera: A Crucial Turning Point for Hungarian Ballet. Arts 2023, 12, 114. https://doi.org/10.3390/arts12030114
Falcone F. Nicola Guerra (1865–1942) at the Budapest Opera: A Crucial Turning Point for Hungarian Ballet. Arts. 2023; 12(3):114. https://doi.org/10.3390/arts12030114
Chicago/Turabian StyleFalcone, Francesca. 2023. "Nicola Guerra (1865–1942) at the Budapest Opera: A Crucial Turning Point for Hungarian Ballet" Arts 12, no. 3: 114. https://doi.org/10.3390/arts12030114
APA StyleFalcone, F. (2023). Nicola Guerra (1865–1942) at the Budapest Opera: A Crucial Turning Point for Hungarian Ballet. Arts, 12(3), 114. https://doi.org/10.3390/arts12030114