Jules Perrot
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- In full:
- Jules-Joseph Perrot
- Died:
- August 18, 1892, Paramé (aged 82)
Jules Perrot (born August 18, 1810,Lyon, France—died August 18, 1892, Paramé) was a French virtuoso dancer and master choreographer who was celebrated internationally for creating some of the most enduring ballets of theRomantic period.
Jules Perrot first drew attention to his talent in his native Lyon by imitating the antics of the comic dancer Charles Mazurier. This led to an engagement at the Gaîté Theatre in Paris in 1823. Moving to the larger, more prestigious Porte-Saint-Martin Theatre, he became a pupil ofAuguste Vestris, who prepared him for his successful debut at theParis Opéra in 1830. Within a year he was promoted to the top rank ofpremier sujet (“principal dancer”) and selected to partnerMarie Taglioni inFlore et Zéphire.
After leaving the Opéra, which refused to offer him a salarycommensurate with the earnings of top ballerinas, he was engaged in London in 1835, and in 1836 he moved to Naples, where his path crossed that of the young dancerCarlotta Grisi. As her teacher, mentor, and suitor, he accompanied her to London in 1836, and then toVienna, where he produced his first importantballet,Der Kobold (1838). He hoped to marry Grisi, but although a daughter was born as a result of theirliaison, she was reluctant to enter into such a commitment.
In 1841 Grisi was engaged at the Paris Opéra, but no offer was forthcoming for Perrot. He was, however, to be closely involved in her first Paris creation,Giselle. Most of the action was devised by him, but any hope he might have had that his contribution would be formally acknowledged was dashed because he was not officially on the payroll. As a result, thechoreography was long credited solely to the Opéra’s ballet masterJean Coralli.
The couple’s paths then diverged; while Grisiembarked on a long career at the Opéra, Perrot began his seven-year association with London’s opera house, Her Majesty’s Theatre. He started in 1842 as assistant to the aging ballet master André Deshayes, but from 1843 he was in full charge. This was to be the most productive phase of his career. Working with nearly all the most celebrated ballerinas of the time, he produced 23 ballets of varying importance, including several lasting masterpieces, each skillfully crafted to highlight the particular qualities of its ballerina. ForFanny Elssler he producedLe Délire d’un peintre (1843); forFanny Cerrito,Ondine (1843) andLalla Rookh (1846); for Grisi,La Esmeralda (1844); and forLucile Grahn,Eoline (1845) andCatarina (1846). He also staged an extraordinary series of multi-stellar divertissements. His sensationalPas de quatre (1845), which displayed the artistry of Taglioni, Cerrito, Grisi, and Grahn without any one of them feeling disadvantaged, was followed by other divertissements of the same type:Le Jugement de Pâris (1846),Les Éléments (1847), andLes Quatre Saisons(1848).
In 1848 Perrot produced a major ballet,Faust, forFanny Elssler atLa Scala inMilan, in which he himself played Mephistopheles. The following year, after producingLa Filleule des fées for Grisi at the Paris Opéra, he left for Russia, where he was engaged as principal ballet master of theImperial Russian Ballet inSt. Petersburg until 1860. There he produced expanded versions ofEsmeralda andCatarina and a series of major new works, includingThe Naiad and the Fisherman (1851),The War of the Women (1852), andGazelda (1853), all for Grisi, andArmida (1855) for Cerrito.
Perrot retired after a disappointing season in Milan in 1864. In later years he gave classes at the Paris Opéra, where as a teacher he was immortalized by the Impressionist artistEdgar Degas in paintings such asThe Dance Class (1874).