ballets » Job

Job is a masque for dancing in eight scenes, choreographed and produced by Ninette de Valois. It was first presented by the Camargo Society at the Cambridge Theatre, London in July 1931 and then later that year at The Old Vic. The work is based on the Illustrations to the Book of Job that William Blake published in 1825. The ballet’s libretto, by Geoffrey Keynes, is based on Blake’s 21 engravings, as is its music by Ralph Vaughan Williams. The scenery and costumes were by Gwendolen Raverat, but were redesigned by the artist John Piper in 1948.

Although the ballet is seldom performed now, the solo for Satan that Anton Dolin created is sometimes revived for special occasions. The whole masque marked a milestone in its time, not least because the collaboration of dance, music and design was an entirely British affair. In addition, the representation of the biblical narrative in its groupings and tableaux was strikingly faithful to Blake’s images.

Podcast » Gillian Lynne

The great choreographer and director Gillian Lynne tells Lynn Wallis how it was a giant, but ultimately rewarding step, to leave Sadler’s Wells Ballet in 1951. We have a ten-minute trip from the...

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Ninette de Valois (1898-2001) was an Irish dancer, choreographer and founding director of The Royal Ballet.In 1918 and 1919 she became principal dancer for the Beecham Opera at Covent Garden and...

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Job is a masque for dancing in eight scenes, choreographed and produced by Ninette de Valois. It was first presented by the Camargo Society at the Cambridge Theatre, London in July 1931 and then...

Read More