TY - JOUR
T1 - Animating Antiquity in the Vision animée
AU - Fuchs, Sarah
N1 - Funding Information:
SARAH FUCHS is Assistant Professor of Music History and Cultures at Syracuse University. Grounded in archival research, her scholarship on musical cultures of the long nineteenth century is broadly interdisciplinary, incorporating perspectives from cultural history as well as film and media studies. Supported by the American Association of University Women and the Presser Foundation, her current book project focuses on the new modes of operatic consumption, pedagogy and performance that emerged alongside the telephone, phonograph and camera in fin-de-siècle France. In 2018, she was awarded the John M. Ward Fellowship in Dance and Music for the Theatre from Harvard University’s Houghton Library in support of her latest work, which examines the intertwining histories of print culture and musical performance in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries.
Publisher Copyright:
Copyright © 2019 Cambridge University Press.
PY - 2018/11/1
Y1 - 2018/11/1
N2 - In 1900, the soprano Jeanne Hatto recorded a scene from Gluck's 1779 opera Iphigénie en Tauride for the Phono-Cinéma-Théâtre, an exhibit at the Paris Exposition Universelle that screened silent films manually synchronised with cylinder recordings. Recently restored and digitised by the Cinémathèque Française and the Gaumont Pathé Archives, Hatto's film affords us a glimpse into the revitalising force ascribed to female performers around the turn of the century: the ability to bring ancient statues - and antiquity itself - to life through physical movement. Through their embodiment of ancient Greek figures on stage and in visions animées, prima donnas laid claim to a form of corporeal authority that had all but disappeared from the French stage over the preceding century.
AB - In 1900, the soprano Jeanne Hatto recorded a scene from Gluck's 1779 opera Iphigénie en Tauride for the Phono-Cinéma-Théâtre, an exhibit at the Paris Exposition Universelle that screened silent films manually synchronised with cylinder recordings. Recently restored and digitised by the Cinémathèque Française and the Gaumont Pathé Archives, Hatto's film affords us a glimpse into the revitalising force ascribed to female performers around the turn of the century: the ability to bring ancient statues - and antiquity itself - to life through physical movement. Through their embodiment of ancient Greek figures on stage and in visions animées, prima donnas laid claim to a form of corporeal authority that had all but disappeared from the French stage over the preceding century.
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U2 - 10.1017/S095458671900003X
DO - 10.1017/S095458671900003X
M3 - Review article
AN - SCOPUS:85072291511
SN - 0954-5867
VL - 30
SP - 115
EP - 137
JO - Cambridge Opera Journal
JF - Cambridge Opera Journal
IS - 2-3
ER -