Salvatore Vigano
Salvatore Vigano Salvatore Vigano (born March 25, 1769 in Naples, Italy, August 10, 1821), Italian dancer, choreographer, ballet teacher and composer.
In addition to dance education, he also completed music studies. During his stay in France, he met French playwright Jean Dauberval. He had just introduced Salvatore to Noverre's theories and taught all the secrets of the French classical dance technique. When he returned to Italy and choreographed his master, La Fille mal gardee was a great success. In 1812 he was involved in the Milan La Scala and then began to implement his choreographic concepts. He already had a significant artistic output:
When he was hired at La Scala he no longer danced. Since then he has been working on a choreographer. But in all of Choreography, Vigana was the pantomime, which was much more than the dance itself. Still, after showing his performance under the title La Vestale in 1812, the audience was shocked and cried. Vigano himself had so much energy that often the trials could last forever, and all but him. He also took up pedagogical work and educated his dancers, because to perform the spectacles he had to have artists capable of doing it. While in Madrid, Vigano met and married the Spanish dancer Maria Medina. He died in Milan in 1821 when he worked on writing Didon ballet. Authoritative control (person):
wiki
Comments
Post a Comment